Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 27, 1921, Page 4

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- Earerma o Sorwich Bulletin. and Goufiet 125 YEARS OLD Drien 130 & weeki(T6e & memth: S99 O | Posefles o Normih, Orsm.. a- NORWICH BULLETIN, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1821 ware sent to the bottom without warn- ing resulting in the loss of life and property, Regardless of the circum- stances attending the destruction of thess vessols Argentina el contmued 10 have a warm spot ifi its heart for Germany so that not so muoh surprise is caused when the wholé incident seems te have been olosed by & banquet and a ~ealute to the Argentime flag. It is in warked contrast 16 ths manner in which Germany has been obliged to settle for its other war crimés. Few nations are thema that have been willing to accept such a dlsregard for their rights on the high seas ag to let a few honeved words at this date recompenss for the outrages committed againet them. Argentina was ome of the countries that stuck to meutrality. Regardlvss of ut Germany did, and thers was a time When It was the hotbed of German inirigue. Argentina simply tarned the other cheek and now it is willing to set- tle at Germany's prics and accept an homor shown te fts representative and ts flag as a sincere expression of re- | reeret for the Kicking it got during the war. There can be no question bat what a has cultivated the good will| Argen WEEK ENDING SEPT. 24th, 1921 rmany by course but it has a weak example of standing up for hts. Somehow Argentina gives {the impression of not having emough 1da to otherwise, or else it val- uad very lightly the losses sustained by ion. 1t certainly cannot be charged with harboring resentment. aet ao ES ¥ 4 of HN B, ARAD A Town Clerk and Treas: §. HOLBROOK Tax TARC ~ Registras Auditor Town Deposit Fund Board of Selectmen Amsessors OAT R. MANNING Reliet ;. PE is severe | mother, “but when a man watches alas you aré! ea 1" _Jixchange,| fation. 'Today a bare ome per cent. e ) te are too many mstanc pirit of deflance and S you aré! ligbeats me!”—EXchange. op ouy population owns practically nine- & ctied o aaind determination ehines out with the o | e e lty-nine per cent. of the entire wealth of ABOLISHING HAZING. Many more than thost Who are des- tined to be freshmen in succeeding | eacs at Wesleyan will learn with grat_ feation of the action which has been by {ne undergraduates at that Institution for the abolition 4 the best of it all is that i as been voluntary. | | many an undergraduate can Ie fon that attended hazine. | s carried on i a mild and | | © manmer. But the great danger| | tion with this humbling of the | raint among the hazers. They are| 1 < good time and they ¥ | | he begun a culogy WASHINGTON AFFAIRS (Special to The Bulletin) Washington, D. C., Sept. 26th—It was a case of “nobody home” when con- gress convened, and even now the ranks arp filling slowly. Scarcely a baker's dozen members of the house were in their seats, when acting Speaker Walsh of Massachusetts rapped the house to order, for the gentlemen's agreement not to transact biisiness that required 2 quorum had been taken very literally by the worn out congressmen who had served faith- fully throughout the hottest summer Washington has experienced for many years. Speaker Gillett extended his vacation till October 1st but in his absence se- lected Walsh of Massachusetls to pre- side, so the leadership was kept within the borders of New Ehgland, Perfunc- tory meetings of the house will cotninue tifl about Oct. 6th by which time routine work will be resumed Over in the senate the reconvening of congress is more animated. The feature of the opening session was a bitter speech by Senator Harrison of Mississip- pi, who assailed the republican party as a'whole and President Harding and the republican members of the senate in par- ticular. Mr. Harrison waved his long rms high in the air and roared accusa- tions of inefficicney and. worse, across the middle aisle that separates tiie sheep from the goats, according to political es- timate. He glared at Senator Lodge, who sat just across the aisle, his head resting ofl his hands, and op whom the fiery words of the Missirsippian seem- ed to fall unheeded. When Mr. Harrison austed his gemerous supply of con- mation for the opposite political party on Senator Under- wood, democratic floor leader, Who up to tiat minute had been sitting beside Mr. Harrison the front row. Mr. Un. derwood must have been forwarned of what was coming his way, for he slipped out of his chair mgl vanished through the door of the democratic cloak room, just at the moment Mr. Harrison begun ng his praises. Dut Mr. Underwood h a genuine favoite among repub- their respect and de sul and enji ittle healthy | e for th 3 personal friendship o such an extent that not a member of the opposition broke in to dispute the extravagant claims ihade for his ability or tried to drag him down from the exhaulted plane on which Mr. Harvison had placed him, Senator Ponrose looked like a shadow of his former self as he rose to report out the bill. fis frame is cov- ered with sageing flesh; face is pale | the physical CLARENCE' HAD “Agatha,” began ‘the nice, old-fash- ioned grandmother, who was visiting “T want to talk to you right hard! I must say that it Seems perfectly dis- graceful to me the way you are lead- ing on that young Clarence Creamer I stumble over every time I walk from one end of the house to the other!” “Why, grandmother!” expostulated the lovely young creature, who was gathering up a hole in a stocking heel with one thread instead of dwrning it properly. “I don’t know what you mean. Why should I act that way to Clar- ence Creamer?” “That's what I'd like to know,” her grandmother told her. “I guess you aren’t going to marry him, are you?” “My goodness!’ the lovely young| ereature laughed softly, snipping the thread with the air of having toiled an hour and a half at the desk, “I should say not! Why he makes only| $35 a week! “I must say!” gasped her grandmoth- | Don't you girls ever fall in love| without certified income 2:count be- ing yprevionsly handed to you by the young man? It you like a man can't you get engaged and wait for him to make his fortune!” “I should say not!” her granddaugh- ter told her distinctly. “You see, we've all in such a rush these days that if we waited very long for a man we'd forget all about him in the press of other events. And, besides, we might change our minds if we had very much time.” “I never heard of anything so dis- graceful!” said ‘the old-fashioned grandmothar indignantly. “What do| the young men do when they natural- ly think you are in love with them and ask you to marry them and you say no?” ‘Oh, they look around and fali In iove with somebody else,’ :he grand- daughter told her cheerfully. “Besldes they don’t always fell in love with us, you know! “Well, that Clarence Creamer ig prét- ty far gone,” the old-fashioned grand- mother told her reprovingly. “The idea of Clarence heing in love with me!” cried the lovely young crea- ture in great amusement. “Didn’t you know that Clarence has been a woman | hater—ever since he was 19 and his| first love married another man?’ | “I may be wrong,” said her grand-| { cept Clarence one of these days when THE . HABIT girl in that dying-calf sort of way Clarence has and tags around after Ler morning, noon and night and wears out the telephone and digs deep ruts in the pavement with the pros cession of delivery wagons bearing flowers, candy and books he must have some slight interest in het! And if you aren't going to mATFY him, Aga- that, you shouldn’t let him do all thoss things!” “Why, grandmother! What can I io about it?” begged the lovely voung creature with reproach. “ I can't take him by the hand and gaze in a kindly manner into his eéyes and murmir, “Clarence, you really shouldn't ough- tal” can 1?” How am I to know it isn't just Clarence's usual way of being nice to any girl he is friends. with?l think it is terribly egotistical to think every man who is nice to you is going to ask. you to marry him! Atvhow, if he didn't do those things for me, Clarence would be doing them for some other §irl, so why shouldn't I have the ben- efit of his layishness? 1 am sure you must be mistaken! “You mix me up so, Agatha,” her grandmother expostulated. * I am right sorry for that boy! Why, he may do something desperate, Agatha, when you turn him down! You wouldn't want to have a suicide on your conscience! You may break his heart!” “Then I'll 4o something that none of the other girls Clarence has been in love with ever did” said the lovely young thing with some Interest. “He's proposed to Isabel and Louise and Martha that I know of, and never lost a meal during it all! I hadn't any idea that Clarence was going to add me to the Jist, but if you are sure about it— My land!” said the old fashioned grandmother. in much bewilderment. “If that young man falls in and out of love as fast as that I guess I don't need to worry about him after I guess he isn't going to take it so| very hard when vou refuse him! I} sort of cxpect he's got the habit, hasn't he?” “Uh huh” agreed the lovely young thing. “Only smebody is going fo ac- he's not watching, too, and I'll about ruin his Iife. T expect! I sho worry about him at all, deari “Well,” admitted the old-fashioned grandmother, “I guess he's as hopeles Just| an't| | ing ihe biffion dellar mark Tt monly estimsled {hat the wealth Rocketeller, the oil king, clogely ap- Droaches the encrmous sum of one billion dollars. . To flustraté what this enor- thous afount of wealth means, we will suppose & man lives 75 years: in arder to reach {this vast sum he must ac- cumulate %éatly forty thousand dollars a day for every day he lives. 1f he shiould not gave a dollar until he was 21 years of age. he would then be obliged to accumulate about sixty thous- and dollars for every day of the remaind- er of his life. Against the hoarding of wealth, God has glven the following explicit warn- ing: “Go to mow, ye rich men, weep and tiowl for your miferies that shall come pon you. Your riches are corrupted, and your gariménts are moth-eaten. Your gold and stiver s cankered ; and the rust of them shail be a witnéss against you, and shall eat your flesh sis it were fire. Ye have heaped trcasurer together for the last day.” James 5: 1 to 3. Su¢h ls the declaration of Scripture concerning the conditions {hat were to exist in the last days. A few years ago, while some workmen were employed In recounting the money in a vault 1n New York city, they marfowly escaped being drowned in a flood of cankered silver. The sacks containing it had been eat- en through and at their ouch it rolied together in a mighty mass. aper on “The Concentration of Henry L. Call, of Washington, says: “Fifty years ago there were not to exceed fifty millionaires in the United States, and their combined for- tunes did ot exceed peérhaps ome hun- dred million dollars, of one per cent. of the then saggregate weaith of the Miisting | the nation. Speaking of the dangers of | e ——————— | U1 MEETING COMPETITION. poten womde ®ocdations of this countrs are p five g ¢ bar £rods conmt Which they are « iy they mpro metho > 8 A different t hebes THE PRICE AND COLOR OF EGGS Fers are articles hat com s¥pected thome - shout what the color of the sgx shell is are imvartably called upon to pay the priee for 1t fs easy to tack on the fan- gy priees for the fancy eggs, whether Mere hapoens 1o be any better mater- il within the shell or not The devartment of agriealture throws » brick into the midst of such an idea sfeerning eggs when its experts de- dare that ® !s no more possible to jidge the guality of an egE by the coler o the ebell than ¥ is to judge a cigar 3y the eolor of the wrapper That eggs may vary and certain 1348 mre better than others cannot he meationed, but It iz not the color that Mtges it but the material that is fed e putting them on the breakfast table. » the [hest way therefore for off this extra price becanse color, winee the White ones are sent the locality where white eggs bring and the brown omes go to an- section whers brown is rated to take whatever ia avaflable of cofor as long as the eggs fresnly la PAYING ARGENTINA. the countries that suffered the vessels as the result of was Argentina. partienlar of the (Senator Bursum of New Meéxico claims the German submarines|a majority of over 9,000, which mcans es. Hazing s onel college life that down the heaith. | ntly injurvine | g " 1one wmally or mot ¥ Sedyueg? but Wesleyan take the bull by the h form wit of good judgment in | | elde shows from therr * 5 the of | Y sorry. A BUYER® WEEK. The sugsestion has been put forth man- | seems to prevail that the | nany to purchasing goods whien ahsolutely needed at top motch reason for letting th th m purchases in buying ould not be connecticn with cre are conditions wk to conten, ¥ he should b be found point connection W open ought, however, many . Tegsons why | t is 2 more careful than h auring ey B& 0 wing his bound to go. Th ng desire moAt be general > are refraining from by nvesting are mot given much en- wzoment when, as in Chicago, the f bullding mater ok a ju the way seemed i for a revival of activil r trades With the ement a buyers' week wo its purpose. EDITORIAL NOTES. are sald to be withomt stcrers in Boston have struck work, Tiose secking long life mwet high y frc realize | that the ay 18 one place they must {Eeep aw Now that opened it is lists wvill the football season has re- to be expected that the appear once more Tt would be so unusual as to attraet attention it the news at the opeming of the week didn't cofitain several auto acridents. | casualty The man om the corner says: Auto accidents from driving under the in- fluence of liquor were never any great- {er before prohibitton. - e ci i The plan seems to be to increase the income tax exemption but there are a lot of peoplt who aren't buying silk suirts and other luxuries this year. i Ir the making of frult juces at fome the great trouble comes in pre-| venting it from doing What the law for- bld; espeelally when raisins are used. A certain fat movis star is said to ®e growing thin in prison. It fs rather unpopular treatment but some people are ready to try anything te get thi Word to the effect that the cranberry orop s less than halt what it Was last year, when #t was smaller than usual, means a bed outlook for mock cherry Ples, As the fignres continue to come in war It isjof course a greater endorsement of the|not it has @ selid faundation is not yet sow since two of its vessels |administration. | Maino and later occupied by the Leiters to anoth as he His legs won' wheel cha | | w he walks to I seat in front row Senator Brandeges dealt a death blow the rumor that th called innre- concilables of the se in fighting to a finish German trea senate veok by the Brandegee f 1a reservat t the favor foreign r committee of nt Women comnected with vay us politic~ over the di House to erna- come away fast to the po- Conne ) ore hop et, > made it clear ad given favorable considera- plan: sug expected ‘definite s' from the confer- | | were instrumental Capital build- in honor of suffrage | sed over the In the vresented to nter, groupe depicts Susan B, beth C; nton and It was dedicated in the on the main floer, but by orders of the library com , who %iad the emoved to the nz. Now it has icuous place di- cons| dome. While it is not feet from original suddeniy become a te ing feature instead of being relcgated to an_ obscure corner, as was its fate aftr ddication, s week, however, the M- ry committee, of whi Senator randegee of Cornecticut is chairman, | consented to have the group placed in present. position much to the grati- tion of the women who had charge of the matter. The Jnpanese embassy has leased the oid James G. Blaine mansion for its del- egation to the coming conferen This house has a remarkable social history and is one of the show places of the capital. 1t was buiit by Blaine of nd Westinghouses, and under its roof some of the most gorgeous sceial affairs | f the city have taken place. Later it was used as an officers’ club. but has made one of the most up to date resi- dances in the city. Except for the very briefest vaestions Senators Brandegee and McLean have spent the entire summer. here working with their important committees. They did not even take advanage of he 30 days recess which ended this week, but found so much to do in the way of congressional work, that they decided to forego the opportunity to get away that the recess offered. Moreover the senate i8 now working overtime, having day sessions of 6 hours and following them up with evening sessions as well, so the prespect of a let-up for the Connecticut | senators is pretty siim. On the other | hand members of the house are still away acting on the so-called gentle- men's agreement that no business re. quiring a quorum shall be transacted be- for Oct, 4th. If fact it is doubtful, Whether business of that soft will be brought up till about the 6th or 10th as the senate is still Working on bills that must go back to the house on conference reports, etc. The representatives from Connecticut are not in town yet, as they are not needed till the house actually be- gins routine work. There is & rumor that congress will ad- journ about the 10th of November. The same rumer makes the suggestion that such a course would prefer no pesibiiity f adverse cngressional discussion of the armament situation until the prelimin- arles of the conference are settled. But Five presidents of the United States i during their term of office, b oply two of them in the Bxeeu Mansion. The three martywed p ents breathed theit last away from the | residence of the president. Lincoln In a | Louse in Washington, near Ford's the | tre, where he was assassinated; | | | | | | | ODL iNCINENTS IN AMERICAN BISTORT e e field peron New Jersey, burn's house in The Hot month seaside McKinley at Mr. Buffalo, ident to die in the White iam Henry Harrison. He nauguration only one His deat irted on April 4, | thun {wo score years after upied for the firs first p was W d his more building John the was oo time hy Ad: Har but two span years of “man iington. Never he had passed campaign 1shington of his in when very to W healt excit robust in wroush made his journey geason reuration cold in_the open sut the first of Apr chill from carel frame lacked ped int oomy, and | caught a ™ »f the first persor n House was a m pre About his eoffi from members of his family the noew president, John Tyle President John Quiney Adams, mem of the cabinet, foreign ministe their representative suites and conggess n and their -wives. Two of the late | ent's swords wers pla on th and at the foot, upon the {al ible and praver book of ti palibearers iwen- | who number?d wore white scarfs and bla The funeral procession is said to | extended gors than two miles ant | to have contzined 10,000 persons. The | body was placed in a magnificent f neral car, drawn by eight white horses, | attended by groor dressed in white, The was covered entirely with black ve vet embroidered with gold The death president the second and last to dle in the White House oc- curred o more than nine years later, President Zachery yior. Tt seems that even before he took the oath of office, Mrs. Taylor expressed her in- tuitive beiief that something sad or gomething dreadful would overtake him Pre Taylor had been invited to attend laying of the cormer stone stone of the Washington Monument. Tt was a hot July day, and upon returning home he complained of feeling very pros- trated. He dled on Jul and the fam- { ily remained in the mansion untll the funeral was over. In the fumeral pro- cession the general's war horse follow- is owner's body to its last resting a times hae the Whis House stood swathed in black while its mis- tress lay dead within. First, when Mrs Tyler Adled; mext when Mrs. Bemjamin Harrison died and later at the death of President Wilson's wife. Mrs. Tyler died in 1842, about ome year after the death of President Harrison, and hers was accordingly the second death with- in the White House. Mrs. Harrison dled on the 24th of October, 1891, her fu- neral taking place in the White House on tha 27th. Mrs. Wilson died August 6, 1914, (Tomorrow—How the Presidents Are Guarded.) READ YOUR CHARACTER By Digby Phillip Copyrighted 1821 WRINKLESS FACES. Wrinklea faces are commonly re- garded signs of age, and this as- and | hour. |3 Kindly extend i | tiona to Dr. J. J. Domohue for his open | tand for the good and weifare of do i ion is just close emough to the truth, and far epough away from it furnish a splendid example of the Justice Willlmantie, Sept. 25, 1931. | wealthy and material prosperity, the lat Brewer, in his work “The Unit- od States a Christlan Natlon, 57 made a good observation and to the point for this time. on pages | Respectfally, FRANK J. WENISCH. | Wwhich instinctively we achieve practical | gy results without scientific accuracy in our matural and intuitive judgments. The assumption is true in so far as| age is the measure of experienc emotion, and no further. Selent tpeaking, wrinkles not the me ihe fumber of years which passed over a man Or a Woman are the measure of the number, i strength of their emotions, and of [~ cters in relation to those ns. They are this primariiy. Sec- ly ‘they may indicate simoly oh nce, as in the case of the | man of any other calfing exposes him fo the sun and s34 two wheels ihie gutter rubbinz the | the women, and the crash came. wrinkle tells its story of char-|curb. The back curfzin prevented the Apivine, & acter and cmotlofi. Those around the | cornér observets from Seeins the driver | POI¢ %00 its ground well, being a jarge cveal one thing. those of the fore-|and the thought flashed {nat possibly | Substantial looking pote head another. and still other tr there was no driver and the machine | well it should have collapsed character are revealed by those around | was running away as f have been | tangled wreck while bystanders pulled tho mouth and nose. | snown to do. - Approaching the corner | out the injured occupants and calied the The wrinklencss face, therefore, is he machine backed ueross a driveway | ambulance. Nothing negative indication. In the ading to a filling station and here the | pened or stcried to happen, fot like a ng it is quite natural, fo 1] inner whe mbed the curb and ran|bail from the bat experiences and tendeneies, m and o srake. e alle in course | and then sped forward and away down i o not had time 0 gimed (he rapidly backing machine di-|the street, o ARUTERs JnE T - reatly toward a © electric light pole. ETTERS TO THE EDITOR/ Would Be Grateful For Modific Mr. Bdito: ic animals ioner of his clash with Cot Domestic Animals Whittle We must admit the wrong person hotld- ing a high powered posit over animals is to be regrett such & ruling leads to the crueity to the | animals. Sympathizing seeking ef | from the hards] and crueity that have been the dogs' 1ot during the pres- ent quarantine would be very grateful it our commissionar would modify his ruling. The conscensus of opinion is that there are no mad dogs now, has ‘not been any, but will be, soon, If quafan- tine continues much longer. A FRIERD OF Norwich, Sept. 24, 1921, ANIMALS. The Dog Officer. Mr. Editor: Th evening on Frankiln square a small boy was lead- | ing a pet dog around on a string when | sccidentally the ittle animal broke or sifpped the string and ran into the al ley. Immediately the dog catcher ap- Dpeared on the scene chasing the fittle dog until he caught him. Bitterly the noer boy was crying and weeping as though his heart would break, thinking that his faithtul friend was to be shot. His mind must have been fuil of thoughts of ogre and goblin men Who ‘run to meet you to greet you and then to eat you." A crowd of people gathered and seeing ! the ugly spectacle their sympathy w: other immediately with the boy. The three dollgrs to jreease the dpg Was im- meaiately forthcoming and. ten times three if necessary would have been rais- ed in a few minutes. The dog was re- turned to the boy. 1f the dog warden or the commissioner of animafs think there is any applause | coming to them for these performances es can enly mean T same of ATl its best it inai e vold of cages | nd also of enthusinsms; at r and mora’ abi Btories That Recall Others | Wouldn't This Jar One man and seviral waiting for the streét car at a corner. Down (he cross streets came a flivver attracting some backing and further was running with Yon? women were attentiot. in that it was 2n »ud shrieks from | hit. the Ine woman at the wheel never glancing back to sce what she had The The flivver— as of the kind hap- the machine bounced | flowers, the fruits, wonderfully gasped LARGE number of wumen’s ailments are not surgical ones. Serious displacements or radical changes have not yet taken place. A tiny part in a fine clock may become loose and cause the clock to gain or lose. fall from its place and cause If not attended to in time, the part ma serious trouble. So it is witl women’s ailments, they start from simple causes; but if allowed to continue, produce serious conditions. When the warning s Pinkham’s Vegetable ptoms are first noted, take Lydia E. ompound to relieve the present trouble- R S T some ailment, and to prevent the development of serious trouble. corwl e l orth Troy, N. Y.—“When I was a utchinson, Kan.—* 1 was about Alad gl st i youniffi'llhxdasevemfemle H"3 years old when I developed He Would Still Be a Hundred Milllon trouble. Mother gave me Lydia E. afemale weakness. My mother took Dollars Short. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com; and me to a doctor and I doctored for Mr. Editor: If Adam, the first man, had lived to the present time, and had accumulated annuuily one hundred and fifty thousand doiars, he would still be a hundred million dollars short of reach- Thirty years of giving just that is merely rumor, and Whether or known. The Reward of Justice "SALADA TEA value in tea has gained for H28Y Veg after taking several T was strong and well. When my daughter several months. I was toosick to do anything, was as thin as could be, got married she was feeling miser- and complexion was yellow. able and I recommended your medi- Mother had used Lydia E. 's cine. She is greatly improved in Vegetable Compound and it had health and has a bea: baby helped her so much that she fi four months old. So you see this some for me and before Thad letter comes from the genera- the second bottle I was feeling fine tion and you may use it as you . "—Mrs. R. M. GREENAWAY, 657 4th Ave,, North Troy, N. Y. and bave been ever since.”—Nrs. J. A. Stevens, 716 E. 9th St., Hutch- inson, Kansas. Many such letters prove the virtue of Lydia E. Pinkham’s etable Compound | LYDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. LYNN, A WONDERFUL VALUE PLAIN AND FUR TRIMMED MODELS. $45.00 Other Values $35.00 to $§195.00 - “Oh 3 isn't a fair, it's a fairyland” Dscanis That Come True. 3 ; Virginia had visited at jéast two fairg in her four short and she thought she knew jus what 10 expect when she accomipanied her par- ents 1o the fair this year. But when all the marvels of the many attractions within the grounds, the lovely balloan, merry-eo- rounds, everything to daszie her youthi- fal eyés she looked up to her mother and mother this

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