Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 19, 1921, Page 4

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fore the war has been used as the basis| THE MAN WHO TALKS ome o RN 3 and from that certain modifications hae e ko THE m mm DU'” a-' been made so that Albania gets a dis- ‘;l'yhere' m;ogm;;:; f:fléfilfimwm' Fes o SR : . trictsthat \was forsieriy past ot Jueo| FOVORE SO L N0\ evmate ] The ed and duty of the hour } and $8. o |savis gad Hisre sge ceMgin SvRsUEeS for cmaning Ite fetich. Americanis gms;mm;figo& :qfln & srwich g“HEfl B R L e et many e of 2 the paustr, esmer nitel evens : t race developmen e are ms e : 0 J f safief however, dogs not satlsfy, and in adding | things in our national life that must he | States Senator Albert J. B«afllga of 1 3 Ot course, lt!:‘B:l.n,le for the und 9’“"“ to sending its Protest to the aliies Jugo- | corrected before we stand up before the | Indiana told the N;':;‘:::.‘.\am h-m“é plagues eradicate .,""’""-““ slavia has mobilized its forces gnid u:n vg:l«; ::t s;;ofi:{.:oth znfifi;sngomm ber of “ck-mnuu ‘banqu sl hg . g T Dpresent depression is not a tran- 125 YEARS OLD find aut the Tesnls of the Brotest. That|the only blood Worth preserving is that st Sl phare due 2 a1 ynhapey state o on th A. L. Bellefleur Had Sufferec Fifteen Years From Stom - —;—'—“fi this should bring forth & note from the which dates back to the Mayflower. The : BifErinetmes w8 - vart of ‘business ® k ach Trouble. % :'- e Postoffics at Normich, Comn., as :!Ty to M :“xhhm u,‘: ’:::: noble ideals and with courage great mn t:rhteh 1mmymvl:a s;erlflmym:n& 3 t and e 2.4 B 3 = an ultima 2 “ | enough to try out those ideals. The Pil- |10t to X a mes " | with regemented “For fifteen years” said A. L. Belle- e . drawal of such forces was demanded|grims were the progenitors of a remark- %dfleel; o::;r leaders -:t.ot:vt::u e out, Yeat o Ace ‘akon Tron i ity | Gour, 210 Hickors Bt, Norwich. T nave SRS could by no means have caused surprise. | able people. But they came to our shores | Mr- Beveridge said. Rl “owners and yum a1l of expression, from sour stomach Bulletin nu«-ahntl\-—-‘ s The disposition to disregard any author- | 300 years ago, and in that period many :“:flfe inflat] W‘u of &mnd b R xpers u liar may Ehart pie solon; | Dloattng, and. my condition Bullia Job 0w, £33 [ Ity and to enter into the conquest of |changes have come. If the New England | that prosperity 's Just & A AR e iia ;g eves, or if he is able to | Sn medicmes 1ok © o ®Tmantic Offics. 23 Church St Telophons 18 | whatever part of Albanta s wanted fgll hail not be’? enncl:;ddln that time || 3 mfl'{nfl‘t v . : of “I had Mo appetite and my food dis myst naturally giye much concern to the |1t Would now ‘be: wretchedly poor. v by agreed with me to such an extent that 1 orities named to check such setfon, | f°F8 had been no infusion of new blood | 4io ¥ *pT SRCHTre people go around ] Went down 10 & mere skclcton of my for- i < oA e “aation |10 300 vears the old New England stock | dstrust. For whep the Deoplo g9 a1 e Gy ‘ot liars, though they may aftect o |mer seif, and 1 scarcely had strengih 13 Consequently the outcome of the actlon|yould be equally poorsand thin. ¢t | the corner an o find etW A gl i el B et Tnoe St e sl work. taken by the league's comnell Wil be|Americanism iz to he-in the future {s |BFOPEEity, hut are again told 1iat © s e DS i the e hen I got my first bctie of Tantas awalted with keen Interest as an indi-|going to depend on how the “melting e cgy‘:sr. m;t e;s:b e g SEGL Ropn 1 s z hu::g ":l mu:w:‘l:‘o‘. ‘;xr‘\ i 'm-‘z cutien of What can be expectod by m;“ e our z&%"&?‘wfim confidence. zel . Dalance the scales at one hum " Who presume to make war at Will in Bu-| The things that make the mast for |; Dy ai: intment. must also come down. ‘ twenty pounds, m: a g rope. emmaugel aar amoE by s e B H e e for piain. maaiing by | . “Our whole economic system has been | LETTERS TO THE EDITOR |pounds on two bottc:, i 1 & X not the routine acts of congress or the | men who have graduated from ambition. | inflatéd to the bursting point and gen- picking up, both in welght and sir AN IMPRESSIVE SOLUTION. deeds of parliament, for these are the A E i, DI . Let us frankly know the worst at once, | eral deflation was and ig indispensable. | OTFanizations Disclaim . Mr. oore's expected things that must be done. It |Yye have been rather fed up on ‘the giad | The farmers have deflated, business men Statement. is rather some unconventional and Spon- | hand; we need instead a period of ‘brass | have deflated, most other labor has de-| Mr. Pdltor: Under a headinz “Press X smployes coming to an agreement In Te- | taneous action of human hearts because | tacks. 2 flated or is deflating, and rafiroad labor |Said to Aid Liquor Interests.” The Hart- |1 was troubled terribly CIEQH,A’H% 8374 to Wages Which Invoives o feduc- | they deeply fegl for others woes. Noth- | “Ono of the immediate causes of the| Must undergo that common. universal|ford Curant of November 16, quotes |\ DeSR paivitaion and . 3 tion there s much that will interest the|ing since ‘the war has done so much 10 | greeping paralysis from which hasiness|and necessiry process—indeed, labor in-|from a statement made by J. E. Moore, all that. My appetite is fine whole country. This marks a radlcal |CEment the bond of friendship between |ig suffering is the plight of the rall-|flation in the production of the absolute fassistant superintendent of the -Anti-S WEEK ENDING NOV. 12th, 1921 §i ;0 .o from the past and would in-|the French /and American people as the | roads. necessities -of human life such as coal, ore I took Tanlac I In the action of the packers and their agrees with me. 1 have v = i el an i iy g Lie ench v !:.on League of America, as follows Mllhwhh that l)uénw‘xx lrm 4 mission of General Pershing to depo: “Today rallway rates are oppressive, | housing, food an 1SpO! lon is one|churches and temperance societies are |hac since 1 fin: h 11,659 e e o e e 1o n. | & medal of honor for the United States | railway facilitics inadequate, raiiway em- | Of the Drincipal clements in the high cost | confronted by tha hardest Awht of ail |Ue of Tanlac 1 ue ’ directly concerned to glve heed to &M |on tho grave of an unknown soldier gt |ployes dissatisfled and rebelilous, railway | Of living, and normal wages In such in-|io have the cighteenth amendment rigit. g g adjustment of their relations In a Wey|the Arc de Triomphe in Paris. This was | equipment impalired, railway capital re- dustries is indispensable to normal prices. |}y enforced since the propaganda is be- -,.,.,,:L"‘“xm‘?m-fl which will not result in & needless waste: | his Deautifyl apostrophe: “Comrade! In | duced and imperilled. Until these con- The Adamson law must be repealed.)ing ciroulated and money expended, and |can go wrong by taking Tor THE CONNECTICUT PRESS. In such an adjustment there is also con-|your heart there is malice toward none, | ditions are bettered, all forecasts of good | The wartime labor classifications, regu- | the press fs subsidized in a manner ha=d- | tainly does the wor’ sideration given to the public, and|but charity for all. You fought against | times are the mere matter of politicians, | !3tions and so-called_‘national agree- |1y conveivable in order to obstruct the | Tan:. bo amvected 0 oparate s a boomerang.|Whether it happens to be the packers|@ great calamity—war: but your work | the crafty wiles of men who have axcs | ments' must be abolished That curlous support that is necessary in the enforce- ig | Wil never be ended till all people have |to grind, or the senseless incoherences |COntriver of makeshifts, the so-called | ment of this law.” 35 awd In Pljlofied bx T I, Perhaps that will be realized even at ""’:”:h“:wg"‘:gf:; i d"‘:::' e’;‘f_ rid themselves of the burden which pre- | of pipe dreamers. labor board, that tells the railway owners | - Mr. Moore's statement is made the sub- | Cones B Carey. Jewett City his late date by Assistant Superintend- [ O™ he public is bound 'to be vitally | P2ration far war imposes. You gave| “Almost ten years ago I denounced as|hOW much they must spend, must be con- | ject of an editorial which appeared in| F ent J. L. Moore of the Anti-Salogn|Ploves. the public is bound to be Vitally) eyerything for peace; but your sacrifice | the - invisible government the sway of | hected with that other organ of our bu-|ihe November 17th teue of The fart. |naturaliy infer Mr. Moore b league when the Connecticut Temperance | Conoerned. will be sterile unless a generous senti- | those financial conspirators who gought | Téaucracy, the interstate commerce com-|ford Courant, ent!tied “The Subsidized |before he makes Such » statement. V Unon and the Federation of Churches| The action taken by the packers comes|ment of disinterested co-operation replac- | to dominate the nation. That cabal of | Mission, which tells the: rallway owWners |pregs” In view of Mr. Moore's remarks |40 Dot exp@t to in Conneeticut, before a joint session of |45 the resuit of a ‘thorough understand- |es all hate.” This is the spirit that killa | cunning and avarice has been over- | how much they may receive. If raflways |and the publicity given them, it was fo |Bot the slightest he ehich he was a speaker this week, dig-|Rg Of the facts by those. direotly in- {war. thrown. But amother invisible cmpire | 370 lo continue to suffer straitiacket|nave besn expecied that the local press |We doubt s Existcace. lat . & i another eolumn, the|VoIved and With those facts as 2 basis| The age in which we live is marked | 1as been established, as evil and danger- — 'n"""b:t‘ ot :“ ‘:;‘: be co-|would make some sort of editorial com- |OF Other, possibiy atmont which Te made tn nis adiress | the decision has been reashed, and ths|with preciseness due to our reverence | °US 85 that of the dethroned autocracy of | ordination between outlay and ncome. Rash and unwarranted statements can ment. The rejoinder and disclaimer as OF the Mr. Ricel = “The contract made by the government | it ’ settlems indicates isio; for scientific pursuits. It is the day of | Wealth.. Th's new assailant of orderea it stands in The Courant pretty accurate- to the effect that the press of the coun- ;‘;ifl‘ f:‘bé“‘:‘“e:e;h“ the Sesiiin ) B: Siiins UEmuiles dods e day o lifsey ana \ Terican institutions is the | With the railway owners when the Uned i, expresses the sentiment of Conmecti- |cOUDtry over, will com try was sbsidized against prohivition |EOUE 10 b9 Temestel -l aceept things 48 real that submit to e |®I0% and VI corporation of those|Were taken by the administration must and its enforcement, Mr. Moore thus % cut people regarding Connecticut's press |that in the long run £ : yard stick and the ‘scales. Mathematics | 1 Who have made themselves masters | be carried Gut, the indebtedness of the | ™ur. Moore had come to Hartford to | talking brings far mo - : ment of wage questions, without the in- ) of iabar unions. roads to the government for improve- t othe cause of which they are sal iously discounted the benefit of his is crowding poetry 'to the t ! meet the directors of the Connecticut ol seriously discoun terruption of work or service, that much | oot g‘p :17 to th \\'g}l. and hhe “Organized capital and organized labor | Ments funded and that of the government Temperance Union, who In turn had been | SUPPOTters. address in the minds of his hearers and b : " | mining _engineer looms up bigger than | - to the roads paid—all is provided in th i g ; valuable help is given to the nationwide alike can be made useful to all men and b in the RSl Shose who were responsible for givlug) i, g forpgensg Taway from Inflated | (eciay bimasonm ey ot SUCh & ma | jeipru] to the republic, but nelther shall | 8Teement. Thus railway Ingolvency will | {Ivited to meet v ‘::(Romifcz‘::ilclh:: as Beeking Advice.” opportunity to speak. Indulz- = ¥ phereMatal to the cultivation | £ 80 e gty @i ol LR bo averted, hundreds of millions expend- o IS MR vivas Sobh Bkl SHAVEGRIL anii i conditions. There have been a number|of great dreamems? The world owes hild PP % 'y al;, oman | 0 on squipment sud betterments, sopees luncheon held in-connection with the an-| My Editer: My ¢ o | only to have them |Of Other similar instances where it has|much to its dreamers, and it will be g | o o OF 0 Bovern the Amerlcan peo- | &b G O R e 0t Mow Idle workineucy |Tual meeting of the Iatter organization. |gore witness, putring statemeénts m’l’i fo ha\a_ them been recognized that in the readjustment |SOITY day when the dreamer disappears. F%The i et ol empioyed, and all ind Vi o At the luncheon a set of resolutions pre- |nis own hand writing, disclaimed must naturally ralse in thelor onaitons wage reductions were|JOhn Bunyan dreamt gnd his dream on s iy e the ROmAoR] e miae the ml_"‘_“y’wl“"‘m py|Pared by the temperance committee of |rent every monmth. I minds of his hearers a doubt as to such|y .14 1 figure, Meeting those condi.|Ea¥e Pilgrim's progress to the world: | '2iceq an issue as vital and basle as {hat | the house months ago, and held up in the | e federation was presented and passed |times, but mow neither other statements ag he made. His dec-|yon " Ginout turmoll and trouble after | COlUMbuS dreamt and its realization was | Ly oo SMS 28 VAal and basie as et o0 Ml (TNANY enactea nto|PY the councll. These resolutlons, in- |nor pays it up 1 ne laration brought attention to his ad- | > "IN UM and troube America; Cecs. Rhodes dreamt which re- | ps aq el t'15 the very | 18W, Without mutilation or fundamental |tended as a pronouncement in the namey Yy thers u law in this A . 3 as. | they have been found to be justified ean-| syiteq 1n the ciyilization of & contl e Adamson law issue went to the very ofthe forces represented fn the fedora- | nin A dress in a much different manmer, pas-| oot P0G e fo those wh continent. | cxictence of goyernment itself. change. Sound business requires and | to make good or m sibly, than he expected but in view of | °0 120 A kol 2| In our day Henry Ford 15 a dreamer and | ““.yyyien. ‘organtzations, by threat to|honer demands it. tion, eulogized the late Henry H. Spoon-|gort to*summary proc SBat Nes NUGNCE B must realiss hat|iTe seeking the peaceful solution of econ~|some of his v A Sies | ofriols the mmtion o Haic T ors for “No need fear revival of railway au-}°% commenced the work of the Connect! His only property when he included the nress of Connecti- |O™IC conditions. Such cases cannot fall jand we might laugh at many of this | their ewn advantage at the depense af o1l | tooracy ; a new industrial fagtor, the au- |Cit Temperance Union and had some-| Who can tell me w vith the solution of just such prob- Ue. trespassed In flalis where others were promised be- the ‘least in G do? A WOMAN. : ; bilitfes of the officers of the law. Em-| Lebanon, Nov. 17, 182 all for the good of all is annihilated ;| Auto trucks and motor 'buses are already non, Nov. 17, 1521 : lems. What we want Is more men of rich &n- | 3nd in place of It Is substitated the sr. | MAKIAE heavy reduotions in short hawi|bodled them was a reference fo the better informed than 1:9 was. ¥ - agination with the ability to make the | ratic despotism of particular groups for | Feight and passenger railway revenue. P’,{S‘;‘“ folows: 5 1 Pl igiin il iy TR e S o TIME FOR THEM IS NOW. T ey Sussine o el their special purposes to the injury of | *If business is to revive, investing cap- Also, urge that tha press of the Hve e Matts k5. 8 GcioabiEs Aobd Happliy elevator fatalities do mot od-| Ve 87 told that bpffmism is a frame s bi-| Ha SpE g ot |f mind, i e. it is something that ex- tion, because there are newspapers which [CUPY & Dlace in each day's news but}, . 8. seison himself fully e much believe advisable in «the interests of |there are a sufficient number of them to|aq in the objective world that Is sbout rvance to call attention to the | Warrant the exercise of all possible pre-|him. Optimism is a very beautiful thing failures in connection with prohibition | cautions in the interests of safety. to have and we ought to have it just so by those upon whom the| AS @ Tesult of 3 survey and study g far as it is compatible. with reason. Prob- fals, there no justifi- | onducted by the bureau of standards of | ably business conditions have somewhat % g A - | the department of commerce it is clalmed | improved since mid-summer; but to say arging them with being sub- | U han i wowld be to claim that |(hat nearly -three-quarters of the fatal|th8t the outlook seems to favor a speedy count as a whole. ital must be freed as far as possible. m?'A: a!tlry cost, s law issuo | The eXcess profits tax must be repealed |38alnst the elghteenth amendment, shali should have been fought out to the finish | —it Ought to have been abolished when |range themselves souarely and solidly the moment it appeared. Sooner or later | the pretext for It disappeared. beitha ths Hifilala and tgliglops forens it must be settled, and every day’s delay| ‘IR place of these intricate, involved |in thelr purpose to secure the mpartial will make matters worse in the end. Dif- | and destructive war exfedients, which |21d Tigld enforcement of the prohibitory ferences over mere questions of policy | Weaken and destroy business, give us a lawe. can be compromised; usually they ought | Plain, ’simple, easily understood revenue Mr. Moore was asked to speak just to be compromised. But differences over | SYStem, based on. business principles, [ before the close of the session. His ra- elemental principles cannot be com-| Which Wwill, at once, work less hardship |marks were brief but among them was state, regardless of personal prejudice Stories That Recall Others 4 All In & Whirl. A little girl attending s: fll one day and the tea Pphysician. “What's the trouble, the doctor inguired. law ol i n all the people and permit business to |the Teference to the subsldizing of the return to re- ! promised. 3 3 bose which are in favor of prohibition |¢levator accidents could be prevented if | (oHUrR ¢ Lgm ‘f:'mf:“sf;"fmtdké“flt;: “The ultimatus delivered to the gov- | S°t into action. Iml!- The Conmecticut Federation of have been subsidized, a hen he says|elevators and shaftway doors werelfaots The argument that sunponsy'mlu svuest by ator deppots. wWea ‘ohsyed B :xx‘l f, TR mE Tt BT & [ Demleray cqmflmrwh-wt “mptdr; up & bit badly, the press of the country it ism't to be|eauipped With well designed interlocking lposition is as follows » enditures—a ~non-cumulative tax on|ance Union are just as desirous to add 3 Full prospérity supposed that he means a fow newspa- | devices. sales—while all, alike and equally. must | their disclaimer to Mr. Moore's statement | aRother city a ministe : = will not. come until commerce with the pay in exact proportion to purchases.|as applving to the press of Connecticut | WrOte to the cand pers. Tt is a strange motlon th#t some| That being the case there is furnished | various nations has been re-established. That would be'a genuine and honest tax |as could be any of Connecticut's flews- | City asking their stand peopia have that because a newspaper's|Sficient reason for equipping all ele- | Most of these nations have no momey to ODD INCIBENTS IN AMERICAY HISTORY ave that because a news ators with uch deviet withont walting |BUF our Eonde ngr Thus (her aopumads opinion doesn't coincide with theirs that | YA1Ors with suc Bl 7 v b o 22 e for g fatality to happen. Many are the uesdtu exchange for ours. Money to buy i 3 instances where lives have been lost only | 9098 With, or, commodities to_exchange expression as to what thoss for them depend on labor, and in thess t are working for pro- |10 be followed by the installation of|countries there fs little labor becouos enforcement in. thie | Safety checks which will prevent the : : % the laborers have been decimated by war. of tha state press can be ask-| ITODPINg of the cars in case of accident | Full prosperity will only come when la- on wealth, papers. While 1t may be-assumed that |ters and remarked: “We bh: “A sales tax is apen, above board, and | Mr. Moore would not have made the {0 ImDly that you would mot in plain sight’ of day. It is-fixed, certain ['statefient that he made without some |¥YOUr a\llhqfl}s to cleanse the and cannot be multiplied at the expense | warrant to substantiate it, we of this :“rf :::_" )}‘sahfl":m . 4 om o 1 o 4 OUR GREATEST NAVAL VICTORY. | °f,the consumer by underground manipu- | state are also certain that newspap lation. Connectieut that have been unenthusi- [Place for undesirables fro “If the gemius and energy which our The proudest achievement to which the e 0 astic for the elghteenth amendment and - American points, when the glory of the | best minds are devoting to the disarma- | dublous as to its enforcement have not dise'almer which the se | O better and more frequent inspections |borers are equal to the demand. Sea i5 being discussed, is to the naval | ment conference shall, after the brilliant |been and cammot be subsidized by liquor | bugosgg St “nisling for the purpose of detecting Weaknesses, | poopoiie o oo Lo paco realized— | Victory gamed by the ‘nfant American |Success Which we know will crown their|interests or by anv other interests. je i cead : i R but it is to be realized ‘that there are|if wo have come to maturity and nave |Davy Over the seasoned British masters | efforts in that historic parley, be employed MORRIS E. ALLING, . | undesirables CHINA'S PROPOSALS, many bad accidents due to the manmer|peen observant—that peckle may be reai- | °f the sea—the fight between the Con- in devising and executing ways and {in which elevators-are used or the free- stitution and the Guerrierd in the War | means to increase American trade in Secretary Connecticut Federation Whereat the dom with which people can get into the Hoiding a place in ly homest and yet unre: % Y y asonable; that of Churches. D A they may be Christian people who stand | ©f 1812. In commenting on the result|those regions allotted to us by nature, 2 n— Hituation that commands attention from|shatt or out of the cars when such acts | high in the church and.still may be fa- | the London Times sald: “Never before in | We might possibly ~secure desperatels | mho cattorfal referred to follows: Why try to shine shoes if you lack all sides the statement which has been|are actually dangerous. consistent. Tt seemg to me that the at- |the history Of the world did an English [ needed ‘mark:ts for our surplps. If so, THE SUBSIDITED PRESS polish? made by Dr. Sze as the representative of | Fajlure to walt until an elevator | titude of Christian people, or at least | frigate strike to an American under [ Wore idle laborers would be given work 3 China in which he set forth the general + B than were provided with jobs by the un- S many of them toward the Japanese ex- |equal circumstances. Stope, eageruss to get aboard or off | Ll G o this Jattar exftieer tor| Prondest swery e tripmphs of tho| CmPloyment conference.” ¥ hear any or all of the evidence that |, i oiow ron WwowEN WHO SUFFER {and attempts to leave an elevator WNON |{ngiance, missionarics are sent feom our | American flag wili forever be assoclated| “But even the highest statearaft is not, |may be iIn the possession of J. L. Moore, 2 sudden tmpulso after it has been Start-| churches to Japan to instruct the na- |the career of that noble old frigate, the | 2lone, sufficient; it must be supported by |assistant superintendent of fhe Antl-Sa-| - ed are frequencly the cause of serious tives in the facts and principles of Chris- | Constitution, which was re-christened, by | {he sense and sentiment of a staunch, injuries if not fatalities. Likewise there |tianity. vrinclples wigich his country balievet) should govern the relations of that r public with the rest of the world is an| mnort We should be greatly interested to | S ——————— t one. He hasn't gone into detal’s. He hasn't set forth those 2 every wo» loon League of America, who enlighten-|with kidaey tronble to Y They are taught that God fs |popular acclatm, Old Ironsides. This|Patient, level-headed, high-minded peo-|ed such persons as attended the annual |Pills writes Mrs. Bess are the too frequent cases of people be-|our Father, wpect Scoville Ave., Cl: that we of the di eat triumph came at a time when the|Ple. The situatlon will apply the su-|meeting of the Federation of Churches of | 00 16 S (NG TR relations in detall the same as Secretary | jnc crushed or walking Into the shatt | races are brothass, that = Ough:htfloe;":l: g}‘hm mm: deaply wounded by the - imnei test mt'fiAuTienm character and te | Connecticut in this city on Tuesday. Ac- | Kianey bills 1 feel like & & Hughes did the matter of a maval holl«| gpon" o §s no car there. one another, that class distinctions are | successes of thelr arms on the frontier, | STEOAR IS dé:l:?'mu wlp cording to Mr. Moore, the prass is sub- {am able to do my work fay he has nevertheless put forta | miovaiors travel many miles in the|Cruel and unjust, and that God is o |Were suddenly thrilled by an action brii- wE Dre- princ s which are not only vital to i sidized in a manner hardly conveivable ;}a{ms. swollen _ankles, bac ‘ 3 3 vail. American statesmanship will belin order to obstruct the support that is |joinis, sore muscles and sle burse of .a, day: Sesenlmie t eeh respector of persons. But if a Japanese |llant beyond all precedent in its Pesu'ts e .. | biadder ailments ate % family comes into s 14 1 naval warfare: equal to the demand ; American character | necessary to the enforcement of this law. oley buildings. . Postmen, messengers as well | oucs 1 which we l‘}“‘?;*a';’:z _apertnent | tho B A N areea on| Wil stand {Ho @est: AmerioAn fatite. |Of course this law la the enghteenth s Do P » : as clerks and others rely upon them o | move ont, no matter how respectahle that | August 19. 1912. Capt, Hull, on board | tions will prove adequate and vjndicate, |amendment to the Constitution of the (o That of course doesny solve the Prob-|, jarg, extent. There Is every reason |family may be. Is this consistency or 1o |the Constitution, was crulsing off the st oi3s e Wisllon wEMRe founare oL Fiilted Brates | em. Put a good heg)r[mvnf; carrles 12| gpy those using them shoud likewise | It not? coast- of Massachusetts, when a sail was | the republic. hn 1;: a tu:ou;k;?:la;n -:;d e !;m beip and to get a basis for discussion a5 h v “hi: . He im- shoul nof e made. nfor- s care but for t f th ; Giscovered from his masthead m. must be regarded as fortunate. That|loc e MW AT fhe vrelectlon SE the| Whe was the e o tued | meiately gave chase. It was plainly| SUNDAY MORNING TALK |tmatels 1t 's @ charee hat mans peop- he S ay lead i o S £ e / v _war, will a at its ‘face value. e the Jiscossion may sead in many direc-lgiven to the matter of safety and It |highest milltary honors? ReceRpl gL gk Wad 3 et e e tons v to be expected. will concern 3 It matters not ; g 3 sident of inent organiza- i i 5 was soon learned that the vessel vice president of a promine: rga; medsly three-quarters of tho fatailtis ] for in death all artificial distinotions that B e i, Raa i ;;;':’:h‘;’;m&d backe | ion made it ‘and so it must be so. What What China wants 15 th freedom 1]t arrons ion the necessary Drewin- [0 Phe Nistng ats Soiich Ener o OHUeE | Tames AS Dacres orn witlf labors, excitement ana SUTor- | o oroonn s e b e " R 17 |tive measurs shauld be quickly appled.|¥" orne o G wept away. Ho | Tpazer for battle and hopeful for vie- : S & ©l- | or orzanizations interested in seeing an work out her future without the restrain- might have ‘borne a distinguished name, | , B282T for battie and Hopefdl for Ve ing of the day; with thelr feet fast in and enjoyed all the advantages of edu- | oy Ul cleared his ship : China but which Japan even finds ac- ceptable for a basis of discussipn. m et Ing Influences and handicaps from out- ndment to our constitution” violated He st: for the e and on tne|he stocks, compelling 3 most painful ::eply:ngt e R newspapers of eide. Certainly that wou'd seem to ba ERITORIAY NOTES, cation, refinement, culture and position ; C:n;,‘;u':f:n s ShrEY. gunshot, the | 3ttitude, and with a morrow full of un-|ine country to secure thelr ald in ob- juset what it Is entitled to, although thero | There are many more than the prit-|he might have been the son of a social | Gocriiers Wred a broadside, but the shot |OCTLAINLY. “Praved @nd sang praises un-|structing those supposed to enforce the are internal conditions which are cer- |iSh Who would be glad to ses an end put |Bobody and reared in a tenement house | ¢y gar short. . Hull wafted patiently | (0, G007 Nature, in excentional cases. | provisions of the law. tafn to raise many questions before |0 submarine warfare. and factoty; he might have heen o rep- : thorough understailing can be reached. St je |might furnish strength to bear such a| We do not pretend to answer for F. H. KENYON, Gen resentative of the sp-called Dack and manoeuvred his ship until he got it P ; ! state with fortitude, but mere nature |evers newspaper in. the races, negro, Indian, or mountain white; | Tiun the Tight position when at five country. We G. N. DELAP, Spe has no resource of joy for such a state. ; - " tha L A China ad ‘ts complications.| The man on the corner says: Even In he might have been one of the many ra. | Fiiutes before 6 c'clock in the afternoon | JA% 00 FOMTee B0 0¥ T8 SIF A A :“f’:’r :‘;“:l;tp;‘efin& ;;r;;" ::;‘: D. W. LITTLE, Special Agent “Fheth encq can help to over- | Indlan summer it might as well rain as|es that clalm America as the home of |1° ordered a brisk firing fo = be COM-|quayiry of joy consists, and aut of what|a charse as fhat made by Mr. Moore Hartford, Conn. come remains to be geen, to keep a fellow wWearing goloshes for [théir adoption: he mights have been of |enced from all the Constitution guns. ¥ Mr. In conrection with the so-called open |nothing. 1 ssantly | it sorings, for it was mot Christian|is too absurd for oconsideration. And | New York New Havea pure Anglo-Saxon extraction with re- | S, 34mirably lfé’;:";;dt;’;f 0 dpcessantly I stoicism, but Invinchle Christian o3, |we feel no. less sure that the great llf;i‘(;ushlrend or ,wvnh ’crlmlnal instincts. utes the mizzenmast of the Guerriere|™Dhich Daffled the sage of Rome, and en- | majority of the newspapers of the coun- it 3 to be realized | The crowds at the drug stores that aré Aise dartiollay Qe been Jcley ent by the board and her main yard im | @bled the saints in the catacombs to in-|try ara absolutely. guiltless of such a | “You Can Do No Better Than and universally known, it would not have | Fent scribe upon the tombs of thelr martyrs, | ity charge. Our Wurst.,” detracted one lota from the impressive- | N¢F, Siings. Buy urst. Invictus maneo.” Christlan joy has | Byen Rl . B it ol ness of the scene, or silenced one prayer m;’:”g ntes At e Sammence |been defined s the. overfiow of Chris- | ogitors s e s oot Withous that the dead boy might realize hig funl |jert O the contest the walnmast and {an_peace. Deeper than the emotions, | poged to prohidition and, which Is No Salad Complete Withou: down, taking with them every spar ex- | 9eeper tham cl 2 oun- | far different and much more serious reward in the kingdom of ‘eternal day. copt 2o howepirt, Seeing her condition, | t2in head of Christlan joy. It 1s the |are opposed to the enforcement of the door policy which has been included among the principles, t that is what this country has long|selling medicinal insisted upon. and there is no reason wh’ it should not meet with the approval of the other natlons. Certainly Japan has s R T LT no reason to object since It Is in a fa- Germany ought to be happy over the vorab’e position to make the fullest and {naval holiday idea. Ten years from now freest use thereon. Such an open door beer give an indica- tion of what suffering the sick have been undergoing. ol This is the auniversary week of the awful battle of Lookout Mountain and | ;: ‘apt. Hull ordered tae firing to cease: |30Y of the Lord. laws of the land, a thing- which is by Thlm]ln its mayal handicap Wil be even less |Mlselonary Ridge, fought Nov. 2227, | oon come Do i Bk Chia ‘wol.| We stall understand this praise ser-|no means probable, they know well that fs right across the way compared with|than it is today. 1863, Lookout Mountain was captured |ors, which had been fastened to jhe | Vice In the dungeop at Philippi better if the geographical positions of other na- e about the quickest way to completely kill ] & by the Union forces Nov. 25. These two | stump of the mizzenmast. we turn back to the earth life of our Home Mam. tions. . any influence they might have would be Novembér must work nights and Sun-|Mountains are parallel, not mere than ¢ Tord. We do not instinctively think of | to distort {he news, Suppress i, or dolib- . At 7 in the’evening Capt. Hull sent 5, - o disto: e n SupD? E M It 1s_to be expected that tids far east.|days if it is going to got the rescrvoirs, IO Miles apatt, located in noxthern fa boat to the enemy, Whidh shortly |Jesus as a joyful man, b"“!"‘m ':" erately ald by falshood any effort that . iviayennaise wrn problem will present its difficultles, |ponds and brooks filled in time for the | CCOTS!, Omly ten ’“g“ from Chatta- |returned with Capt. Dacres on board. | ¥ays speaking of His joy. He in #Swag directed against the enforcement of but a good start means much and thers | opcning of winter. x nooga, just across the state line in h? learned from a leuten: o | fullest the true Christian joy, which IS|1aw. Newspapers are not subsidized by THUMM’, Tennessde. Gen. Grant had recently .f,c:,;;mm o Trom e acutenant WhO | promised to all Christians, even thoush | [awhreakers. We saw what happened S i been promoted to the supreme command, | Guerriere was an unmenageable wreck, | F¢ hath borne our griefs, and carr'ed [t3 a few nondescript papers that sold DELICATESSEN STORF > The ‘Way to avpeal to a conference, as|anq was belng feebly resisted by the | o 2 1 | our sorrows.” themselves to the German propagan- ! - s i madie. w g ¥ ¢ with four feff of water in the hold, and y are views yet to be presented which 5 #hopld be benefict g E rebel General Bragg. Knoxville Was one |in a sinking condition. As soon, there- | Paul and Silas knew, as all who en-|dists during the war. In the first place : DEALING WITH JUGOSLAVIA. |forth the facts m a plain straightfor- | hundrea miles farther up the river une |fore :“‘gn"&: o, ‘vera removed sh |ter lato the fellowsii' of Christ's suf | they were ot littie value to the ntercsts 40 Franklin Street Yesterday was the date fixed for a|¥ard, courageous manner. dfl;therfnt\?rfi:fl 352‘&13“{;‘5&‘1{2&‘{“'* “;s was abandoned and her shattered hulk ::r:pwmmm m?.o:fl?tpl}‘:fi{p;? P ::: ::i:enmu ::. u:y t;x:d ':m‘?y’}’:u“m":;e ! n i3 5 . Waddal mesting of ths coupdll of the| L g lTolNGo R o | feetnesses of Dookont Moupteln's spd| Dt aibogee p&0a of the en- |Of the Gospel. They knew that through |saro point, and In the third place the | 3 :-nm;. M‘:m:’m!; to‘;n mehl',‘u:o;e of, w’;' naval holiday proposals as “hypoerisy. Misstonary Ridge. Brags, feeling secure, ngemmi‘t e tatal| dgpston bosxd the !énall: ;mfierm’ 3 u;;ny‘:n.d found m:t;:: majority of them shortly found them- | e tagiion Which Uas deysl- ) * |sent fiftcen thomsand troops to oust o seven killed | Christian joy a at many Sped 1n resard to the Jugoslav. Albantan |68 and dishonesty” they aro apparently i Constitution amounted { selves in serious difficulties with the au- . Burnside out of Ktoxville, thinking that ed, and as soon as she would follow In their frotsteps and re- | thorftiess Even the unscrupulous edi- Soundary, and more than those two |JU0EIRE others by themselves. Grant would rush 3o Burnside's atd, |ty JoeR Weund| L Daa drove new rigging, aopllea the |odive tho pricclosp proccasion of thetor or publisher wowd hardly fail into UNITED METALS MFG. % stead of falling into the trap, Grant sent sary stoppers and bent few | Christian. e joy that 1s mot depend-|guch g colossal foolishness as iz Inc countries will be interested in the dut: hid tuu;;m.\_ F‘oe: c;n trm;el abmt"t‘ha his whole army to attack Bragg in his :,efi:s she w:..o ready ztg mp:e :,: ent on surroundinge. Mr. Moore so easily attrfbutes to the S ’ come. country the Way ho has and gain rather | weakened position. He mnot only drove | ather fri igate. t. Hull, in the tribute press of the country. That is & bad section of Furope for|than loge ten pounds, he certainiy has|Bragg from the mountains, but Long. |er: ine ten sac;p» Ve all fought . As we sald, we should grealy lfke troghle. As Ing ago realized there are|jpeen having a merry time and more than | street from Knoxville, cleared the way |with great bravery; fram the smallest U CTER ||t = the evidence that ane would those in that region, seemingly, who had | war rations. to Chattanooga, and thus delivered Ten- boy on the ship to the oldest seaman R.aAD Yom Cflm rather fight than eat, even though such nessee from rebel power. and not a look of fear was seen. 4 an sttitude has brought to them all kinds brillia - By Dighy Phillips, Are you going to help commission the| There s a susplclous and mysterious Copyrighted 1921 - i 'wt fardship and sufferifig. local chapter of the Red Cross to under- |gap between raw materfals and finished | pected victory—the first, in fact, of any E HAVE AN The difficulties at tho present time are |take the much needed dental werk among |products. The law governing the sale of | jmportance as yet obtained by the United | — =g —— . ws ' due to the fact that the two countries|the children of Norwich? Your contrfbu. | T8W materials seems to have no relation in the War of 1812—was recogniz- g : e e T g e O e | SR L N o e ey, EXIDE BATTERY and thers is an mnwillingness on the b e e o et f“:; can pegble, especially in view of the vio- | uced o a scicnce, Fidas ot the truth of ; e - part of Jugoslavia to accept the mward| It jsn't so much What the mations are | 36 thelr DORARER (7 107 Nog%, the piict | tory hgving been achieved o0, She gaten son’s assertions by the tane of voice - FOR FORD CARS that has beeg made by the council of |called upon a sacrifice by scrapping the | promibitive to the very poar, who are|>: elmt‘ ‘apon vwitlo";':: pt S Bu- | i which he speaks. i} ‘s D Mlile ambasmadors. Apparently Jugo- |worships as it s Whaj they are going to Does the trouble Ite | 1287 navion dared 10 coRd N efors, | Nor is keen judgment in thls respeot . . . slavia carries the idea that it is not nec- | be able to save by not being obliged to to English pride as can | oonfned {o the professions mentioned. m essary td abMo by the declsion of that|kecp pouring money into mew battle- ed. T SO AR ot you ‘mu:ym : 74 { counil and that in the desire-to have its | ships. ¥ a arrived n Boston har- | FUO 8FE SDIE o, “scqieh The Ne’ WEEie” e - own way 1t s prepared to push its forces - s Wh R red last of August. Never did any | Mo NL By cant Lol voR Bon : ectnc O Into Albania, take what it beiieves It] Well it will not be possible for it to be Sotath spread such wniversal 30y over the | thoir’ ability on the “hunch”. basls. With- 0 S A £ ought to have and snap its fingers at]sald that Henfy Ford hasn’t made an 2 - g:‘gms:n such astonishment | o4 analyzing t. e ;- ' ¥ m those who are inclined to bring about a sts ut the criminologists mm Gims 5 £ offer for the warships when they are we as this complete and f £ ‘2"“ The news of this brilliant and unex- Dossibly be, ima ‘The Peaceful adjustment. scrapped. But can he so arrange it In the made by the ambassa. 4 1 tonnage Wil ail go over his

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