Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 5, 1921, Page 4

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‘. American ships which passed through . the canal and got the benefit of its ad- vantages but woul hate to depend up- ' i on the revenue obtained from foretgm h ulkh',' ships. That gives no consideration to \ I .31 78 | chipping which would have no use for The gentleman’s [his vouth Multitudes cross seas and continents Sief the canal and would pay mo attention t0 | name fs Mr. Guy Fawkes. At an early | vesterds: in order to see objects and places of and Goufic other forms of transportation. It wouid | age he broke away from the grandeur or beauty. Nations expend ———— be picking out a particular class for | religion and embraced their miltions in Mn“uwlnnc mhzrw 125 YEARS | pecial favors when as a matter of fact | thought was better. He left England and | col and brand new o far as the. the finest examples . {1t hae already received great benefits ::‘rl\‘;g!w;gh ‘:he Spaniards in the Neth-|is .g::and. £ e could :.Io nothu:!:; = s b 1 & wee | throush the huge outlay for the canal . He became very fanatical in his experfence that brought Wing fmte | cept. re meared the place, e SRER Should euch a plan be suggestod it conld | HeWIy-tound faith, and when ho ro-|contact with Lincoln is as dramatio as | tion at having deceived them vanished, for | Biace on evith ‘u"“"m":“ iy Butesc «i 4 Podsfice st Nersih, Owmn. % |ba cxpected .that there would be raised ;‘;"";‘m“’s;‘:g?'_: ae ‘:’m” A conavira. LEQY. SIS SIS War GEERS oF wers taking me to & ford guarded | S0 TUFL F pnerto you been I the cry of untalr comsideration trgm I the Mg T ite m&:&: inevitable happened; | blind, but that now you: eyes are open- hois & P gy {hoss engaged in the transportatlen|n, farther nobody wewld Bave object. i &ognized and had to cut for it. I alecs Eifersl Rooms, B4 |business and needing assistance DOSSi-|ed. Worss things are done every day |tion was waiting for. 1 was the young- iver, mfssed the ford Reheatiy i Ballsin Job @Tes 35-1 | bl as much as the canal users but un- | than blowing up kings. But these fama- |iest 6f the New York “Tribune's” field cor lightful everything seem. oo Wmanthe O%ce 3 (hoceh Hi Taesdens 18 fanle to get it because their efforte are | tics proposed to biow up the members of | respondents. Two years before I had en- R; “m“”“fi‘flm" m'n-mm e o 5. o5, |confined to other 'airections. parliament on the opening day, Novem- |listed, was wounded at o hdore <he. wiallgme mnd -might of the 2 ber 5, 1605. Fawkes was captared, barn- | and fvalided he serviee, T b £ “The heavens declare I~ —_———_—_"| ~NOT INCLINED TO ALLIANCE. |iNg match in hand and publicly execut. |game to work for the Norarich, Connecti- a B vy oF tod, axd o Dt e CIATED PRESS, Thers are mot omly those abroad but|°Y SIX Weeks later. This affair is known |cut, Bulletin,’ where I wrote an editarial | had ab the horse and was walk- | 18 BT 08 L T v K coreiy eiies || ihose at home who womld like to see | og the EUnpowder plot, and on the an- |that aftfacted Horace Greeley's atten- |ing along the tracks of the Oramge and |P'F0 0 MUCTIEC Lo (o) por on- One Lot Consets, valued to = 472 | lonis country join hands in an allience | qmen . Gy U) FaWkes, as a stuffed | tion and he had eiven me the job as cor- | Alexandria railroad when they mabbed | 5" 12t of (he - grandest stghte of 5.00 to $18:00- o Miwin cortii GOSN odiiilen., - THAK fl:&‘! ;‘\’Jm abg::_‘hlv:ydo:n B!:‘;wmen remdmp ent. 1 had joined the Army of mewwmnd- Ym‘d%wfifi_: earth. It is that to Witich Paul refers i fl to g . : otomac at winter quarters in north- B craw) “I was . Y wetse e || Wore those who were anxious that it|more than ome permon at o e Wilh |osstern Viechiin. et opas of tho Mot fant K Shrané Wamk mn the dark, e g el s e s~y w4 &k mm 19 hocome a member of the league | gunpowder. were centered on that army. Then sud-|a chalienge, and I was safely in the fed. | bp¢ NESVERIY Vison! Journaged o B : w=—== of nations regardless of the dangers| Last week your attemtion was ealled | denly, Grant and his 120,000 men disap- [eral lines at Union Mills. way to Damascus, suddenly there shone - = which were pointed out n connection | to the profound subject of rubbish, and | peared into the forests south of the Rap- | “Of tie half dozen correspondents that |1 10 JEANES SCIEHT (IR SUNE One Lot Valued to $7.50— ey ueh membership. It s not impos- | the duty of cleaning it up, having par- | pahannock and Rapidan river, cut off | had made the attempt I learnéd I Was [ip . op the noonday eur, &nd you canm o i (o find those today Who still fa- |tioular reference to the outside premises. | communication, and engaged Lee in that | the onty one that had got througn. But [ ot 0 S ATOR U JOL, TO8 SO0 Sale Price $4.50 n dotien, Now you can take it from me that ail [ desperate three-day battls. my troubles had only begun. The near- |, girian noonday sun, But thers was Vovertheless the cowntry has firmly | (he rubbish that accumulates on a man's| “At the close of the first day's fighting, |est public telegraph station was at Alex- |3 (igion of the face of the glorified Son eortect corseting is essential. WEEK ENDING OCT. th, 1921 ren aeainst such & policy and from | PFOPETLY is not all on the outside. Some [as Grasit was reforrhing his lines the | andriz, 30 miles away, and ft would 6105 | co ' Man There were unusta: fhatures - e Ome Lot Valued to $5.50— it} lays of the republic thore |Of it clatters up hly mind and some of |four “Tribune’ correspopdemts decided fat midnight. This was af 9 o'¢lock. Ilor this manifestation of Himself. The To the woman Who appre- 2 11 6 Z r G ing fmvolved | .t 8ets Into his heart and gives him bad |that one of us should &y to get througn [souldn't get d horse'or a handcar at any leonversion of Saul of Tarsus was the ciates this need, we suggest sal Pm m 13,Q@4¢ @ been warning against being WWolVed | heart action. Look at your librars col- | to Washington and telegTaph the news to | price, so over thg military wire from |groatast miracie since the resurrection - o err — sopean alllances. lection twenty-five, or, possibly, fifty four peper. I was 25, the voungest; s¢ | Unton Mills, T sent to my- friend C. A.[of Jesus Christs. And vet in fts essen- BON TON Corsets. Their when Ambassador George Har-|years ago, and what is it worth tofay | I volunteered. Dana, second assistant secretary of WaT, |#fa] features, Saul's vision is that which graceful lines enHance the QOpne Lot Valued to ””_ vt os o | o7, speaking in Liverpeol to the cham-|taken as a whole? Of course yom have! ‘“While making arrangemwits to leavs, | fhis fiessage evary one may have, if he will but life wp pr T Their 0 . {ner of commerce, took oecasfon to re- |Some of the immortal books, but most of |1 met General Grant and told him of my | * T am just In from the frént. Left [hie eves and look. That vision was the ot any Bguts. Sale Price » n of Lord Derby rel- | It belongs to the “grasses of the meadow, | plan. I asked Him if T could cary a mes- | Grant at four o'clock this morning.‘ secret of Paul's later life of consesra- correct @esign emsures corset aler o0 the possibility of the United !r:i‘x‘t‘ak;l!ns:)m'tbut n;ndie,' w{nh othc;bdl- sage for him. Knowing, of course, that| “Back came this: : tion. It left no doubt in his mind. ¥t comfort. The new models - 2t some fnture time joining in an | TECHons, dom't we fll up with rubbish |the seventy miles that lay betweem me | “ ~Where @i you leave Grant? spurred him on to do great thfugs for proes One Lot Valued 50 with G,,;:“R,im,,j and Kp,a,me that necessitates a genulne house clean- | and WasHington was filled with guerillas | “It was signed, nof by Dana, but by |Christ. = o are now being Vi to sl . P o e g 1\‘0!’!‘ was Saths :‘r: pn;p‘::i;' ‘mc?has_w;?x;; Are things fld";T’i tr:flons, e smlfleflflgflffly» Stanton, Secretary of War. Then !trsa& — q [ Price nm that such z eping into the live young peo- | “ “Well, he eaid earnestly, ‘it you do sec |lized what it meant; the government di TTE] fos ..ah & r:”“"‘fl‘:‘:fi“;“":{"";h""‘;o’f ple th:t t6nd to debanch m:memu:ns. the president, tell him for me that, what- | not know what had ha.ppenesud in the Whl- LE RS TO THE EDITOR Front and Back ed the sentin “|They are up against somd things that |lever happens, there will be o turning | derness; I was first to a telegraph with | ‘Conduet Always Above Reproach. and country. demand the Ifberal use of the ecrubbing |back’ the biggest news of the day Mr. Raitor: The writer of i artice |§ MISS SABOURIN, who is a graduate of the BON-TON Q0 States has repeatedly |brush. “By four the next morning I was in the { “I told Secretary Stanton that I would |is not informed as to®who semt the 'HOOL Or e you. Make frated fhat it is ot actuated bv| Ome of the most persistent topies of |saddie and away. At Cuipeper Mines, a |tell him all that § kmew f he would let | communication resarding the remmmmii |§ SC e v SaaORe « motives which have caused other | conversation just at ~present s, what | Unionist friend furnished me with @ but- | me send 100 words to my paper over the |of the pastor of the First Congregationai || an appointment with her now. ‘o 7o to' war. It prefers peace |d0es, or what ousht to constitute per-|ternut’ suit, a battered hat, and & pair |military wire. church in Lebanon, to a Hartford paper - ¢ and wonld prefer to See the |manent isabllity from operating a mo- [of brogans, which he persuaded me was| “Again came the peremptory query: | and which wae conied by The Bulietin of - isved by other mations. Resard. | toF car? This question will keep in the “Where did you leave General Grant? Monday, October 31st. The result of 1o leseoms of the recent|front rank as long as the automobile fi “T replied that the news belong to the | the article is to injure (he charaster and 3 cented Insiances from | SOnRUCS {0 be tHo clef assasein of | rafiway organtiations were slifewd | Tefunc' and reiterated my terms. Stan- |reputation of an ezcelien Christien min- | titoh I Alnciose that | s ‘OY cm;m— great severity must be l.enough to ses tjat without flie strong [ton’s next message was to the post com- { ister, and our reputation as a chureh for - o mtrios whish fna 1t | USed In dealing with the careless driv-[hacking of public opinion the strike |mander ordering him (o arrest me as 3 courtesy and considerstion in dealing | 5 o Cadden se co s which find It| or, hecause he is wholly inexcusable: | would be doomed to fallure from the |spy unless T fold what 1 knewl With a somewhat strained sitnation. Dur-|§ 140 Main Street, Norwich Opp. Plaut. Co. to stir up trouble and engage in|equally drastic measures must Drevent | start. Perhaps, also, the motor truck| “Hungry, tired, and miserable I stretch- {ing the nine years spemt here his ocon- to keep out of it. Ambitions | the intoxicated men (or woman) from |iand automobile loomed up before tliema|ed out upon a bench in that cheerless | duct has been without reproach. No unm- o s 1 for conquest ever holding a Heense agafn. But I5|as just a little too big station. I was virtually on parole pend- | kind or il considered word has any one " 1 dRRE T enough said and done to keep the man Ing orders from Washington as to what | heard him utter. His attontion to the conditions haven't been so purged | (oM holding a driver's licenso who holds Wwas to be done with me. Came was still | sick and unfortunate has been a subject 3 e o 10 e nclined to enje|®_ciminal's rocord? The sclemce of as death. I was just arowsing off when |of remark and his prayersand adminfstra- . . t s bt hatn ot pens! s discovered that a crimimat CIDENTS IN AMERICAS Ritho telegraph sounder chattercd again. | tions at the funerais of his parishionars “AU’I‘OMOB“‘E wREcKm” - 3 allianco i mot only hax u uad heast, bt o poFvor- SEE “ It's for you, said the operator. ‘Mr. |umostentatlons, temder and sympathetic. ed mi © is sub-normal without bein; e i - i 1 R f r condl: i v policiés o country relattve | actually thsane. OWEHt a drivers Hoense S T e s e e s true members of s consregation || | oW FREQUENTLY YOU READ THAT HEADLINE, MR. AUTOMO- e s have long been estab-|be glven to such a man? Law in New |pgg vIGILANCE COMMITTEE OF| Mr. Lincoln! The President himssif!|tion is nothing mnmsual in the history of [ BILIST, AND THEN PAUSE, WITH A LITTLE SHOCK, AS YOU RE- ; . are disposed to confine our-| York says decidedly no; but New ork Civnb kit Neverthelsss, T repeated the terms I had | the churches and calls for the kindest || MEMBER YOUR CAR IS NOT COVERED BY INSURANCE/ e e i . * ¥ Sieria tntnence ARl IBEITEEER I The extraordinary conditions of law- | M2de to Secretary Stanton and they were 1 consideration. “AUTOMOBILE WRECKED” MAY BE WRITTEN ABOUT YOUR CAR cxample In g0 doing, though| pid you ever reslize that the difforont |jossness that existed in Californiz fol- | PFOMPUy accepted with the request that, | —The writer of the articie is not thanked |} oy DAy, NO DRIVER IS IMMUNE FROM ACCIDENT TO HIS' doing there is not the disposition to | states ‘of mind have a commercial{lowing the mold fever of 1848 had not|in View of the importance of the news to | for advertising the needs of our chureh in E RSONS. - = n 00f from the rest of the world or | value? Suppose the men whe' stand at) guplicate in the history of our cousitry, | tie country, I give the Associated Press a | the aforesaid manner—as it has hort the || MACHINE OR, WORSE STILL, TO PE 3 : verved ction ain from jéining whatever move- |the head of the greatest corporations ejther hefore or dince that period. Such |brief summary of my dispatch to the Tri- | reputation of our retiring pastor, who, |} LET US TELL YOU E TIME ABOUT AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE » are for the advancement of civil- | shold express themsblves in a sort of |was the mnsettled condition of society | bune’ g T oiome, for himself In ] AND OF THE SATISFACTION OF DRIVING A CAR SO COVERED AS r t0 a normaley siness, = H iatory. 60F MiE e. 1 E ent. 1 . - y | not inspire confidemco which is the mervo | Hooa ang daring. tho erimesagamst | With me. Standing at the side of the cp- .. ereer mepEn. |} REMEMBER, THAT ONE AGOIDENT MAY COST YOU EVERY DOL- = THE AUTO ON FARAIS, center of business activity? All _yow|iife ana property, and so fnefficient as|erator at Union Mills, T dictated a dts- | Lebanon, Nov. 4, 1921 LAR YOU POSSESS, INCLUDING YOUR HOME, IF YOU DO NO’ o fodern methods farming differ | have to do is to keep teliing John Smith | weli ag glaringly corrupt the courts and|patch that occupied a haif-column In the CARRY INSURANCE ON YOUR CAR. .. rably from a generation | that “you never saw him loaking better |jugges, thias for a time robbeéry, murder. | “Tribune’ of the following morning. With | PRE-WAR CONDITIONS RETURNING WE WILL GLADLY TELL YOU ALL ABOUT AUTOMOBILE INSUR- 2 New idea w discover; iis life” and he at once will begin |arson ana violemee of every character pthat knowledge that my article was in ON OCEANS TRADE CURRENTS ANCE AT ANY TIME. B siauay Timshe | 1 flesh; you have made him more | were completely in the ascendency, so |my paper’s hands, I started for Washing- | ool curranicon the oceans of the 3 anges, 5o that it is not surpris- | a workman. On thepother jthat every man not actuslly fn leaguo|ton on & locomotive furnished by thel oy are apparently returning to pre- I O e methods are giving |12nd: pessimism w % = 3 g - r conditions. During the war, says the y C directiap, having 2 commerclal value for |was put on the defensive, and carried| “The Cabinet was assembled at the | /P p 0" 0y “po The National s - |t ho can put it acress. Pessimism | his weapons by day and slept on theni | Whiite House when I arrived at about two | @85 0000 FOCC ¥ o € O SR 30 FRONT STREET * PUTNAM, CONN. hor | trade mark of the unprincipled |by night. in the morning. As T eritered the room, | oo o o ‘ha Atlantic resulted in & * | ess man. It is sometimes used as| “The outcome of this condition was the|T suddenly realized how unkempt was my Saerable fHekeas OF MOVt 6t cele i 3 an organizdl propaganda to Dboost the |organiation of the historical vigllanics |appearance. T became aware that my bui- A e ondie e oo T to e found | price of commodities ";-' peach grow- | commitice, which consisted of the most | ternut’ coat was very wrinkledynd vers | ot “pecetul B g S i ere one @ quarter of | €%, Deach handlers, and peach séllers |influentint’ men of San Frascisto, wl v: that the trousers far fpo Yone for oriAg s the BAl grewnh ider that the present trade with e’ a common |3l in in some scerec, sodlety | wal: |bound thomseives, “each unto the Other. fme, had been tarned up and ed with Pt e S it "‘;”:Z:zf“fi‘:;‘d:d:"m, wm: ey, et of WAL e fhevagh ey axe B 50 | o the trosti” - In responss up gusd: the |f0r he amiickan OF Iy Sad Lo o twine; that my hair was wildWY s ihe Atlantic frontage decreased. e zeased the share entering | the Atiantic ports, shows in 1921 an in- 2 b farm when: it ia/|0f, the fros s o4 the the ma e of 7 " | disordered ; and that my orogafis bore , & mently {ucre: - of 2 mt e e e 0 | Drice of peaches. Or it there is o drought | The first and oie of the most €xCiting |'heavy dephsits of the ‘saored soil' of Vir. |, I, fhe year before the war, says the |grougn the uorthern ports from sbout |orease over Joié of only 82 per oot o T |in the fall you can substitute potatoes |cases growing out of the cxtraordinary |ginfa. Gidecn Wells, secretary of the | CAnic® statement G5 per eent. of the mer- | 19 per cent. In the opening year of the jo7er, 1300 WS Foot Wl O per THE WATSON — armors own' ofie. or [or peackea: organization occurred in San Franciscolnavy, and a personal friend, introduced | Ciandise imported "““v““‘\‘_:“‘if’ i““; war to 16 per eent. in 1921. Sl e Ghat v B et emie r cen |, I there not a real power in amything |in June, 1851, When s Sidwey comviot |mg around. With the ald of & larze wall | 53 'ores, "WFOUER the DOVt of Wew VOrk 808 | on ne cxport side, adds the bank'e| TN B0 N BT e hen com- & pbut | that is excellently well done? The real |was caught in the act of carrying away{map T explained to the President and his | () aiantic ports a8 awhole. In the fis. | Statement, the percemtage now handied| o rine"the fiscal year 1921 with the - ! of this emotion may lie in the con- |a small safe which he had stolen. The|aides what was happening in the Wilder- S I;H‘; jith the Bimgers Llby the various ports also indicates aiGo 0\ oar 193 i E i ross of most of us that we do|man a desperate character, wal seized|ness Then T said that T had o personal |21, YC2r 1918 Wih tne dansers fo v |l o’y prewar equditions of shippine s A AN Amer poorly. < thought came {by some menibers of the vigilance com- B ¢ Otlantic the share of thelm- | jtes. Owing to the démsnds of Bu- o - el e R e Bt Stened to |miftes, who SORUUOtéd: him TorEHWILK 10| erancy F e President an dthe cablnet {yorts entering thronsn New Yok had |Foutes Owing to tie SSwsaet o€ WS QUEER “CHALK" LINE . - ” R Marine band. Looking around I saw |their headquarters, where he was tried| «pjone the president seemed immense- | 2LeR to 42 per cent, as asainst 55 ger | PG O OR L Cihe exports which pass- | Carpenters sometimes use a piece of S . @ | SRR e e Jies ? ' Tt d Immense- }oent fn 1914, and that entering through Y ¢ < in- ing for marking off a g RRs e robably as untrained In |In the presence of about eighty members|). tan T mad mot moticed 5t until he |° L e "% |ca out of the port of New York in-|chalked string rking - sraigt bher technique ¢ c as myself, but ot the association, was convicted and|qcoq over me while T stammered out | the entire Atlantic frontage was bt .aced from 37 per cent of the total | straight line: but the Chinese carpen- e 1s the smallest number of | o o onjoved it! We were under the |Setnenced to be hanged in Portsmouth o T s, T " conldn't | 33 Per cent- as against 72 per cent. in ho fiscal year 1914 to 48 per cent.|tér prefers his string greased. He of the New Tngland ststes] 2oy ; . jGeneral Grant's message. e couldn't|ig(y feantime, the share of the import |¥n the fseal - i mounis h footlon. of execition. | square that ufght fiioert me Gty andk A6 wollter. Grasy- | ntime, . Tt |4n 1917, while the share by the Atlantic | makes a small ¥ooden rest and moun é might b t painting. great sculp- | During the progress of the trial the | n B B0 (NG Cliders he bent over un- ( L20¢, Crossing the mire peaceful Pacific {f oo o 29 a whole increased from 55 [it o the large end of a cow’s horx ean B8 great preaching |cltizens hud assemtbled In 14766 MUMbETS | o pix eyes were level with mine and |ong ShicTIng by Way of the Bacifc Ports [her cent in 1914 10 70 per cent. in 1817.| He fiis wooden plugs into both ends e = Sio bigheer | 2 nz, ‘create precisely (ne [abont the building and the square. Tt|L S eves WEre 1eVFl WEH Wohe A0d|naq inereased from 7 per cent in 1914 1CC0 RSN Tl Ciin or merchandise o . of thé horn: Then be rums a cord x e e i 2 The reason is there|Was arranged that as soon zs the sen-[[TACS S TSt oL U MIMHORCR SYONY |0 21 per cent. in 1918, while on the norey |10 (o PTG Seiantic ports and the' holes the plugs and ~ o of farm | is 80 mu work done along all |tenoé was ‘passed, the bell on the Call- |7 s . T | Drovan (ack winds it on the reel. Finally he poars « in the per- | these lines that in the hands of mastery |formia engliie House, nearby, was to tall Vi o oy @rate wo1d me to ten wpu |°F C2nAadian products resuited in an share of the Gulf poris | grease in the hole in the top. Now » sy Yo R T {we are e 1 was giad to see so |the funeral kmell of the wretched mam. |, ;u Bt 0 ol et Baos U jcrease from 10 per cent. in 1914 to 16| o 4 from when hé wants to mark a stralght » SO B E e i many boy sent and hone some were |It was 1 o'clock at might when the bell | Tom "'; e S “!“"b' St per cent. in 1921 in the fmports handled | 1 I7 n 1921. Wi5!line on a board he pulls the de- . ni Massachusetts respec- | g to take up orchestra work, |tolled, but before It had ceased Capt. these wifl be o tumping backsd by the northern border ports. the reduction, howsver, in Buropean de- | gived length of cord through the o o Isiand having the - highest| Remember Derfection grows out of | Rag, of the pofice force, applied to the' “The president's wonderful eves glow- | “\yith the termination of war however. |- merchandise, New York's| grease in the horn, stretches the ¢ of any state, 115 | persistence. Think of the mractice Mr.|dobr of the commitfes's room and de-|ed- T shall never forget this picture of |,nq the reduction of dangers on the At in the export trade which |Jine taut upon the board and with g | Archer must have had before he could |manded the prisomer, FHe was refused |him. Every other leader of the Atmy of [jyntic the share of our imp entering need from 37 per cemt. in 1913 | thumb and forefinger snaps the eard. ¢ the farm | manipulate the cornot as he did. What is |Several times, amil othiers of the police | the Potomac had tarned back, and I had |, tho port of New York slowly returned, cent. in 1917 fel! to 42 pef | The heavy biack line of groass that A e the bene. | Worth doing at all is worth doing well forcs Who were on the ground saw it |brought him word from one that would |(, pormal. having increased from 42 per 0 and 39 per cent in 1921.| recults not only guides him as he saws ™ 3 &ttt doraa | 5 Was no mse to attempt a rescue. not. Exuberant, he pulled me to hi cent in 1918 per cent. n 1921 as | of the Atlantic ports a8 a{the board but perbaps aiso makes e i ¢t i tne | il the Shriners have had their in-| "Somo persons climbed the liberty poie | and, he ®as so glad. he kissed me on the | upainst 55 per cent. in 1914, white the | hich had advanced from 55 Pef | sawing casier.—Exchange. s ase themin the | and the batting average was cer- |ty rig a blook for the execution, but it | forehcad—THe Mentor. ahard ente way of the Atlantic|cen: in 1914 to 70 cent. in 1916 ¥ . t h Had the Sphinx, which |was deemed Inappropriate to carry out ports as a whole advaneed from 58 per | gropped to 57 per cent. in 1921 Middletown.—An_inventory of the es- 2 - e i procession, boen incarnate, of |tho sentence there, and he was fimally | ——————————— 700" 18,0, 70 G0 her cont. In 1921 a8 | “orre return of the Atlantic ports to |tate of Albert R. Crittenden, late of thin - EPITORIAL NOTES s 50 e or S0 e Have | mpari=l 0K 2 bom of 2 Mz || oPAD CHARACTER || ccnt. fn 1514 Meantime, | oy e-war share of the trads of the |city, has been ficd 1n probaie court bere g e complacently smiled at tho honor confer- | tom hause, et not Seloee e orape YOUR CTER || e e T ooty e - Whols aale s BN mi red. Had the image been permitted t0|populace had literally torn him to By (Taby X Miine, TS SEat 7 gaNam i L e e - of a art from it protle g zu;:v Dleces. Another similar execution tooi ©epyrighted 1921 | { o ard from its lips the | place within a month, and was folow 5 ¢ fmport ® %o n : ation from Rameses | by others in rapid suceession. iy WEAK “17 Syt d e g il e - the Second or some other guy of the day, & 3 cerned, the share entering through the il or er guy Y, | Determinod to be thoromgh in their [ o e fantic, Gl and Pacif 3 . g how the Shrinersion;the Basiliof lwork: off *pirification; the eOmmiitee | oo Yook b I the evea of thess who | Atlantic, Gt and Facfc Joecs b again | r Ty Novem. | the Nfle Tejoiced in the prosperity of |served notioe npon every viclons 2| read character in handwriting, is the “t” |back (o practically pre-war propogtions | st 5 w over- | T i e O POoE ey wictor vhich the crod-stroks of the total imports, while in the case| 3 ol brethren on the banks of the Con- | pected person whose name could be ob- | 0 T the o e igh o i i n 1 delighttal as t and the Thames! With the |tained with a warning fo depart forth. | T\>d, and it tells o very defintte gtory | _________ | - t only ge chance. camel it only neMed a few palm trees |with. This, with the swift and terribie | O Character. . { i Mg in the distance and the familiar Pyra- |executions glready Twitmessed, caused | . ¢ WeaK "t is miore often found in v . n mid to complete the orfentation of the |mmltitudes to flee for their ‘!Vn’s 'Cfllnn: pmens Rer N Sl il s andi it 58 i I 4 - seene. The nip in the air was not |rapidly Qiminished and at length, for | S2turdl this should be so in view of its} | g « [ | quiet Egyptian, but the Sphinx was not |the first time in some vears, citizens felt | SiSDificance _ outware urbed by the anachronism. | secure in their persens and possessions. i‘.’u ‘. never find what is cailed S| - {1t has travelod so oxtensively as not to| But the vigiiance of the commlfitee | doMinating character among either men | 3 . about to|Mind so little a thing as a change of {never relaxed. Governor McDougall fe't | O WOl Wito cross their “t's” in this | 7 Shetneket provide | 90 desrees of temperature. 1If there was |that it was about thme for the law to | (ashion, for they're not of the gritting- | = 3 i et frost in our air thero Wwas nome In our |stop in, and When two men were found | o¢th, do-or-dle type, no matter what: Hone Nearly Gome, but Lydia E. o s | welcome. as subjects for the next sentence of the | Neir other virtmes may be though | P D f ot | From tho 17th chapter of the Acts|cOmmities, Whittaker and McKemaie, he| ORI fair to state #hat in tha agevesate | Pinkham’s Vegetable Collpomi | rae sovict Russin would like to|Of the Apostles, which many of you have |declared that they wouid be dealt witn | these other charcteristics may often | Saved Her H o h soviet rou.|D°2Td of we learn that the crowds came [through the court. But before this conld | Make them much more desirable citizens | 1 b t TOU- 1o Mars' Hill expecting fo hear some |Dbe d0%o the bell rurig akain and members |24 admirable personalities than many as well |new thing, and they certainly received |0 the viellanc® committes suddenly ap- | ©f the determined omes. | Star, N. C.—*“My monthly spells T what they were after. We sometimes \Péared from every section, and in @ very| The woman who crosses a “t weakly | gave me so much trouble, sometimes o hear about the ‘“craze for something|SHOrt time the men were executed. the |is a woman who can be easily led. She | g they would last 3% TTEET I latest talk is of sending Emperor |wew” as though it Were an unworthy |SPectacle belng witnessed by upwards of |is not very decMled in her views, and | wo weeks. I was a3 REPATING rLs tles to Madeths. BhE oughm't the |ambitton, Paml dia mbr. condin e |t thousand phople is not Ifkely to insist very much upon | treated by two 39¢ at- | 1 s to be given an opportunity to | Athenian propensity. ' Would there be in- Sueh terrfble and repeated examples | consideration of them. The same is true | doctors without MINTS, W“ld o aiainlli= e et e W " tdens about 17 Ventlons and discoverles were it not for | Of SWift justice at the hands of the cem- | of a man who shows (Hls tratt Nief and they 1 LB. BOX BON-BONS AND CHOCOLATE 8 this tendeney of the mind to know the |Mittes proved affective to a great de- | They mhe people who awtometically fit Poth sid I would - 59¢ . Chrintmas shopping could set in |ENOWable? The dark ages would soon |7 In “cleansing San Franclsco from |into the surcoundings in which fhey MIXTURE, O ERERLE Vo L iristmas shopping cowld et i Ibe brought hack it the human mind |he horde of criminals With Which It had|find themsslves. In Rome they alway BOX B 3 ind continue right up to the | snould stop being inquiskive. The men. |Deen sorely infested. FExtending its op-i«do as the Romahe do” not.so much ONE 2 LB. s ne customers. business and father|ta) faculties Wil continue to grow as |CTatons throustiont the state, the vigl-| because they believe it is good poljey to | wonid orobably be better satisfied. long as they are cxercised, and jt is |127CE committee determined to effect aldo so, but becsuse it is their natural Ty fhe new thing that furnishes the proper |*O™Plete renovation of soclety—to break | inclination to be Strongly influenced by a fine situation when striking | incentive to activity. We like to smetl | 7P 2nd drive from the state the Dands|the people who happen to be aromnd th 7 bemse's of t s |m vers use violence against groe. |new flowers, to see new landscapes, to | O felons with which it was troubleéd— | them. . ! ok et Pesins: sua prover rnment “hn are delivering mitk. Possibly | visit new countries, to read new books, to | 214 to awe Into submission the polfical| Married to persons of dominant traits, | ki - lot cver getting |} PEANUT CRISP—A-1 Peanuts, pound. .......... 25¢ gty B e ok <a way to win the public sympa | Hear mew sermons, and fo hear people |DUIles WHo %0 lareely controlied the | ey go: aiong easily wify them without | anybetter: Fread aboutyour medicing : : dipped in bitter i frois Gt of the 1 tell us stories and jokes that | they | clections friction. Married fo persons of their | in the ‘Primitive Baptist’ paper and Dainty COCOANUT KISSES, in s Sepdpiatiiied | B T e (2%t WONS | ouia o 'me mromerts mncters | O Prociivien they bocome pairs con- | gacided to try it Thate used Lydia Checelate, pownd ......ccccciidecaioe.. . 200 bellectod. There would be re ob-| But for the aloohol that is in f, i | oo~ DOt Do atrailof aiyiing new Lol U ur i commietes | reimo e e aa | B PRABa'S i Jieound O-fashioned MOLASSES CREAM BAR, pound 40c Jection to this countr * tha appear that the,real beer would | A8 thiy paragraph ia written, the news. |1ts administration. This was true mot | e’ sy s ot e roable | : | and Lydia E. Pi ’s Liver Pills e Pegard-than there miia nsidersd for medieine any - more | PEPers rebort that at & joint meeting of only of San Prancisco but of Sacramen- | saver wgerecsice or sesfstant " | for about seven months and now I SALTED JORDAN ALMONDS, pound. .......... 80c LRy & e et gy e o oma it of ome por semt. ar. | the various heads of the rallway depart- |10, Stockton, San Jose and other pisces Y am able to do my work:. I shall never : z R e i DRE for the-uze of thé'| oie ments, 1t was unanimously voted to call | Whero crime, nawed and unpunihed by | (Tomorrow—“Second Story” Men) . forget vonr medicine and you may |§ These goods are made of the highest quality material ob- B e o ] the threatened strike off. Wiiat caused |courts, had been thus summarfy and publish ‘this if yon want to as it is tainable. ive discount to Sunday Schools and Parties. Bite a6 & eubtertuge or 2 dofethz of U | The cutting down of the public debt | heen fas maation .,g?wféf“fl:; i ety In o o true.”’—Mrs. J. F. HURSEY, Star, N.C. | § . We give breaty requirements. |nearts o naif bilion during October 1s | companics held firm against any e 0 btiltoes o tio: bodastn Aented. Btories That Rocafl Others Here is another woman who adds One 2 Ib. box of Chocolates sent to you, parcel post pre- His view deals with the treaty excellent news. ‘That 15 sometMng|sions. Was it fear that there wonld bo |the iMleality of thelr acts. Thev de. . ————— her testimony to the manywhose let~ pfi@m‘mfi! 150 miles of Norwich. Send check bne and makes n netior *n | which Wil henceforth requre mefther | Tush from the ranl of unemployment |fended their course eoiely o the crowed What Did Maecher Say? ters we have alret P"”M$“"‘ b American vesssls engaged in | worry nor taxation. to fill their places? Perhaps to some ex- |that thera was no security for 1ife or| It was in the charch parlors where ing that Lydia E. ham’s T or moneyorderfinfl.w. > foreign trade. Each and all woul | tent, becduse there Was 2 nation-wide Property either under thie regulations of | there was hanging a picture of the pas. nzle(;ommdofmnmmhg th trested alke that Sappencd io have| 1¢ vou are mot mumbered among the|fecling that tho ralluad system ought [foviely, ns they bxistod, or undsr the l ior which had been taken more than % {o suffering women even after they 2 show tion that would “ake | sontriutors to help the United Workers | 2ot t0 bo od . Clearly the main rea- |’ as then administered. Tho resulc of | vears previous and showed Mm Wil have gone so far that an operation is e oco Jrem usrough the canal. meet 1ta fnenclal needs don't neslsct #t | SO0 et 26 RET Rl et publle (nls Vigiluneo commitioe hae left, for | rather long, curloy hair. Hencielta, a6l geemod advisable. Therefore it will ” N i optuion e than half & century, California as | four, was there with ner mother, the min Whé suffers . Colonel Bunau-Varilla favors a mb-|ioneer. Peeome Montified by your 1o fwanted the rallroads to'rum and what |Safe a nlvce fo live in ns ANy offier stata ister and & roup of cmurch memper. SUCly pay any women who su 49 BROADWAY NORWICH, CONN. Jér plan_concerning cansl ustng |with the work which Is 5o much needed o peopie 58 ¢ whols wazt they wsual. {jn the Union. She caugbt si®at of the picture and re. Iromsuch ailments to try it. Jemels. Under such an arranzement |and so benefietal to Norwich. The . jenders of fhese various (Mond v—Our PFirst Mint.) garded it inteyuly. Finally she spokc | i

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