Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 22, 1921, Page 4

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WORWICH BULCETIN, TUESDAY, NOVENBER 22, 1921 A ’=—_*———*_———————=—fi:———_——[___———m 1 . v pointa as there is over the steamshin | WASHINGTON AFFAIRS MAKING IT PERFECTLY CLEAR courses, the paesage taking from 16 to 20 daye. One of the passenger sohooners is the Romance, & sister ship of the Esperanto which won the first international fisher- men's race. Whether or not passenger business has been falling off, the fact and Qoufied at that schooner has been brought S icass 0 gy R e o New Bedford by a government ves- 25 YEARS QLD sel because it had 350 cases of whis- — - - key =hoard indicates that rum ruoning [ ——— » s, e ot e Postoffies —ctad-cn Eaiier via Bormuda furnished an added attrac- o s last trip, and there is no tell- what the mystery lquor ships > frequently during the sum- he in that reglon can be this latest revelation. eoma, hut Tategaone Catly bt Badness Ofbes. 425, Booms, 3.5 Paiietia Job b E ANTI-BEER BILL. tion In the senate favorable nti-beer bill another step has ken nearer to the test of constl- iat is certain to follow. The goes to President Harding for what that will be should few days, been fight in congress During the period racked to give import; legislation brought to bear necessary for Secretary under the laws re Wwas nothing to pre- afacture and use of beer 1 pu and it was would be issued 2 and o the on. a clear aich e that oes, an- » was a signal for the tion again to the (Special to The Bulletin) e Washington, D. C., Nov. 18.—The con- ference for limitation of armament will not take on a political, or perhaps it would be better to say a partisan col- oring, if the advisory coureil make-un !x any evidence of what, It s as catholic in Its personnel as could be fossible even ir © varied po- litieal factio: Leok over the list and you will find men and women represent- ng every phase of folitical life in the United States. There are republicans and democrats of all shades; mugwumps, hu!l moosers, reactlonaries, theorists, utilitari- ans. No party or faction worth mention | or fit for the occasion have been over- locked by the President in selecting the corps of advisors. And the best of it all is that most of them are optimistic over the cutcome of the conference. Only a few outside pessi- mists have hung crepe on the door. The selection of e Pan Amertean building for the copference, the holding of the first meeting in the Memorial hall of the Daughters ¢f the American Revo- lution, and the eoct that next in line in that remarkable row of splendid struc- tures, i sthe great marble building of the “I dom't see why Wwe cam't go some- where,” rebelliously said the woman who was tired of staying at home. “Every- body I know is away and I am just ashamed to be seen on the street. It looks as though we coulin't afford car fare!” “You might wear a placard.” offered her' stubborn husband cheerfully. “You would have printed on it in large type the amount of the income fax wrested from me this season. That oght to settle ‘em.” 2 “T don’t see Why vou are so fond of sticking right here in this old town.” his wite proceeded, “when there are so many spots on eartn we might be visiting." “What spots?’ asked her stubborn husband. “Where would you go?” “Oh, there are just dozens of places!” enthusiastically the woman who was tired of staylng 2t home. ‘“Tuella Fisvbite must be landing at Honolulu right now—and there is the volcano and eapples and swimming.” But you can buy Hawailan pineap- ples real cheap right here,” objected her hushand, “and therc are tanks to swim tn on all hands, and as for the volcano | American Red Cross dedicated to the _m|§ ‘]’!ml k“?:;v rwrfcr(i\!" well h)’ml patriotic women of the United States, | ¥OUIA be orribly upsct {f someboty makes the selection of site a notable in. j Sumped a voicano 8 Txont vard. There {sn't & sinzle bit of use one put a voleano to," especially if it is boli- Ing hot. And a cold volcano to my mind 1= as superfluous as & cold pancake.” cident. Every cne of the three magnifl- cent structures that mark that section of the eity, are consecrated to noble pur- Doses. The Pan American building, with its “Well, T was just tellinz v where Lu- sunken garden its fine outline and un- |ela went,” his wite reminded him. *T rivalled interlor beauty was crected te |don't know that I should nick out Hon- furr a place where: conferences be-folulu if I were going anywhere right veen Whe great republic of the United | now. The Jiggers and the Plltback fam- ates and those of South American could | ige went south in January and they held, and so promote harmony be-{wrote the loveliest istters about lying . em. The D. A .R. hall is one of around In the sand and the oranges thev were getting and there were a lot earls and dukeand their wives there “That is positively the limit.” her bus- band told her firmly. “All the sarls and in Washington and co e5 peace after vietory In the first days ¢ American independence ; and the mag- ing of the American Red d to the women of Ame: wo- of ated for some time v nd | | , to be bt | ok TR should be demanded 33 | ED NOTES. AL nee r Briand he'll goes. of pota- ho raises e a about Pacific for-| aven't bec that equip- shoot guns will | corner says: Some- Highway effect that olding up their e conference 18 strongly that > holiday as a certainty, 1l admit that the Red Cross reak down, but will everyone to fee that it carries on and conditiens that ery for re- w Cut the cost ons under enguce - of expens an nd another ve war international agree- much desired reduc- xes will be experienced by the prep- e fact that they are burning corn 13 of coal in the middle west shows nd how it can solve its und] 4 and fuel problems in a single dukes that T have seen in the news se- rials at the movies looked ble part they played in the | as ugh r completes a memorial trio un- | thelr d gone on a permanent 8 ed in the United States and is in | 8'Tike angd that thev had a bet on as to \ siration. But the great in- [ Which one could raise the ‘onzest mus- ¥ 10 the conference will unques- | t3¢he. You can sce much hetter looking § come. from the peasle <f the|men any day you want to stroll dows ountry. Not only of those country s | Michigan boulevard and T am surprised great nations that are im- |2t ¥ou, anyhow, s and their consequences. mar fed as you are—= “You know perfectly well T wouldn't Took at them twice" Said thS lady who was tired of staying at home. “But X should like to meet their wives” 1 ““The iblgeer title a Furopean Womar has the dowdier sho is” explatned or} husband kindly. “You wouldn'} learn the siightest thing about Paris styles from the countess of Whiehwhat, I assure you, Mirabel. There is no complaint on the ‘score of the oranges the grocer has been sending us—and if yon are disturb- ed for lack of sand T1l have a load brought down. Sanded floors might bes come all the rage if you started them ! “Well, I don't know that I'm so crazy about going south” admitted his wife. “I should ke Caiifornia better, T am sure, Mgta, Genne mailed me postcards just rioting in roses and riolets and sha couldn't wear her fur coat after she went out thera and she sald she met sim- ply every soul she ever knew.” “Oh, help!” crled her stubborn hu bang protestirgly. “If there is a spot | on earth a sensible on Wil stay awsv from It is ene like that. Because Wwhen you come right down to it tenths of all the people 1 oev new | are preclsaly the ones vou'd desnise most nine- run into 2gal Why, people snond ir lives tryin~ ‘o escape the majority the aequa ses {hrust upon them, it strikes me that California—-"" 1 didn’t say I wanted to go to Cal- fornia, did I?” asked his wife. “I was just teliing you! It might be nice to take that Canadian lake and mountain western trip as soon as cool weather is gone. The Hamstakes went there last year and Evelyn Hamstake sald it just made you gasp to see—" “But 1 don’t care to gasp,” objected her husband. “I fail to sea why one should trave! thousands of miies and spend hundreds of dollars just to be made to_gasp. 1 a,l Evelyn Hamsta 1 dian’t know v £ T never saw anything like you,” de- clared the lady who tired of inae- tion. “According to You 't place on earth fit to look cept Tight here at home,” ‘Good!™ said the stubkorn husband in gratified tomes. picking up his newapa- ver. “That's exactly the point I have It's more comfort- been t ng to make, able!"—FExchange. When talking a few days ago with al, Ty = moers of the forelgn affairs commit. |8 terrltory. Tor 47 years he had-a large | fot and aragoons—cut un, clean broke ] When one remembers that | Part in making tht Putnam Patriot the |down by the coalition of Bifil & % Siaes 5 . dollar collected by the | 1€8ding newspaper of that part of Con- |George—by the combination i it 93 cents of |MeCtitut, and in ail that time he main- |t then, of the Puritan with th ‘. N 058 rs past or fo- | (Wined & high scif- repecting standara | les.” Spdbo the economic |1or himself and for his paper. Randelph made other charges against ey o will enter very large- | He has filled his last assignment, and Frm_ W uv_»fe;n?\f: the | i bt Ak wd make it easi. | e shall know him no more, but the re- |8 » b0t tith /1A Sena S eilanit To carry out ife | cod Of honest work and anhood |ed en explanation of Randolpn at 1 e beljeve { (3t he left is at once a memcrial to This Randolph refused and C A = ¥ Wili be carried out. ! Of {him and an inspiration to these who had a_challonre. The seconds chossn | . modifentions. and | the Privilege of knowing him tried to effect conciliation, but when cxpected, but 1 fally they foung t was no hone they pro- 3 pose of G confer-j——— —————— cesded to arrange or the sEray ot Your Grocer Sells Wheatena—Recipe Book Free. o i - =~ 2 _The afternoon of Saturday, April §,} - i i : READ YOUR CHARACTER | 1826 was fixed as the day. The right = = ’ Eemaldgc e bank of the Potomae, within the State of The Wheatena Company, Wheatenaville, Razhway, New Jersey. luction in nrmies? Per- Copsrizited 1621 contrived fo effect n i n now, but = 5 &N the hoves that somethi & : Hasty cur to prevent the encounter. The day g . P urticle we are not considering | 107 the duel, owever. arrived and the = =27 : i 2 G i, e Lreieb | e hand as-a cr, but as | PA-ties went to their piaces. south, Where a Galiélan pan-bandls cuts| “While ¢ escaped political op- | back the Turkish invaders at Vienna and C o 2 product, meaning that are speak- | ;‘r""(ff‘\\: 'il;mir;'l,w s a thiek for-{into Czechoslovakia, round about the lit- ‘fresy.cn she was ‘I:\ frequent lur:w ; ;n:: saved Europe from a Moslem i : 5 ; far west of < : 1gh | from political controvedsy. v about | sion. ; ) a A s tlo town of Zakopane, rises the High|JOT POUHC Tation was Pol- | “Krakow clusters with memories of Rose war ) t sment muinct | ¥ I Tatra range to form a Bapny hunting | 16 Per o Rithecias | Peimaa luster. There the roys Tt Seady s S0 pae which Inevita. | Tateall cond, won the | $70und for Stherman, naturalist an? €x- |,y ing o with other | palace ho Aus S e : o e | enotee of nositions. opponents stood | CUrsionist - pieax | nation sies wer |as a barracks. TH Jagellons R s = ine cast and west re w Saoe the nivel past Calicia fs 6 Wk | 55'a an zoyernment en- {and Kosciussko. Lemberg, the newer . stinet, but | stump fust bemnd Mr. Glay, and J@18in. A dense population ckes out a |y G- oxgn. Drovided Austria | seat of Galician government, is a more . from i~ o low gravel bank just hehind Mr. Ran. | SCABLY_existence from its soil. Before [ ¥ ®IE LY, N 5 a for- | modern city. Its name may be famillar rance or - [doiph. "Ry accident as Mr. Randolnh was | the world war many of its peasants hed | yon minister at another. |to American ears. as is that of the ail han o You cz {ajusting - ni distol It Aischarecs nat|to leave their familles in their primitive than {hres-fourths of {but unpronounceable Przemysl. because o ¢ tig can s ctiers are mot paine g one was injured and he apologiged. thatched huts while they went to R and a guarter million | theee citles were the sucoegsful objec- 4 'y 3 The stroking of ) i a for a_part of the year to augment | ot s CR e B T om the | Lives of General Von Macken's thrust in : cnongh, yet the let- their incomes. Yet, while Galicia was| 5 the region has two important min-|1915, ten weeks after the Russian arms 3 it 1 mapletely uni- Dotk a part of Austria, it had more than half | uras petroleum and sali, and, In lesser (had driven the Austrians out of : You have to read It jn jumps Randoly the horses of the emmire, and manufac- | quaniity, Iron and coal The salt mines | Przemysl’ i v 1 L s. recomnizing word by word the stump behind Mr. tured nearly half of the spirituous ltquors | 5+ Wielicczka are unique. They have | d ation to of text, 21's knoeked un the earth and | consumed In Austria been worked for seven centuries, at least. | : and 1t byt o sing Were shown to von youwd have gifficulty in tellin visory council, s buffe; ; (his writing into two class- o e, it e first is the lind in Which the| e i ! nly ms first letter and i | | {tor 15h, but they a W@ four ~ and you have to ok pret {evose ar t = the They me Tes up o a nt writer Who i atient, viva- na mor an usually alert men Nearly alwave you'll find him ot 2 way or an- y i >l and inter Such a e and too imuys fent to follow rules and conventions | The advisory councii H m split yeur gment. Th: | Kk but they first mentfoned writlng indlcates a cer- ed by the pres- |tain degres of dinlomacy and artfulness, and advise so they aTe |in many cases reaching the extreme of | 3 vy council with sultable | Atsstmulation, the ability and tendency | rank and credentials, | to ma nes seem what they are not. | Even thoush the strect of Washington |The ofher writing does not indicate | show faces from every foreign country | thesa things. ! s t predominate. Evers- | | e sees the sSolemn taced noise- Tomorrow—Fingers of Detaft, i en from the Far East. ride uie: they or walk through the great avenues, but keenly observant of Sl . MER! the American citizen, b whom QoD RO B s are now brought into close contact. i WISTORY i And 1n all the ceremony and TesPONs- | pes——————— bility of the great international confer- | % - - S once it is again New Engiand that plays | CLAY AND RANDOLPI'S BLOODLESS ading part. It is Senakor Lodge, who DURE. is a leader on the biz four American ¢ Tn the first quarter of the last cen- Js Senator Lodge. Who as|tury there were no two more briliiant the senate committee on |men in the United States than Henry ons and repubifcan {1 assume control of the arma progfam when such a program reaches the senate for endorsement; it is Senator Brandegee Connecticut and Seuator Mcses of New Hampshire who serve on that committee in high and re- sponsible positions, and who will wield strong influence in the senate when the result of the conference comes up for ate and action. It is Congressman John Jacob Rogers of Lowell, represent- the 5th Massachusetts district who is nking member of the forelgn affairs tee of the house. Members of the 3 England states were selected by Prestient Harding to serve on the advis- ory council, so New England will be in the front row of limitation of armament ranks and hold a prominent place in the adjustment of international affairs. Clay and John Randoloh. There were likewize 10 iwo more bitter political op- ponents. The bad blood between the statesmen culminated in a challenge to a duel in 1826. Randolph was a United States senator from Virginia gnd Henry Clay had been made secretary of state by John Quincy Adams. The president had sent a message to the senate on the subject of the Panama misslon. A motlon was made in the sen- ate for a call upon the president for further information. Tn response to this the president answercd by a message, with the tone of which Randolnh was greatly displeased, and, in his place in the menate bitterly denounced it and its authors, President Adams and Mr. Clay. Tn his speech alluding to the message Randolph said: “I was defeated, horse, A Message Feeble Erie, Pa.—*1 am nearly The Last Assignment. Today there was laid to rest in Patnam the mortal remains of Lewis O. Williams, for years an homored, respected, consei- entious newspaperman, of that section. | one who used his, talen and his opportun- | ities for the good of his community and his fellowmen. Lewis Wiliam was e 80 years i jed splendid type of the Connecticut news- down and nervous £o I could hardly keep around and do my work. T trit peper man. He belleved in his paper and | different remedies but did not seem to-gain. 1 read about Vinol and tried 2 bottle, Inafew days I began to recuperate and it certaini lllndl world of good. 1 feel much better and s! in way. My sister, Who is 86 years old, has algo taken Vinol with excellent results.”'—Brs, | undertaking. T ®| Navy yards are mot supposed to be the or: nd - | affected by the Hughes plan, but some . = pinded u n 1arded influence seems to have got- #he dangers and negot ms | mey scrapping part of the property as may be encountsred *%t| 4t the submarine base, part they do, yet there are times when | Vhe experience & anything but what| What the advocates of Inland water- mwould be willingly engaged f what | w n this country think of the St was coming was known before the start.|Lowrence canal project, is indicated by there is quite much Interest in (e rosolutton of the sdeeper waterways estabtishing recor@e between these | convention opposing the idea. | but old, and influenga left TREUN, 1010 French Street, Erie, Pa. .‘ “ COD LIVER PEPTONE AND IRON Creates strength and rebuilds wasting tissues. ‘We agree to help you with Vinol or return your money, ind Mr. Randoiph. =nt had now arrived when o1, =it that he could interpese. Ha went in amonz the parties part and 3 born blind draw little cars Mynhr!-irl. ) nd offered his mediat Nothing, how. | her foster mother. While Prussia and rallway. Ferryboats navi-| f28d svery Gokes ] ould be done e et | Russia_gronnd down the Poles within es in the mines. The damp salt | | on serve o b, SSRCESURETI fire. Eoth men took | their domains, denfed them their lan- iere shortens the lives of the| | STUFPING or fred muiposcy | €uase. literature and volitical rights, et their pre-war wage was the | | DRESEING £3. fr. Rang Austria was 2 benign suardian. There- f about 20 cents e day, Yored with Be'l's S fore Austrian Galicta hecame the con orial as distinotive | | Sesscning. la- A Mr. Clav and immedi. | servator of Polish national aspirations monument. From I his hand o |and there Poles were free to express 1 by Polish Tax: hands, “You owe me had to be worked on smaller shares than | huge mound at Kosciuskoberg, near Kra- Mr. Clay nrompty anywhere else in Burove, but. withal, the [ kow. Austria transformed the mound Babt 38 no; eva Poles In Galicla were the envy of the|into a fort. But the name of Koscluszko Randolph confesseq that he had | P08 in the 1ands of the Tsar and kais- | was not despised by Austrians, for e G e et B that Polish hero, it will be recalled, drove T see the devil in his eye, and that, with malice prepense. he means to tale my Jife. T may change my mind.” When Mr. Ciay neticed that Randolph had fired into the air, he sa'd to him with deep emotfon: “T trust to God, my dear sir, you are udtouched ; after what has occurred, T would nnt have harmed you for a thousand worlds!™ On the ensuing Monday Mr. Clav and Mr. Randolph exchanged cards, and thelr relation of amity an? courtesy were re- stored. IN THE DAY’S NEWS GALICIA. “Galicia? Oh, ves, that’s in Spain, or was it the place St. Paul wrote a lot of letters to?’ This answer to a geography examina- tion question hits wide of the mark both times, but Galicis bids fair to become etter known begause of disputes with Czechoslovakia afld Ukraine, not to men- tlon renewal of the age-old dlasension be- tween the Poles and Ruthenians who are about equal rumerically among its own nopulation. A bulletin_from the Washington, D. C., headquarters of the National Geo- graphic Soclety deseribes the present-day Gallcla as “a region about the size of North Carolina, with elght timer the population of that state, handicapped by its peographical location and immortaliz- ed by its history. “Restored to Poland, Galicla forms the southermost area of that natlon, with Ukraine, Rumanla and Czechoslovakit Iying along its horders. Nature was not kind to Gallela because the Carpathians, which shield Hungary from the cold Bal- tic winds, turn their back on Glhrdl and of cut off the warmer to 0ld People me weak, run- breezes the Declaration of Independence was signed, their own thought in their own tongues. Iy in the hands of absentee landords and ustria acquired Galiela upon the first ition of Poland, four years before our she was commaratively fortunate in es were burdensome, land was large- HEN winter storms come, a touch of extra heat is often needed. On the side where the wind blews it's nearly always drafty and chilly. This winter— wherever the wind searches—put a Perfection Oil Heater in its path. It will keep the whole room up to ‘‘comfort-point’’ temperature. The cost of this extra heat is small, f Statuary, crucifixes and ture cathedral have been hewn out rock sait by plous workmen of conturies rom the world, reverent hands PERFECTION Qil Heaters STANDARD OIL CO. OF NEW YORK 26 Broadway even aa minia- the SQVE MEAT—SAVE BAOKEY Tith every reast of every settlement of ch was heaped upon a and its use enables yon to keep a slower fire in the main heating plant. In many instances the Perfection will soon pay for itself by the coal it saves. Millions of homes use Perfection Oil Heaters. Ask your dealer to show you one. & For best results use Socony kerosene.

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