Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 15, 1921, Page 4

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e P censes shall be issued only to men whose iy 1 : 2 - rtren bave ‘voen mvestmen snd | THE MAN WHO TALKS ADVOCATES ENFORCEMENT OF JONES ACT e e e | great public utllity begins to confract,| The report that the United Sutes‘! am convinced that a merehant ma- should be a ery about rotten conditions, | rather than expand, its operations, there o aroy Ts. budtly’ sugaee iat] M0 of Shx WU or that rotten conditions should exist?|is s.oe ground for thi susdlodn. Thst | SHPPINE g | 'son 7 '8 & t to the rresident) liaries to our army and navy & MW Gien opportunity to pursue in a par-| this {s being done certafnly canmot be | Preparing a repor | as anxi r 2 ticularly advantageous manner the very | denfed. ‘The Iliitle steamboat, Both | reccommending that the so-called in time of war, is ”:nfxtcrdmt:. .: snd Qoufief kind of a life which their record prom- | frelght and T et Tt 8| Jancs aot-the. micrclnt marre- met :&“xz Just canno N er, is not so mu -evidence the fect i T o e e T ot ba| #mall seaport towng as it was & quarter | Of 1820—be put Into immediate etfect| Wop %y iy of giscriminating duties Foek i e g Seiied s PYSE century ago. Plers abandoned, and {n | roveals a peculiar situation respect-| was in force from the beginning of amount of crime that is committed| o oo dilapidated, silently tell the|ing the status of our merchant ma-| gyr government under the existing there? And yet encouragement to those story of past prosperity. After rine writes A. R. Smith, editor of the; constitution until it was suspended in . . ' s 3 With criminal records is not confined gul:y day :f e small ts’tu.mhon .,.:‘,; Marine Journal. Section 34 of that act! 1850 1t has never been repealed. It was P ! ; D, G, st 4 N, % | olely 4o those who issus livensen. Many | the trolley. which made - complste met | directs the Prosident to serve notice| s successtul when first adopted that| Pl Tea thatis sure to l“se et e e are the instances where crime is com- | work of the country’s geography, but now | on nations with which we have ter-1the reduction in revenue through the bd - L SRS O *| mitted by th he £ t liby wn-| with double fare many lines declare no | minable trade treaties of our inten-' g owth of American shipping caused - " Cavcdn Pines Offica 480, s B thope who mpe R e ki cn only painful defic-|tion to free ourselves from the re-|ihe application of the policy to be re- ~ it i oot sa | ooF thepended sesitences gt While aut on 0 Hine porBbn GF The ' Whethery | stralat thoy imoss-uport e du' Teesc| «oouen K ehuecin by, Wlptetag (AR, o Sold in metal . meaic e 2 Cotnh B Tt e | Dond waiting for the disposttion of vre-| D il 5i€ BNCGT fhe road bed be.{ tablishing the early successtul Ameri-'yr or higher duty on imports than NEVER 1 = - vious cases. One of the county judges| ;... Grescent Beach and Flanders is | can policy of discriminating import du- | tje regular.duty when brought to we E N Bu LK nase at seems to take pride in the mumber Of| poing torn up, and the rails removed, | ties and tonnage dues so as to create in foreign vessels, of reduc- 5 suspended sentences he gives and yet| wy; the wilderness section be*ween Bal.|a preference for our ships in foreign| ing the duty on im one of the aceused under a year's sus- pension of sentence has been arrested twice on burglary charges since last tic and Willimantic follow suit? The out- | trade. The Jones act was approved b¥ | yegsels. Aithough generally suspended look is bad for the man who can’t serape | President Wilson on June 5, 1920, but i 1350, it had been in full or par- enough money together to buy a third- | he refused to give the notice directed!tjs) effect for so long—1789 until 1850 - credited to % or mot otherwis Z July and 1s wanted in connection with | hand Ford. on the xrwlnd t&-:'tn fi?:ggl'::! d?:::mfd—tmt M\:n mdg'r“m i - tile yeper end algo the local viws publisbad R tyoe other cases of a like character. The man who drives into town from |itS W"str“ é‘ o Jétefl Aecado“re. or e war, tmlm U5 sgha of rweMicstion o weesl du. || New York has reasom to wonder | the country savs “it's awfal” What is|action in treaty 2 | in our shipping growth during the next Lrem are alss ressvved. i nts | j; tire - whether it fs the wears of the many | SNIUT Tho clear ki, e pure e e | o V00 SOREACaL"Y Bember B the| e Sveras of ous imperts sad 1 . | supreme beautiful wea s bless- % or the protection of the criminally in- | SOP7CR throughout Scptember, and which | Senate commerce cmmgnlm;e szaid:;_: exports carried in American ships wag clined that is setting the most atfen- | .. jected jtself with mighty impulse in- | Harding participated in the prepara-| g per cent. tion, to October? What is awful? The un-|tion of the measure. In the senate t;xe _ As a result of every possible retal- e e usually low degree of mortality that ep- | bill was passed almost unewumoURY | istory and countervailing emasure for- TALKING TO CONGRESS. taing in all parts of our country except | there being no partisan divis! nn.d h*':eign natlons availed of they succeed- In bringing the conference on unem- | in sections of the south where there has | Shibping "‘?”‘}xa"eadgy;: :;;::c% pei‘efl‘ % ctfimgurmlm“e?sg:ndm ko ] ployment to an end and presenting its| been an outbreak of pellagra? Is it|resolution in ‘;°": °c“smm! aaty on'gi:-nfmsevent iy 9‘;’_“ n the Tight list of eight recommendations, it is to|awful to have our schools all the way | cent. diseriminating In: Thé ahip: | okt s"em ¥ aty o = be realized that authority fu vested In | from kindergarten to university crowd-|imports in foreign vessels. ™ Baid. 1t | it watle o v 42 AB mu"“d plrry o ome to carry them out. The confer-| el With lads and lassies to a record- | Ping board plans il i:;s s tried an ':i ewsg l; "y a —eee———————— i 0 3 z‘ a8 called | Preaking moint? What about the smoke discuss the matter of 'ds rf 4 "n".! marine v:e ezem u‘r; ler pro- s By enoe of about delegates Ww: ool belching from a thousand rtacks that|Subject with the :)re:) ene.smeem's S gec‘u‘nn otol:-dmim‘m Iin: duty“pol- P *% |for the purpose of considering the Con-| . . ycen erim and silght in the previ- | being prepared at the president 1|17 in ente- m days I am convinc- terest is bound to be mani-|ditions Which contribute to the presemt| oo i oieve YWhat the .armer means s | auest. The inference is justifiable that| ed that it ie the poliey for this coun- order that was issued Dy | unemployment situation with a View 10| ine searcity of water which has been | 2ll of the parties to this conference are | try again to put into operation for the nibition Director Mackensie | suggesting methods whereby cooperative somewhat below the average for thein a friendly attitude toward the pro-| protection, maintenance and develop- that all saloons and breweries in the|effort cow'd be made to relieve them. It| summer period. But December with frost | visions of the Jones act in general and| ment or expansion of our shipping in v i 't | section 34 in particular. It would be| foreign trade. state that are selling liguor of more [ wasm't expected that there would be| and snow is some ways ahead. Don’t | S€ it th ot did et e d " ¥ X ¢ T i ss the bridge till you get to it singular indeed i e upsho e discriminating duty policy aif- B iy ot s pel i, Bl [ ol e p B fing the president convinced (hat ho| fers. rom e so-called ’ subelay * oF content must closed. o 3 L sid- : ! The “rain fafls on the just and the| shouldgive the notices of mcdification| bounty policy in that the former adds That will be recognized as something!ered sufficient grounds for compliance| ynjust” By this quotation T do net ML i LET US SHOW YOU OUR WOMEN'S PATENT TWO- STRAP BUCKLE PUMPS Imitation Perforated Tip with of our trade treaties thut President|to the revenues of the goverment #f it white stitching — Goodyear in the way of a radical change in the|provided there prevails that desire on| mean to infer that the farmer is un- | Wilson refused to give. fails to protect our ships, while sub- matter of enforcing the Volstead act in |the part of those Who can aid in the re-| just, but rather that we all suffer alike| The modification of the treaties in| sidies and bounties take money direct Connecticut and will indicate that some- |lief to see an improvement in the situa-| under any of the unfavorable condi- Welt. The very latest thing the manner indicated in section 34|ly out of the treasury. The former is g more definite and thorough in the|tion to effect, a warding off of suffer-| tions of life because soclety fs Ml"_ would not put the discriminating duty | indirect and the latter is'direct. The way of enforsement can be expected. To|ing and to contribute to national wej.| £2nism. Tf you sten on a cat’s tafl It is ! policy into immediate effect in my | former protects our shipping against in Footwear— S Wigics e ntedent ohie Al e the whole cat that squirms: if the stom-| judgment, because existing laws no-| foreign competition through the tariff & Wi degres the present e 3 tach gets very hunery the brain acts ab-| taply the act of May 24, 1828, would| just as every other American product . . of luor fn the state is due to the| As mmst have been anmtlolpaied by con-| ;orpany - The farmer s mot the SHly | grevent. This 4t clothes the presiént| is protectsd agatnst foreign competi- Spqu]$7.00aPau' manner In which the law has not Deen | gress there has been pointed out Ways! nan Gho suffers from the drough: some- | with power to suspend the collection | tion. enforced. There was a time when pro-|in which it not only can but should do| times mills shut down from lack of wa- of discriminating duties when he be- ion first went into effect that it was|its part. Congress has been busy but it comes satisfied that other nations do ifficult to get it than it is|bhas not enacted such laws as it Then it During all of the time—more than two full generations—the discriminat- ! not discriminate against goods in Am-| ing duty policy was in force we hafli erican ships entering their ports. a great, growing and profitable Ameri- The suspension has hecome general| can merchant marine, Instead of a| under provision of that act. Up tol shipping problem we had a shipping| and including the Underwood (ariff| problem we,had a shipping policy that act, from the tariff act of July 4, 1789, protected our ships on the seas. The this policy of discriminating import du- | reason our ships were driven off the ter. The merchant sometimeg finds rath- s be-| er ar Tt makes them say: “It's was anticipated that [lieved ought to be nassed ‘at the earliest | awful” when they see the dust violations wou'd he given the attenti order to deal with|on their most saleable good be expected. F: ent day conditions. the restaurant kee v, “it's o such enforcement and | 1In the oninion of tho conference con-| B0t meaning his “tough steak” but e nizing the handsome profit there W wress showld hasten action on the rail-| (" e i e e s dling r at the present d: ad relief measure, that it shou'd put b ¥ g might rally il- experi BARROW’S . = : | hine, but to his scant congregation. | ties hag in one form or another been | seagy was not because of the change n so that about the only | forth serious efforts to adont the tax| Byt they all know that droughts are carried; but its enforcement since 1850 from sail to steam, or from wood to tting a drink and getting | revision bill, in order that there may | periodic, that field, warehouse and | hag been suspended, generally speaking! iron, or because of the civil war, but 1 is vrice. De some definite basis on which” busi- the refreshiny rain. through out doption of trade treaties' 1se protection had been withdrawn Rom running and rum selling have [ness now mending can he undertak We heps it ig untrue what the papers | and laws to that effect. If the Ford- n a large scale. Spo- land that it should get down to M ‘When the war ‘of 1813 erded American s have taken vlace but|ness on tariff legislation. Uncertainty report Judee Tazarus to have said In|ney tariff should be passel as it came| ships tlocked back upon the seas in his San Trancisco court when he chang- | to the semfate from the housc it would| eve i A 2 1ld ¢ v increasing numbers because they hich eould be interpreted as 2 |has existed because of a failure to wive| ed the mr charse against Roséoe AT-| not earry—in suspension—these dis-| were protected against foreign compe- n to ses that the 1aw was|the needed attention to these matters | buckle to that of manslaughter: “The de- | criminating shipping laws. tition; but when the civil war ended, ey e state has be S ae 5 mrensl nt Hekote the general | fendant is so well-known throughout the | The need for the restoration of this, | lacking protection, being compelled to X Tt is to be realized that|situation the conference has expressed e e ey hor Ao v ener STy 4 pistostiv, v meet free trade competition upon the t, than in the case of many | practical and enduring policy is that| seas, our ships found themselves un- Who come info this court” Can this|this country cannot build ships inlequal to it and they withdrew. seives. Heaven is place of unutterable | Yoy Can Do No Better Than went Congress may be a bit peeved over| mean that if Arbuckle was a poor devil, | normal times as cheaply as they are During the half centruy after the|sweetness. Can you imagine the num- Buy Our wm ” of the seemingly |heing told what to do but it must real- built abroad, nor can we run ships down and out, little evidence would be close of our civil war whenever Ameri-|ber of iittle chiliren there; Can any- n which enforce-}ize that It has a duty to nerform and to establish his zuilt? But be- | for the national defence and for the|can shipowners and shipbuilders ap- ken. Tt is this|that it cannot be charged with oves but it has|its ovinion. since the law i seri: tness of » child's | N Salad Comple! ith star, occupying a| finding, holding and developing of for-| peared before congress to explain why u“ng,, s ey Bes Tty te w out h has resulted In an|speeding in connection with these mat- orting about | eign markets for our surplus products| our merchant marine In foreign trade|SOP€? And then you b s ey = mmber of »ons. There | ters, lerice is need- | that we should possess a merchant ma-{ was steadily diminishing and what|OWn littie one will be there. |a won- Th S " monay In the business that| ed to prove his zuilt than In ordinary | rine of our own measurably adequate| was necessary to revive and sustain|derful singing it is as their 'w-“ua UITm ™ r to take the chances of CREDITABLE ACTION ses. 1f this is what the judge meant, | to the carrying of our foreign com-|it, they answered, protection. The same | touched by the finger of Christ! e z bore el oM b o ¥ T o & . dead girl, thoush far from saint- | merce, is true now or will be in normal times| &S a time when there was no entrance ome-yiade Bhek iAo e il o ematie President Lewis of the s ted u If in the | This country, as [ see it. has got| Ior it to suceeed our merchant marine | Into Heaven for us; We had closed it. . - L A e that on kers has proceeded in a man-| judge’'s opinion the evidence submitted | to adopt a strong, generously protective | must be protected, and it is upto con- | Man had grievously sinned, he had broken Ma onnaise v e s “""’i "'““ that does him eredit in removing| did not sustain the ree of murdr: shipping policy for our ships to pros- | gress to protect it generously, ade- :"“'le"' of God and there was no hepe Y haa - ary Inter-{from office Alexander Howat and other | he v *d in changing it | per and grown in foreign trade, and! quately, permanently, whole heartedly, | for him. 3 < mAanner 0 {omoials of the as district where g . Then it was that the babe was cradled THUMM'S - s of the nrohibition @l |\here has been utter defiance of the that a e in the manger became a youth, grew to 3 . ing from the 1405 o the state and the rmles and or-| Man v 15 fiocket nag become proverbial. He had been noted | Manhood, endured tnirty.three years' ut- | D} JCATESSEN STORE as 1 only so far| g, of the orzanization no show in a 1 court. We still i A 3 a5 a_horseman long before he went to | fering, calminating m the agony upon % o £ ont of bus- | S o e O, dable na. | TOPE that this s untrue. ODD iINCIDENTS IN AMERICA® J| 1. White House, and at the time he was | CAIvAry, "”; "‘_gl" ‘{e"'““"}‘;“'d“:;‘>;‘;“: 40 Franklin Street " tication b L Ve been made in Kansas for the| Likenesses between things estavlish HISTORY elected he had a stock farm near 8t. | His heart broke. Then it was He . ot adjustment of labor aisputes. As the | 2121081 And A6 grest i trouie L i Louis, where it is sald he kept more than |Just for the unjust, the innocent for the a hundred horses. He drove the best of | guilty. He arose from the dead and : horses while he was president, among |Went to Heaven to swing open the gates | “All joy,” In her innocence she smil 5 is thew are ant to be overdrawn. | — S E—————— partic true of the lessons| OUR PRESIDENTS AS HORSEMEN. from Nature as applicable to the| General Grant has gone into history as result much benefit has been received by labor and vet Howat has taken the position that he is above the law ani h the man- his favorites being Cincinnati, Egypt and |of pearl. This is what salvation cost|I asked the aged, with her care oppres- phenomena of human life. The facts of | the man on horseback, but all our presi- | Jeff Davis. Him, 'humiliatioy, sorrow, -suffering, sed, or. | SO ves last IR T2 above the International body and pro- srowth, decay and death | dents were very fond of riding. Most of Gu.ung nl:e many fine presents that dahnnlh. 2nd dognu reali:e t!.x;?z e;ery one | All sur‘l:rln:.{ o'er, “Ob, Heaven at t, RACE OF FISHING SCHOONERS. | cods to unauthorized strikes and er a certain point. | Washington's portrafis are equestrian, | GTant received during his foreign trip | who refuses alleglance to Him is array- rest. , 7 a8 n than might otherw creats w fied unemployment. Howat ke in holdinz up | and old citizens of Alexandria were re- | Were two magnificent horses from the |ed against Him, for He said You are |I asked the poet with his soui of fire, directed to thelis now in jail and it has been estab- nt Israel as patterns sponsible for the statement that Wash- |Sultan of Turkey. Grant visited his sta- |either for Me or against Me, there is no | 'Tis glory,” and he stru . because of the radi- | ington rode the finest horses in Virginia, bles daily while he was president. Presi- | middie ground. ed by the k his lyre. international officials that) I asked the Christian wait his release, dit s under which we a s k. he | dent Arthur had a number of good horses A halo round him, how he wered, refusal to vermit!the strikes were called in violation of| o ¥ p SUETR FORC U TACEC B are i‘;‘fi;fl?'hf,,‘ej‘;‘l\ybahffl“x[‘";fl??&.; in his stables, and he seldom drove about | “What is Heaven?" I asked a little child, Peace. 3 ot Seflomia, (o) rtendite Mhen amnfred, by G, dnob i carrying analogy 100 far,|he onee rode 10 different horses into | Washington without'a coachman in liv- M q ternational body to direct the miners | ay reading into the Bible what it | Alexandria in a single week, and during | ®TY. reliminary contest to deter-|io return to work he refused and it Is| was never intended to teach. The fol- | his later years his stables at Mount Ver-| President Cleveland rode out in his cai mine w vessel will represent {his|upon such action that his removal|lowing is a good illustration of where|non were among the best in the country. | Fage every afternoon, his horses being « sch Risie has demon-|eomse. Nature fails to teach by analogy: At|He visited his horses immediately upon |S€2l brown in color. Benjamin Harrison '® t 1 t ls faster by eleven min-| Gotting himself up as being higher | this season of the year external nature is | rising and always saw that they had ;‘:::l “mhe Lm!:"m, lln the White House m m ets ny of the other aspirants for | than the iaw of the state and refusing | 9¥irg. the beautifully tinted foliage is | their breakfast before he had his own. ra“*fiéd :u e m(:! Roosevelt and the nd as the result of its per-|in be governed by the from the|the forerunner of death. At this sea-| The horse Washington rode at the time roouts. torm S0 f the yi 1 = e! o i Monday: Molly Pitcher at Mr.nmouth. hes insnire 1 elot P raq | 500 Of the year, at the close of vaca- |of the surrender of Lord Cornwallis was 5 e d Cantain Weleh |international body, it meot [ e returns to his work with re-|a fine chestnut charger with Wwhite face ndled the Esperanto to wax|(nat the president of the latter B04Y | noweq enersy. While the strength of|and legs, ana he took him to Mount Ver. T of the vessel ould recogn him not only as a men- enthusiastic Put Flesh on Thin Folks s Nature is waning, that o waxing. | non after the war, but never allowed him | | which wil! meet the Canadian winner. laco to] the organization in w 41T 18 WARIRS, (AL Of MR ls WAXIME: | Lo a stroke of work. He was wei sta: || READ YOUR CHARACTER THE NERVES ARD INVICORATE THE BODY— Scibint same’ a8 aill othe | ise Baén pisying ad’ IHporiant B we may be reasonably | i and cared for, and died many years ers of e character, the Americans|to labor in genmeral and, as a leader of 1 that is, however much | ja¢er By Disdy Fhiligs, not s ny advantage that does|labor, to tho commonwealth. AT, Avis paopie iy Gatress | When Washington, as president. Iived R " to them. For that reason| How: d his followers have been | p- oo T o e vaor miera|in Phiaduiphla his stables contained 101 - owat and his be able to take care of the poor Within | goach and saddle horses in addition to Croie-sus Clvteali; re can be mo 11l fecling over the de-| repudiated not only by the international | their own bordirs. This is partally and | ue e i e i dition to : cision azainst Mayflower. Tf it ‘slofcers but by the miners convention ably due to the fact that peo-|went upon state occasipns. He had a| DO YOU KNOW a girl who eross-cuts her 2 i 3 + of fishermen only fishermen | ana the action that h t in| ple kere are not in the habit of advertis- | coachman and two grooms, Who wore liv- “'“’;“}‘“ ‘"d“r{"“g'h -,‘mu" fimfiu’; » mitted and any attempts | pie case is only what has been ing their poverty. Somehow they stand|ery of white eclath trimmed with scarlet| Xt 7908 40, Reeb her in gl G . =i wam 1 ratr to obtain qualification lpy nis conduct and policies up under severe privations, and would | or orange. The p-esident’s parade horse bl e o .“°Y .‘:,h = gt be aiscolralNd Wi BAOAN 25 be justified in comp more than | was white as snow and was named Pres- ey Ok ph o el i 1 il b ed SR e do. Some of the magazines last = cott. With these two. white chargers | D2inCd: 1= the capital leter kA e mth called ur attenti e fa Vashi: it h i;nr: r:m 5 : “x,ou to ll'h‘ hct Wa,mngu{n made ‘hls lO\lr‘lhTO‘lEfl the through the middle of the letter. You all good druggists such as N e of crops in some seotions, to- | southern states in 1791 He rode for 19 | Li0nER Ho AT OF he letier. You al Drug Co. th low prices, had brousht on | miles belind them fn the white chariot, | Joqrve It Princivally in the "M or X" of suffering comparable to|which was talked of al over the count o = s el e that the initial stroke goes more or less not, howeve tre nfl, d;,;"v':‘m.“ Those who think we are not going to : fl,l‘ ;”:.P." have a winter this year are due for a roor op | Pitter disappointment. he suecessor now at the p ! not a fisherman| It Will be tough news for the circus s has been anywhere so long or | white chariot is in full view.” et M R FE T T i Mool elephants to learn that the peanut o strick = ¢ down strokes over the horizontal stroke. snse intended Tt may have been | \ stricken areas of Rus-| Thomas Jefferson kept the finest of | ‘°F7 Srokes over the horizntal atreks. g but it wag |15 three million bushels short. ia. In July The New York Times stat-| horses in his stables, and,at the time of |, V2o8, YOU Zeo it you may be sure that Sedigea Niblng SBGENES aud —— €d that 100,900 people of the sonth were | his inauguration he rode to the capitol on | Lojiant not to say self-confident. De- M Y ot Joston is displaying mueh pride in its| att ed with pellagra of which 10 per | his favorite saddle horse, Wild Air. pendiné upon her other characteristics, o ot haes|polico force, something which wasn't | cent. will be fafal, and yet e have no| While Jefferson was president he took | M Siky oF inny 400 SeOW thik Veabsice ve B whining. & herseback rides every afternoon from 1 s i s ago. g sare aiffere d it been regu-)possible Ju,m._g_ Students of political science ang all | Until 3, and he kept up his riding on ‘x? ;“&Z?:.“ Y e ngaged in the fishing industry i er says: Prices| Others interested in the science of gov- | horseback untf within three weeks of his| ™ yo iy o0, that critielsm il her constructed. The man on the cormer says: ‘2| criment will commend the work begun | death. He kepl, while in the White| o1 Bnd. too, that critfetsm kg her. ver tho outcome of the race|may be on the tobogEan but there iS| ;s jagt summer at Williams college | House, four fiery bay coach horses, but | Snc /'t really good opinion of hersel. ! be as the result of the com- |pparently strict enforcement of speed|ynder the lead of President Garfiel. It |he seldom drove behind them. This opinion may be justly founded, or it poscPie et oy r-Seel [y was in the form of a summer schoo] at| Jobn Quiney Adams was entertained |, nor e point is that it's there” this GMSEY B ddeeisd s st Williamstown, Mass., and known as the | DY horse races, and he used to walk 10| “pyg wia doss & cross-cat capital mean sge has heen taken, and that| The outlaw longshoremen’s strike has| Institute of Politics. One hundred em- 'h: “;T;“Hm";f a60 bak sakin wn::: in a man's writing? will be waged and won on|been called off. It was a failure from | inent leaders of American thought were prassl Lh;" oS 'a trce. 10 DOREI: M So far as men's writings go, you might The spced that has been |the start and never should have been | Diesentprofessorv, jurists fnanclers| Win R 02 O r"0 0o ng iy e |2 well frest i LI oBiiS 1 Suib rafe . 5 B ’il probabi . the schooner Elsle coupled | begun. month the great questions of the day. | Cariot with four gray Isch ol Dre. Dty of otber ity s e with the faet that It will have practi- Among the great men from abroad was | ident Jackson not only B i T o Iniaveth s me crew as safled the Es-| Those who have bought German|Lord Brvce, who déllvered eirht address: | DUt fio delighted in hetting on them, and| "y’ 1y ; poculiar vk decided fect that cs confidence on this side of | marks for 2 riss are Drobably buoyed|es on the general theme: International | 1O 21d then ran his own horses. turnoat | the cross-cut capital is & trait of wom- P ne lne fhat the fishing fleet of this|up by the recollection about stooping to| Relations of the Old World States. Never | Martin Van Buren bad o fine turnout | or'g “writing, * almost _exclasivety, and tountry will be well represented. conquor. before were #o many of Burone's univer- | o, cq was of dark olive hue with orna | WISTSVEr You see it you're pretty safe i sities represerted on a lecture piatform ments as bright as burnished gold. assuming that the writer is a woman. WY = rrwp el g e [ L e T in one season. As this four weeks e 1 : 5 President Polk’s carriage was also of Monday: Drooping Mouths, course will be published it will make an | 5 oo o dnred. Wi cox) g I New York undertakes to correct |2nd Turks throw each I‘:J“’:IP b“:: “:Y entire library for the student of poli- olive, Bietan v % fozs Hl the deplorable conditions that are |0USht to be great performers at put-| tics. And s a interior were of rich figured crim- h o there is nothing that our | oL i nterior were of xich figured crim- | Sunday Morning Talk cevealed as the result of the investi.|Um§ the shot. e et gl e L the order for firing a cannon at his | LIat ma.tained at present that | arrival was: “Light your matches, the | TOHZORtally to the left, the yen looping —— seranto mmls,:iflampound. . A T A T e CHOCOLATE ALMONDS, pound . - — studies as these popularized Will serve i > rations that have been and are being S of the sights of the eapital. Tt is a place of overpowering bright- sondneted in that eity # will not only| Getting back again to the mornings|a big purpose. President Zack Taylor brought to ness, eyeryt that came from Weatly improve the situation in fthe | When the frost is on the pumpkin or | Colleglans—mostly women—are now | Washington the old horse which he had | themce ,,h“‘?‘s,,‘ ni":,‘m ave Al oy | preparing to be renews the demand for | °n route for home, having attended the |used in the Mexican war. He Was as|a great jewel the strect of puee gold, metropotis 1l mean the xn-m--,gnd i s s, Dante pow-wow in Italy. The anni-| white as snow and full of spirit. He |anq every mingle gate a pearl. You know tion of mmny meeh needed reforms. diecake versary of the great Florentine was a| followed the remains of his master to the | the brightress of one ‘mue 'sem" i m safeguarding the interests y fitting tribute to the greatest name in | grave, being led directly behind ‘the fu-|sparkics oa vour finger; b "“.t ¢ the law abiding people Is repeatedly| With the Greeks claiming another vie-| [a1ign Jiterature. Dante, though a pro- | neral car, which was drewn by -eight ¥ B lowd. Nensontofmity to regula- |tory ovéc (he Tarks 1n Aeta Miior it duct of the 13th century, will be remem- | white horses. lions and irresponsible officlals contrib- | I8 necessary to wait and see What the| bered as lonz as the musical language of PEANUT BRITTLE, pound .. e b S gy Bl : g ' PEPPERMINT DROPS,pound . ........... ... ituat mak Turkish reply is goimg to be. Garibaldi and Mazzini iS spoken any- | fiery animal She was as blind as a stone :;A,y ror'!':b;:.”“;:‘ (::, 1::,:;‘,:1, .‘,:n,‘:i o ———— where on earth. His only peer is Vir-| wall and he used to ride her about the the welfare o Society in gemeral. Regardless of the conditions which are Irom day to day being disclosed in New York city, the great amount of ecrime wnd the many unsolved murders, it is bronght out by an investigation now un- derway that there are now 217 licensed Raxicab drivers In that city who have triminal records. These men have been ronvicted for felonious assault, burglary, larceny, bribery, forgery and hav- possession of drufis and yet in spite £ the fact thatdt-is stipulated that N It That the wmempioyment conference | €l but he was a Roman, while Dante | streets of Washington at night. His 1 LEMON DROPS, pound . ........... should to congress tho hasten-| 10 .the nth power was Italian. He | ery was navy blue, with buttons of siver. (REAM CARAMEI.S, i g Wwrote many poems of varying degree of | President Buehanan had a magnificent ing of leglslation to aid tne SiRa- | perit, hut all of the first order of power. | turnout and one of his sets of harness tion is by no means surprising and con- The one work on which his literary | cost him $800. gress will do well to take not of the Cut -1-;..e Ouwt—It is Worth Meriey Cut out this slip, e with 5c_and immortality. rests ig that splendid trilogy { President Johnson bought his horses | Mail Foley & m Sheffieid advice. known as the Divina Commedia. In it to Iy o p s Bhaer s 2l Ye Chocolate Shoppe fox ihis poem Dante ditplays his almost in- | close of the war. His fa;'t;fl:z‘itesirx; ye fddress ciearly. 20U WhL receive in Fe comparable versalily. The first part of [ & pair of fiery blacks, wi n like jet | Honey and mpound for g - g S I:;:‘u’."m";, Of ¢ | the Commedia is called the Infermo in|and eves which fiadhed with spiric. |colds and croup: Feley ok e . great lakes ome, DAt DIOD" | which the writer is simply terrible; in | President Lincol» paid little attention to e ¢ £ 49 roa wa ably only a part of the time that will be| 410" . oond part, the Pcrgatorio, he in. | show, and his horses were the poorest, i . 3 necessary to learn how certain’ Stuff | troduces more of the human touch;.and | it is said, that ever cccupled the White | S1¢ : ‘ s gets out of bomd and storage w:n—lm the dParadiso, he moves in the at- | House stables. T mosphere of sainis and angels, ERERRNB2ER

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