Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 21, 1921, Page 4

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v but his attention was called to It after | It became known what he intended do- ing and several who had planned to| FROM LUCIU.E’S DIARY - derw :: Bulleti: and gnueieé 125 YEARS OLD Gebseription price 13 & week: 30 & moath: $8.98 s e Botered st the Postofics i Nemmis, Cvmm., & meand-clre matter. Telspisoee Cally, Baletn Basiness Ofice. 480 Bulletis Edtiorial Rooms, 352 Bulletin Job OZice. 35-3 ®iMiwantie Office. 23 Church St Telephens IS e —————————— e Norwich, Friday, Oct. 21, 1921, accompany him abandoned the idea. Thus in his case there was a deliberate datarmination #» possibly with the feeling that he could still get a good sized return. - Whatever attraction money was in the cases of both Judge Landls and Ruth there is a decided difference whether the getting of it calls for the deliberate violation of a rule or law in order to obtain it. Baseball would: certainly become a great game if every big player dtd as he pleased 'because he considered varlous rules were unjust. THE TREATY WITH COLOMBIA. With the ratification by the senate of Colombia of the treaty negotiated by the representatives of that country andj the United States, which has already been ratified by the United States sen-] ate, there remains the duty of the United States to pay to the South CIRCULAHOK WEEK ENDING OCT. 15th, 1921 INTEENATIONAL RELATIONS. When President Harding spoke at the ) A e pfdee e A Bl And Our Stock Is At [t’s Best Now anniversary celcbration of the surren-|diSDay resentment and from the atti-| l0 be @ little going 8 bemoaned the broken lock and fretted | captired Manild in 1762 and held it ua- - 3 Cornwallis at Yorktown he found |tude it has taken it has created more} "y, Lerfectly sweet of you!” Ijabout using the small old trunk til the following year but their conltol] fitting oceasion to give expression |OF 1685 sympathy among other smallel | gaiq, packing the hats in their boxes.| “Why, here's the key now,” she ex-|dil not extend outside the city. In ! w Sh U d rfull feelings relative to future republic. The position of the little fel-1 TN\’ look like # milliner’s assistant.”| claimed as it fell from thé folds of|dition the Spanish had to cope with The € are oOWINng wondae y g()()d ational reations. It was nealy a [lOW is invariably espoused instead of | “Penny has gone in the car to dojher velyet gown she lifted out of the|biratical Moros—Mghammedan Malays— B and a haif ago that the frst|the big ome, so that in view of the | errant for me, but I'll order a taxi for| trunk. “Lucile, you must have dropped|¢f the southern islands, who were con- Sults at 335.00 $40 00 and s45 00 of the colonies was suc- irmms made, regardless of the counter | you, Lucile,” said Aunt Rachel. j1t in here when you packed thnfindres g ’m?{h nsz:“rl:\orc de\;lgped ‘l:mds y 9 o o concluded and the liberal it {assertions that Jolombia was doing | “Oh, thank you ever so much, that “Why !us's about that now?” I in- t ally insurrections broke il i 3 will help a lot, for I must get home|quired. “We're getting this trunk pack- |4t and it was in the midst of one of that was ¥ :sted by the colonies in |nothing less thar holding up this coun- WU 1€ % - 3 - e ¥ et e theSe that the United States took - Oth t 25 0 W8 Jaukowed by (he quibnles i | . : 3 quickly o pack mother's trunk. I know | ed beautifully and it will go right on e ok con ers al g an I early days has had its good ef-|!ry because it belleved it could get the| oy "ho perfectly delinted with her | the taxi with you to the station. It's > not n the nation that has|momey, there was a feeling that the|y.¢ ypjch ever one it is." | really better than taking the big one.” ce pacifying the islands, the United s ; ! since that time but in|climination of the matter was preferable |y wag 5o convenient to have a taxi| Mother made no reply, nor did she| t2tes has given the Filipinos steadily. '“ley are f‘-lll to our hlgh standard ¢ s of the world. |ena that this country could well afford | that I took advantage of the oppor-|thank me for my efforts to help her!;';‘c::a's‘;‘_i D°“‘“;" control of their af- yw w natural that the presi-|t0 Pay that country the amuont stipu-| tunity to drive a little farther up in{.off to Washington. 1 did not feel hurt,; 7% wef '_:29;":“;: “(‘"“m'fmn“"hkh . P courso of his address shoud |Ttied for the removal of any possibie| the north side and call at Maisy Cooks| though for I knew that she is a nervous| Jief over the isiands at first under the of value’ and are one-third less than a doetrine of enduring |V feeling, mot only within its borders|for a lamp shade that I am going to|traveler, and likely to be a little for-| ;; ective house and s “"d\ e o the mations whieh |but such as might be harbored by sym- | get Cousin Fannie to copy. Maisy was | getful of the amenities when she is|fhe ‘seven members. of ¢ ; I" . Moo I vaNiicers: home, and she and I had a lot of fun | excited over a trip. Filaon The oo la,st years pnceg, i bloody - cambat. {4 : ¢+ inis | trYIng on Aunt Rachel's hats. We found | Anut Rachel telephoned me t0day|vice governor s ‘ standing shoulder| It is perfeetiy apparent that this} .o sy hecoming that we wished wel crisply, saying /that if 1 were QUIte| president of the United Smwd by the 200 € a ountry hasn't money in such abund-|.oulq grive around and make a few | through with her new spring hat kind-| " “Baueation has bees the eemd Slngle-brea‘td’ Double-breastedand two g ance that it can afford to throw Itjcu)is in them, but, of coure, that was!ly to return it at once. I subpose Pen-! smerican policy In the ‘;a:;:‘" of the while much the |away. There ave plenty of Ways in|impossible, but I did stay for lunch|ny told her that she saw me in it at|sman percentage of the natives were li d concer the | Which it can be used without thinking | with her as she said it was silly to|the Wayfarers' tea. That was cattish|erate in 1898. Numerous languages and Pleatd Backs. others his stand that|of wasting but when it comes to|leave just when the maid was put-|of Penny, for she knows very well that | dialccts were in use and only a minosity that eithee should | maintaining and keeping the good re “inli; it on the table. 2 it did not hurt it any for me to wear|understood Spanish. It was determined ° =] sword <t the |tionship between neighbors, espedially “Well, here you are at last,” ex-}it once, or twice maybe.—Exchange. |to make English the common language S l values n Overcoats to expr American | Where our conduct is bound to be used S, and to open the necessary public schools pec"a American country the sum of $25,000,- u00, such being the amount fixed as ay reimbursement for the territory. that Wwag lost when the Panama republic was established. Long have been the efforts to settle this dispute and adjust the claims of Colembia. There were strenuous en- deavors to get this country to apologize for the part it played in comnection with the canal and Panama, but that was out of the question. In the meantime because of the failure to reach an un- derstanding Colombia has continued t« example for others and against Fhich prohibited Just what he has dome _@§lsregard the law, | pay such fine as might be inflicted and ! On Tuesday morning father creat- ed quite a stir in our house by tele- | phoning mother, that he was suddenly called to Washington, and he wished her to take a lule afternoon train with him. “But I haven't even a proper hat,” she protested when I urged her to 8o. “Mother, let's ask Aunt Rachel if she has something she can lend you,” I said, running to the telephone hefore! she had -time to object. Aunt Rachel} was most gracious, saying she would! be delighted to let mother take one of her hats, and that she thought it much better than to try to buy one in haste. I told her I would go right over and get it, and she seemed very much touched by my thoughful help- fulness. You and Cousin Fannie,” 1 said, “can go on with your mending press- ing with free minds, because I'll bej back in plenty of time to finish pack- ing your trunk, molhé‘l‘ You know, I'm some-little packer. i The two hats that Aunt Rachel show- | (’d me were really ravishing. She had‘ seen them at Jeannette’s and had been | unable to choose between them, andl as she said ‘laughingly she had indulg- | ed in the extravagance of taking both fortunately for now mother could have one. s i “But which one?” I asked. “Have you found out yet, aunty dear, which! one you like better? H “No I haven't. We can settle the: vexed question by letting ur mother | have her choice. And I w it, Lucile, | cmmed mother impatiently as I marth- ed in triumphantly with the two band- boxes. “We have everything ready to put in the trunk and we can't’'get into it. We have been waiting and waiting for ‘you to come home with the key. 1 telephoned to Aunt Rachel, and she said you had started hours ago in a taxi” “Oh, dea.r, hoW she-does exaggerate I protested. “I drove around to Maisy Cook’s to get that lamp shade which Cousin Fannie’s going——" “Where's the key to the trunk, terrupted mother. . “Why, I haven’t.it.” “Well, then who has? Why is it locked, smyway"" “T dare say it locked itself this morn- ing when I closed it-<to keep out the dust. You know it has a string lock” -“But ‘the key, Lucile? W‘ner!es the Key?’ “How should I know, darhng Do be more - calm!” *“Do you realize that we have to leave this house in less than two hours and none of your father's things are packed and only a few of mine. Fannie please telephone right, away for al locksmith.” No locksmith in the neighborhood could send any one to answer Cousin Fannie’s frantic appeals. 1 suggested that mother take a differet trunk. “But my own handsome costume is locked in this one.” “I'll get it out for you; don’t worry,” 1 said and I did. With Cousin Fannie's| help I opened that trunk with a ham- mer and a screw driver. Mother, in-! Stead of praising my resourcefulnessi| lendid color .from the growth of red WHEN HAIR THINS, | FADES OR FALLS, USE “DANDERWE" e 35 cents buys a bottle of “Danderine.” Within ten minutes after the first application you ean .not find a single trace of dandruff or falling hair. Danderine is to the ‘hair what fresh showers % of rain and sunshine are to vegetation. It goes right to the roots, in- : igorates and strength- ; ens them, helping your, hair to grow long, thick and luxuriant. % Girls! Girls! Don't let your hair stay life- less, colorless, thin, scraj A e application of dehght!ul Dzmderme will double the beauty and radjance of your hair and make it look twice as abundant. but it was not a peaceful possession. The Dutch - attempted " time and agaln to cap- ture the archipelago; Chinese and Jap- anese pirates made raids on the isiand cities, and in the 16th century a Japanese shogun actually demanded that the Span- ish governor of the islands acknowledge the sovereignty of Japan. The _British to reach the great mass of children. R ILIRIRTRIRRYIREYIV N Don't stay stuffed-up! Quit biowing and snuffling! A dose of “Pape’s Cold Compound” taken every two hours un- til three doses are taken usually ks up a cold and ends all grippe misery. ‘The first dose opens clogged-up nos- trils and air passages of head: stops “Pape’s Cold Compound” is Quickest Relief Known: nose running; relieves headache, hl- ness, feverishness, sneezing. “Pape’s Cold Compound” is the qlm:k est, surest relief known and costs only a few cents at drug stores, It acts without assistance. Tastes nice. - tains no quinine. Insist upon Pape’'s IT IS TIME TO BUY =|SUITS and OVERCOATS FOR FALL By E 5 1917 more than 4,000 pri I >resident | and when we are seeking to 4| primary schools an i President pnd 8 e ver: § £y () o o he was|expand our trade relations, it is quite | emeNTs auenicas §||READ YOUR CHARACTER ||} 8" rmicnae, s 2377 U ok of nations |Proper that we should look spn it | RUSTORY | By Digby Phillips, { half the estimated total of the children of S B Ch £ rfi d’ icated how they can and | treaty arrangemnet as something to i ot e the islands—600,000—were enrolled n o o esterieia’s, . . utton vk together for wemd better-|meet and not dodge. Colombia’s action | — e E———————_— that_year. . By 1920 the emrollment had (| he dec] after referring | Indicates an early completion of the re-| A YEAR WITHOUT A SUMMER — T reached 791,626, 'I‘hro h Half Belt Ulst d Hfllf ths sed | maintng detai When “Old Probabilities” upsets Suspicious Handwriting “The trade of the Philippines has in- ug! S, €ers an ™ the centuries, that things: Lo such an extent as to makej Look at the letter you have just|creased tremendously since 1899. In that x he centuries, that e = ; bt SieRio i iti or 3 the combined ‘total. of exports and he b 5 has 2 CANNOT BE IGNORED. us wonder as to the existing quq;uu written. Is the writing rather sm jyear s come When| @ ongh Ambassador Herrick paid beriod of weather, it is possible to|and has it the appearance of having Soborls Whe, 12,0000 ;in 1911, the fL Sters. ou sho see ese er- re tion of essential| gh A s - reconcile .the condition by going back | been crowded on to the page? jiol wan $164,000,009 Nearly every man 1 gmong rnations, devoted, |o attention lo the threaiening WATh-|jugiope hundred years, to 1816, when| IC 0, be warned. You have certain|in e wonia who us3S a rope pays tribute coats ! sacly of them, in its own peculiar ings that he received it is .evident now | ooy g wimout a summer.|tendencies of character which may (!0 the Philippines, for ‘Manila hemp' is way, t common good. the | that he should have, and.there are rei-| mnls was onc. of the most smushal| well bé a hanalodpiand & cauise af ti nn/‘h(;fr‘f:se[ b]es;_ roge materisis knowil It " the advance of all human|Sons to believe that extra precaution|years as to weather conditions tha#|happiness to you. i ed from a species of banana U d d h bef th n wi'l be taken henceforth to safeguard|has ever been recorded. Tradition has| But so far as character anaiysts have | t7¢% "l““_”’ $47.000,000 Worth of it was n erwear’ boug t ore e pre' The president plainly declared that |the lives and property of American rep-|it that there was a frost during cach|been able to discover, there is virtu- ?x"‘"”a"t‘, 'd" ,1l“‘- Cocoanut products— ey e b | R D o o amoniar | 6 tho Laiive months, Dit. Ihismich | iy D0\ CRAFSCESE fendencs Which sen: | [tk snd of—come ‘second. ”uch of sent advance—75c¢ to $4.00 wor crefEnty or a programme that|agents in those centers where threats|as the Government did not begin to Jl:)ll_bs_lturned into either an asset or| pyy ot co::a;";‘ns ;‘:“e ‘:h";fl';l:mfsmn; U e et S I gRLGien keep reliable records of the weather|a liability, according to the manner s v 2 i Would consider submerging personaiity jhac been mado to fhem. Z in various parts of the Unitel States|in which the.individual cxercises the| Lol 2mounted to $20.000000. As a pro- N i s i Ha i lised the mecd 'of “uring. | Drvclopments subseauent fo e ex- | B Warious parts ot e Uil Sintenl B, SR (S, SOV, ©Xoriiees ) ducer o sugar. the Philippines” catnet egligee Shirts, ts, Caps, Hosiery, st thought of ail great peoples [Plosion of an infernal machine In the | cuiiy “Giat gecurred during this year | endowed. There are no perfect char- | jose: (oqmPared SHith the famotn sugac 5 4 nto understanding and cooperative en-|American embassy at Paris show that|js hard to establish. acters. Some are weak or Srong iNipcitles the group ¢ its production in fac about n ieavor which shuns the allidm attempt unen the ambassador's life krom fragments collected from the|some ways, and some in others. Above |y, ponogm;; azd'bl:'orcnlamed bk evel awe arms and strengthens the comcords in|Was due to the misguided offorts of | newspapers of that period, however,|your mental and physical equipment is|ene world’s sweetoness. ose, STmE. peace.” Sneh are sentiments which if |Ccertain anarchists who were updertak-|it is evident that in 1816 the average| your will, your soul. Men and women The Philippines might be sald to be ed man n&ds ollowed would result in better pela- |ingz to influence thereby the disposition | temperature ~during the summer|are good or evil, not according to their| jagged land both vertically and horl- H theas hitoman Al nations. Tor cases of two Italiams, also an-|months was so low that many per- | characters, but according o the Way|sontaly. They are vers momntaimond NEE == the 1Hfe - i sibility of a change of seasons. characters, according to the ends thev{Though only abo & i - THE TROLLEY HEARING - the Mo of . vegmueerin o 5 files's Wee! eg. | seek and the moral control they exert S e e e Massachusetts shoe factory. Needless In an article in Niles's Weel Reg: dt e o area of the United States exclusive of s every corner of the state there|(o say whatever they have ' dome or | iSIEr, a baper published in Baltxlrnuxl‘xe, Tt youer }f:n‘;‘;-mm“ e o }A aska, the Philippines have a coast 7 ucrest in die Bearings that before | threaten to do Wil have no effect upon e i k| Handnly Bowapdl the vicht Wik ‘of the) o o ol i = x xah I:fl;fl:\ \::‘fi v-fcl‘f'{la the dispensing of justice in their cases.| o Ml R 0 LT ore based on|DPdBe, you ‘are inclined to be overly|dious bay and with a geod harbor. has : ; i I CET-. They must pay the pen under - the | pororts that came to him from various| Suspicious. Train yourself against |an excellent strategic position. It is a t is not 10 beljaw which in the opinion of the court|paris of the country, and ‘in part For the rest you are strongly in-|sort of oriental center, less than a thou- those n those}aster ascertaining the facts is deserved. | Jar New Lngland. He says: “This sum- | ¢lined toward thrif (among other|sand mi from important Chinese [ ] { ] » ) are being| Byt with the bringlng to light of | mer has hitherto been ex . things the crowded writing bespeaks|ports and less than 1500 miles from | - ones Who arejother instances where the lives of Amer-| with the exception uL a Vi few. days ious desire to save | southern Japan, southern Korea, Singa- ! P13 3 ares comd 0Wn. |1y 1 Bucopern eities. have . been | that were very warm, The &l Bas bees a virtue, but miserline pore and thé ports of the Duteh East Good Clothes Store” Th some communities, like Nor-{iyraatened by the same or simi overcharged with upuu for the prin- your writing is crowded vou ! Indi It is estimated that within a wich and other places in this end of {minded individuals it means that the | CiPAl Dart of the time while the want| have enough natural thrift. Don't en-|radius of 3,500 miles of Manila live vhere the ten cent fare sk SO e | of ruin has been feit aimost everywhere | COUrage it. Make an effort to be gen-|three-quarters of a billion inhabitants— A M e g B, authorities must put forth extra efforts|, . .\ icularly in the central part|€rous occasionaily, both in busine: jmore than a third of the total popula- R Bl AL 6L oo .r" it rirgrss Stepge ‘:"{‘Ch x ”“;3' of Pennsylvania and through the great| Personilrl i Keep a w -ition of the earth.” 2 % o Ot imay take to carry out eir threats |\, o - the achiar | yourse! and mak o : 1 g e 3 range of ‘the Applachian Mountains.”|Y If a ake a conscious effort o % : 1 F. Plant and h land it would also appear that good and | in weather reporls published dur-| 0 avoid narrow-minded views. Mrke | T two principal mineral products (pot- The Peking Legation. Bl sufficient ground had heen furnished for | ing the ecarly part of August of that|Il 2 Doint to be generous to others | Gtories That Recall Others ashand tungstem) obtained from thel.. A giance-st ths namss=o > Gje Bw and figures making. a_strenuous effort to elean ou | vear 1t was shown that during July, | Your thoughts. And above all, deter- e D ot 35,000,000 27100 countries where the United States min- to the commis # s = fe an temiperature for mine not tc worry over trifl 5 = 3 908,900 iste: | opriately installed a dan s element hat 1815 the mean temperature for the T3 tri ; e iste: is appropriately installed. in his a b Mo Ut 1 el e e ; ton. Del. was 78.3|ous effort along these lin Fing OM Welte. Throughout most of this desert re-|omcial mansion bet A rather eccen- i s year e oo Loy hesiny bo-orael, e e e vl e e o e % Pauline during her, five years had heard | gion places where water may be ob-|iric shoice. writes Tesressa 1Lome o ihe - yes business at a! \ypen such a class undertakes by such | While in July 1316, th e ll' . % \dlought taake Hent e \ssets, | grandmother talk much of the relics that | tained are few and far between. In|worig's Work. Instead of London, - present fare where 4 |methods to infiuence the adminis- | OB PO i e L e 3 3 455€1S. | she pointed te with, pride. JTke was a|days gone by the desert prospector | parie Rome we fnd. 4 logatic vesi- o loing business at & |tration of juetics, wnd tries to | ‘.“f“ff‘ et bt Piorsow -Laughing " Hair i horse that had been owned by the grand- | used burros or horses and wagons, and | gences in Bangkok, Peking and Moroee a vever, under the |maintain that murder can be committed | “ete®ipe SVOSIEE SR PR OSEAS BOH = R parents for vears, and one day Pauline | he was compelled to carry with him on|co. The lesation at Peking is na . only about half | ho thefr kind without paying the pe: G i e TTERS TO TEE EDITOR ;t]nr‘)rll‘\\:;;hxx,l‘l‘g ifif&'?fi-&"fi‘éé’;{nfifs }qflsatr\xv;:fi:"?r:er rloarc:o‘;h m:gta;xodu:fiafi larly creditable, b e v < AL P - > B sl o i ¥ E s r: as o a nlace 1 g s T "a‘““",’“‘; "’1““’] et et DUETHS Srets e ol s Owls On Broadway. mane, After several minutes she turned | he expected, of if the well or spring e vepld s reservation - b more than still, twirl the thumbs |was cold and boister ! oven-! o Rditor: What § . | o her mother. = A o' ot 2 Sant 90 o s has come {and wait for ‘he threats to be carried |ed mild, but grew it s f s S Lo SO i malr tHat e Tooks | ety gt He | the " prethient Gl ] b 2. oo dud N animals MRigHt]sicnia kave b nirdW i the NelsL o Garesse | - with complacency on the melancholy spec- : prettiest old | suffer great hardship or even perish.jof Pecking strike the traveler RS i o lout. Those responsible for the threats | vanced and. many CTOPS WETe tacle of the.three owls in a cage on low. | P87 “Won't he make a fine 6Md relic?” | Today the prospector travels by auto- |cariousiy B Shalcns Sicoms . o o2 Ppnean ihave clearly indicated that they consti- grozen and corn killed. In May ice f0.m" | .+ Broadway? B There Was No Reply. mobile and distance is of much less|so generous well afsposed” toward our e o H » itney ltnte such a menace to society that|ed one haif inch thick; buds formed| Throughout the summer, choked by | Robert. aged is of an inquisitive | importance. If he does not find water | diplomat in The rather shame- ought r(: there can be no molicy of toleration | Were frozen and corn. Irost ice and | dust, languishing from the heat, blinded | turn of mind and fn-quemlv asks ques- | at one water hole, a trip of a few hours | faced answer never bought = w Siire of Imaintained toward fliem if safety i jn | SUOW Were ‘COIUNOR. IR vJunc. Ann0§1 by merciless sun and never-clouded arc of his forlier which bring oniy a|will usually bring him to another. of 1900, T'nite are made the o sion |any vray to be assured to the Individual. green thing was killed and fruit |light, poked from side to side by the | grunt in reply. Travel in the desert with an auto- wi ’ on. Whether [Their activities canmot be ignored. all destroyed. Snow fell to| pencils of school children, by newspapers, | At dinner the other evening Robert | mobile, however, does not necessarily for P g i 1= “”,,h of three inches in New York| Dby cigarettes, these three little creatures, | was : mean travel without danger. Many t fare adjust- EDITORIAL NOTES. and 3 achusetts and ten inches in|to whom God gave wings, ve crawled “Pa: is steak? Where does it | persons traverse the desert who are not WL that D be whea '3 5 4 5 i Maine. July was ac and cringed and fluttered ween their | come from familiar with the coaditions to be en- & 3 P waited with feen fn.| Armica ought to be about as popalar aland ice. Corn wa 2 homeless bars. in their helpless quest of | .That was an easy one for papa, and he | countered. On the- transcontinental Cotten Operatives’ Automobiles. s of all copoarned | TD in the footbaill training sgquads as|in the Norther: ates. In August he'<helter~ promptly responded: automobile routes across the desert the Pretty hard times when a New Bed- ,N‘4|‘ s s - [some of the signal combinations. ! formed one-half inch thick in various; NOW two only remain, with winter| “Fram cows, son traveler is safe; but it is much easier|ford cotton con: anning the =2 Lt s | places. A cold northwest wird prevail- before them, and no other friend appar-| But he was not prepared for the next | to get long distances from known wat- | erection of 1o be used _for Rio § “pre made | 1 a thandershower at this season |ed nearly all summer. Farmers were|€ntly than death. : e ; 5 ey ering places with an automobile than|housing the m SPotitiom— s 5 ¥ Wit RIDIY |00 is conr eans anything we have'| compelled to pay $4 fo $5 a bushel fm.’ = A WOMAN. From our two cows, papa? with a team, and a slight mishap at a | Boston Transcrip ntire system S5F Lomel weptning FOF clioE iweather: corn of 1916 for the next spring’s plant-y Norwich, Oet. 20, 1921. {remote point may prove to be serious. bercoen ing. The first two weeks,of Septem- —_— PRODUCTS FROM A lenkyk r;diator and a dry canteen or | LANDIS AND RUTH o d d th ” a .cracked spark plug may mean a With volunteers ready in two states ;’?r Fere midang oo m"’t,w,m, withi N THE DAY’S NEWS THE DEGERT BRGNS Gf tieny ‘ailes And suffecing ling' some are to deal with ! i | frosts and ice. October was colder than 4 et aracit county. In. the Eiaiten P of y miles and suffering - - to operate trains in case of a strike it = - 5 Jov ¥ The Philippines. Begs € A from thirst, v F : the case is indicated bY |anour o 5 A with frost and ice. November | P i States is. San Bernardino County. Sty T e Horlick’s the manner in which they g shows how public sentiment is running cold and blustery, with sufficient! “The Philippines, 7,000 miles from wuse|Galif. which contains more than 20,000| LD need of mapping the desert et F10 hat Judge Landis ought to be the I s 7 snow for good sleighing, while Decem- | Paciflc coast of North America, furnish|cquare miles. All of this county except | (0248 and marking the watering places The ORIGINAL S i eas iitinis 5 ‘he 1ast] October has ecertainly got- everyone | ber was quite mild and comfortable. |at once the greatest stake and the most| . faw hundred square miles is arid |DAS 10BE been appreciated. Parts of Malted.Milk Bate Tgep e anviing to say about lrgoting for it like a bad player that, A letter from Erie, Pa. dater June|difficult territorial problem of the United | J.1 " formine the greater part of the | Ne Mobave Desert region have been ; abe Ruth playing 'a few extra games|giams out 2 home run every time at bat, | 14, 1816 sa. The season has been dry | States in the Pacifia” says a bulletin | \yopo oo Desert, which inciudes also ad- mapped by the United States Geolog- -~ of baseball in order to get the addition- and frosty for weeks together. It ap-|from the Washington, D. C., headquarters "oinin ig of To8 Angeles, Kern, and ical Survey, Department of the Inte- T u ars that wil be obtained there-{ . DT g . | pears as if we should have no crops|of the National Geographic society. P b y rior, and signposts have been erected by. t is beginning to be noted that Ruth | i {1cqe parts— the corn has been iil.| “This is mo tiny island territory like et ersons who. are unacquainted | Y the counties, automobile associa The position they take is that inas- made a rapid recovery just as s00n as|eq hy the frost of the 9th, and un-|Some of those that fly the Stars and wi}h ifio%eser{ believe it to.be a barren tions, and other agencies, but definii much as Judge Landis has been willing She world series ended and his team | ti]l very lately Lake Erie was not na-|Stripes in mid-Pacific,” continues the Wasta x‘umpamg of supporting life and and precise information in regard ost. | vigable for ice.” bulietin, “but a country of nearly 115,- b, > watering places has not been availab. of a : epa- ” t the $42, 90051 2 nfxd" - Durins 1816 spots were noticed oni000 square miles—a greater' area than ;:t'l's"'?tn}'xf"fi:ai s:r:i‘f;erug;e sotp?t for most of the region. ™ “Food- Drink” for Af} Ages. B ts commissioner of “hasebail m | Bockuse Babe otk is jurt whas he|(he fun snd some persons attributed | (O 0t oIS (U PR oY | But to those who have become ac-| - Quick Lunch st Home. Offics. ~d . 5 e vnusual weather to these spots,!J® » < 1z ai ith i i = 5 0 g, < seght not to.penalise Ruth for lecking ::h;:e ;1 lh: big baseball players, his | 30 WTASHA. thought the earthquakes Vined, or, among the islands, greater than quainted with it the desert is gne of | Fifteen thousand lives and $500,000.- Knnntams. 4sk fos HORLICK'S for some extra dollars. e g tion of tho rules cannot| nat were felt in South America and|the three large southern islands of Japan | the most interesting regions of our| 000 could be saved in this country an- Avoid {mitations & Substitutes Nothing is of course said by sucn|P® overiooked. Lisbon had something to do wich thlupen which the life of that naticn cen-|COUNtry. Animals and plants are|nually through firesafe construction | people it i & g b Snditi th the | ored while it gre wto imperial stature. found there in considerable variety. G ple about the fact that Ruth made unusual conditions. At any rate, the| ®S bs A The soil is generally good, and where | &= — o * wonderful recovery from his injurles| W have it from Viscount Bryce' that | change was so great from preceding| ~ThIS far-away territory of the United | Te 80/IS ECORRY EDOC SO0 HHCTS after the close of the world's serles, | AMerican fears of Japanese aggression | Summers that the people made up lheir:;;”'t’?a“; e s raireiiant u“”;}g:l: produced crops -in ahundance.- Sev- Bowfl. POISON MAKES YOU SICK trom several games of which he was|aT¢ Sroundless. That will make a big| Minds that some mysterious force W88 s than a quarter the present popula- | €ral thousand acres in the Mohave —_— kept out because of the claim that | Dt In California. at swork making: oyer e World. iion of the three most important Japanese | Desert region are already vielding| te required a long rest or the use of Something of the attitude of the i jangs But the tropical Philippines,|£00d returns, and doubtless much more| Your bowels may seem regular —|usually from bowel poison. Ms arm might be scriously impaired,| The man on the corner says: The next | LeoP oy Loy be gathered from an edito-{ i) {heir ample rainfall and luxuriant|land can be cultivated. The most val-|MoOve every day—yet your thirty feet| Hurry! One or two Cascarels to- By . s : rial which appeared late in the sum-| " i g . 5 of bowéls may be lined with poisonous| night will ciean your bowels h! The barnstorming proposition with its | Proposition from the railroad men may vegetation, are capable, in spite of their | uable products of the region, however, p right seaitite’ $3E008 h its B . e mer, in which it was stated that au(munm‘mqus character, of supporting a |have been obtained from its mineral | Wabteé Whieh is being sucked into your| By morning all the constipation poison possible X or so seemed to have |be to have the rafiroads turned over to | seem disposed to hope that the season; much larger population than at present. |deposits. The value of the mineral blood, keeping you half sick, nervous,|and sour bile will move out — thor- Mfected an alost overnight cure, them as a holiday gift. will return again'such as they were in “Magellan, who saile! almost® around | products shipped from this region dur- | despondent and upset. Whether you|oughly ! Cascarets will not sicken But the parallel drawn between the former years, but.if they do not it|ihs world, and whose name has been|ing the last 25 vears is about $50,000,- | have headache, colds, sour stomach, in- | you—they physic fuily, but nev..flp. sase of Ruth and that of Judge Lan-| If there is profiteering as the reswit|MAay be a matter of no consequence.|given to the famous strait to the south |000. In 1918 alone the value of the|dig€stion, or heart palpitation, it is]or inconvenience. lie fe enything but correct. In the |of the railroad men's threatencd strike, | VCECCADIeS receive mew. constitutions, of South America, discovered the Philip- zase of the latter it is to be realized |they will of course blame tho railroads,| [LC". (ransplanted -to an uncongeniali pines, sailing among them from across hat he violated no law. There is a|the rairoad labor board o iy | SO1L or climate, so will the habitude| he Pacific in 1521, Ho was killed short- 2 a : sy T Possillly | of our bodies doubly change to suit : i skirmish with the na- irone feeling that he should not have |publio ¢ iy atieenniil " L5 r B >h' ave pinion, the changes in the season. i tives. Magellan, though a Portuguese, iaken on sueh dutles while a judge of (Tomorrow—The Aurora Borealis |was operating for Spain, but the Spanish h.g coart but he broke no law in doing| The country certainly needs a reduc- of 1837 were slow in asserting their soveréignty It wasn't a case even where a|tion in freight rates but is it golng to i = x They captured the native city of Mardla kW existed which ho didu't belleve was | expect it ot the expense of the rai-| ., Tne famous “erimson. cliffs” of|in 1570 and founded the Spanish city the st roads which are hardly able to keep | GFeenjand which . extead. for miles| following year. Wi ik Phaien v ‘i ke ta L e S 3 ole io Xeeb | northward from Cape York, derive their | With only one siight break, Spain re- VAPO&V it almost at the ‘highest peak? en that covers their faces. lmmned in onntml until Dewey delnle" the Spanish fleet mwnmx. Over 17 Million 7

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