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. ; v lerrich Bulletin und Qoufief 125 YEARS OLD Camcriplion oriw 13 & week: J0c s momsh; 36.00 e, s R M 2o Postfice ot Normi=, Oome., e Teiepkone Culta, : edn Dustasss Office, 8. Ballets Editorial Rooms, 354 Bulletin Job OTies. 353 @Niwanstie Ofice 33 Church Nt Telephone 106 Norwich, Friday, Dee. 16, 1921, P SpeetE——————— ¥iBGER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, The Assoclsud Press I esclusively eatitied o (e aae for repiblicatiun of all Dews dzwateh- ® codied 1o 3t or mat ctuwise Zredited te i paper Aud also the iocal vews Dublished Al Agvis of republiestion of @eelal des- o s ave alw reerved. CIRCULATIOR WEEK ENDING DEC. 10th, 1921 11,673 BLEM. opening of the h congress Pres- THE SHIFPING PRO the . g he wouid g regard to the . ne at ater time that ou s own good points. casion of his | congress told w o pre- resemblance of De- vresi- forernnner erding s at goods should those When into ef- Sikd DOWN TO BURINESS, to be that Ger- that it held is n his view ¥ the reports to opposition de- th oney. meet - *e 15 no small task bout the needed deflation that used marks may of grind of keep! resort d to recover. out new ion of public utili- increased, in some twentyfold over while legisla- wing fostered for the placing of =0ld values and all the traces and indus- =mosal of the government” may be used for security ioans from outside the coun- has been maintained by that it could not meet the de- has been met with the clalm ta= not making the effort that In order to toe the mark, satisfled to make a poor on could not ion therefore would have heen the " other a® Aoing everything within its was 4 for th ™ . situ; tfferent than | Jermany had tmpressead PULPWOOD RESOURCES, i feneed | aper shorts few years, d that the sup- wood would be exhausted ‘n century 1f immeddate steps n reforestu- t were be- to what ore from ths realized that possessed gre untouched re- sources !n this respect, but s inter- rection what t service has to say lumber wealth of that was emphasi engage orests of Alaska 1o note territory and its possibilities ot supplying pulp wood. Forester Greeley d that Alaska-contained 2 of national forests and over 75 billion teet of timber sultable for general con- sumption: It includes 100 mlillion cords of pulp wood, whose serviceability for the manufacture of papér s fully estab- lished by exfsting commercial practice. In connection with this feature Forester Greeley deelared that “Wisely handled, a paper industry can be developed in Alaska as permanent as the paper in- dustries of Secandinavia and capable of supplying & third of the present paper consumption of the United mauct: Thus the paper supply of the ntry may not be as near the bottom as one might think from past statements, Puilp wood - in - Alaska, however, s different than in New York, New England or other points in_the country. Jt will require much development, rgil and water trans- portation and nece regulations, but the opportunities afforded by Alaska In this direction are mot belng overlooked, for two sales of pulp timber, aggregat- ing 700 million feet, have been made dnd others are pending. This doesn’t in- dlcate that the replacement of pulp tim- ber at points where paper industries are now located can be disregarded but it gives an indication of tho resources that remalin to be drawn upon and the future of Alaska in this respect. in the way s THE NEW HAVEN'S PROPERTY, 1t is safe to say as Attorney General Daugherty goes back to Washington af- ter ‘Rearing from those interested at Hartford and Boston and consull‘lc: with Judge Mayer in New York that is in much better touch with the situation than he would have been had he remain- ed in Washington and endeavored to get hold of the facts from what has gone before. Witheut a dissenting voice there is a re on the part of the people of Con- cticut that there should be & restora- tion of the trolley lines to the New Ha- n road and the trusteeship in that re- discharged. to the Boston & Maine stock held by the New Haven amounting at the present time to 28 per cent there are those Who claim they de- sife, to and can buy it. They are Boston & Maine stockhoiders who . probably hope to get at a bargain price when cost the New Haven road $140 a share. It isn't to be supposed that the return of the trolleys or the Teturn of the Bos- ine stock would remove all the the New Haven road. It s of trolley lines any more than what is now being paid to the trustees would go to the operation of the lines or the meeting of the indebtedness to the state, but what would be gained through the return of the properties: to the New Haven would be putting it in ion of what it owns and giving it ortunity to use.such for the pur- pose of horrowing additional sums. Just ¢ it should not have these securities E at this time is difficult to see torney general was opposed to ac- agaénst the road such as resulted the trusteeships. A suecessor took view which brought abeut govern- he ment prosecution and now it remains to be seen if the present one hasn't been convinced that thg existing situation Is unjust. There cah be mo denying the factthat the New Haven needs the help of a favorahle decision, PROTECTIN THE OUTLAY. ing fhe roads and treasury against the methods truck’ operators has been well recognized in this commonweaith. Ths placing of the restrictions is in the in- terest of ‘the entire state, and enforce- ment of the requirements is only Wwhat the operations have reason to expect. That this is not the only ctate where fhe preservation of the roads rests upon action of this kind has been shown by the t ce steps in other ecommon- wealth, horities have been keen to notice the oxecns of the heavy trucks, but it remains for the residents of Long through its farm bureau to ask supervisors to take drastic action nst the violators who disregard the ¢ prohibiting the use of country roads to trucks weighing in excess of 12 tons need of h of motor Island the - | They point out that the cadam and as- alt of the roads are being cut to pieces nd ridged by the heavy trucks. It is bec: nsn\{f the violation of reg- ulations that the Ngnitations become nec- ry, and when \toads are made to more than th ere expected 10 age and waste of resuit. thoney is bound to EDITORIAL NOTES. Porbably you have noticed therd are more shopping days to Christ- the & favors that erstate commerce sion lower railroad rates 1 be said to be unanimous. ollette has out Pacific pact 1 of be sufficient to cause most peos favor it, come course T to The man! on the corner says: If ven't told what you want for Christ- mas you mustn't be dis: ointed of San- ta brings the wrong thing. ely possible that congress- man who wanted to, restrict Judge Lan- dls was 2 friend of Babe Ruth who plan- Ned on embarrassing the judge Boston relled upon the women to stand for good government just the same as New York did, and the result was the samp in both ecities—highly disappoint- ing. It you have a wild story to tell with- ot any prospects of proving it Semator Watson of Gedrgia can probably be got- ten to listen to the tals and take some stock in it. A decided improvement both to pron- erty and street is that which has been made in West Maln strest. In time the wisdom of making other similar better- ments may be recognized. Emma Goldman is sald to have her mind set on returning to the United States. Undesirable was the decision when she was expelled and there has been no reason to change it. Up dn Maine they are complaining about the lack of snow, but the chilly blasts this week /indicated they must have come from some snowffmk, Tt magy” have been as far off as Labrador but it seemed as near as Massachu- setts. S Wisconsin's governor doesn’t approve of marines on mall trains belng orderec to shoot to kil because innocent men might be killed. Probably he wants to have the mail car crew shot or blown up before taking action against the hers, without stopping .to think th nocent men will not be shot if they st where they belong. _in his report millions acres { i | the wharf with on lady who was given to jumping to con- clusions. “The Blacks are moving out to one next month where they intend to make their home and millions of dollars I saw the pictures of the house today. It'is going to ®: grand and Serena ex- phml ed all about their vegetabel gar- den!” < “Dil she now!” temporized her hus- band warily, “Well, I came home in the same car with Black tonight and we had almost one end of it to ourselves, because | his life he had wanted to own a shotgun there wasn't room for anything besldes’ and never had any use for one, but now ourselves and Black's packages. He had one thirty-five pound bundle which caused him to sag on the right side like a sink- ing warship and several swung from the other hand which must have totaled near- ly as much. I asked him whether all the delivery motors had struck and he ex plalned that the truck was seeds. He had thirty-five pounds of grass seed to make a noble lawn in front of his new farmhouse and the remainder was ta sup- ply the flowers and vegetable gardens. “He had the wild light of the enthusi- ast in his eve and I took him firmly by the coat lapels. ‘See here.’ I asked care- fully in simple words, ‘will you tell me Why you didn’t buy your seed in the town five: miles from your farm, instead of lugging it ciear from Chicago? “Black looked blank for a minute and then brightened. ‘Why, you see,’ he ex- plained, mopping his forehead, ‘we got to looking over a catalogue and we couldn’t wait. D seemed rather nicer to have them right away ! ,Now I hope you aren’t asking me to get in the condition of poor Black. I give you my word that boy had sufficient vegetable seed there to supply all of Chicago easily If all those flower seeds live and prosper our park system il have nothing an the Black farm. I point- ed out to him that the onions alone would cause him to arise at 3 a. m. because onions always are at the state where they have to be weeded out or thinned or en- couraged some way. And as for beets— say, I remember when my uncie planted two rows of beet sced carelessly and with insouciance, and a st of the sum- mer he spent them out. He spread them a is yard, and the neighbors’ yards on all sides, until peo- ple ran when they saw him approaching, because they feared he intended to be 7 ‘I wish youw'd buy a farm,” said the, stow upon them more beets. He couldn't | was bear to | is always sure to happen when an ama- teur &go grow things! Why, if I | carried thirty-five pounds of grass seed I'd be rheumatic for life” But it's going t®™be such -funl!” in- sisted his wife. “Serena says that after they had made out the list of farm ma- chinery necessary her -husband saliied forth. and came home, not with a plow or”| thrasher-or anything like that, but with 2 double barreled shotgun. He said all he had it. He didw't say what he ex- pected to shoot with it, but Serena hadn't | the heart to discourage him. She said lit would be handy marking double fur- rows in the pansy bed if for nothing else. Every night when he comes home to din- ner he brings something that he has run across that wjll be so fire for him to wear on the farm. Up to now he has two corduroy suits and dozens of khaki trou- sers and hip boots and lots of rubber ponchos for himself and his guests.” *“So not on your life?” said her husband sternly. “A man with & new farm is lots worse than the proud father of a new child, and nothing would.lure me into being a guest at the Black ranch, Peo- ple in his condition make you get down on-your knees to see how the radishes are sprouting or to measure the growth of the green beans from the day before. They take you into inclosures where en- your vest and your ears unmless a brows- ing cow swallows you in two bits absent- mindedly: They are always requesting you to sob joyously over the new gaso- line motor or the enewly dig ditch for finished supper and think now you can begin to enjoy yourself they yawn and say good-night, it's bedthwe; hope you sleep well.” i “Sfrawberries as big as eggs and Jer- sey cream that you have to cu fresh butter and green peas just remarked his wife meditatively with one eye on him. "Quit it!” shouted her husband. “Say. | that woliid be fine, wouldn't 1t? Guess I'l run over and ask Black if there is anything else vacant near his farm. Not that I'd be so . foolish, however.—Ex~ change. l Famous Trials JOIN ETIENNE GUINET. In the latter part of the 18th century, when the government of the United States was not very firmly established, they found frequent trouble ampng eciti-'; zens who tried ditions then pi in make money out of con ajiing in the fitting out neutral ports of this country armed s to be employed in the service of gn countries. One of the most im- portant incidents that came un the jurisdietion of the circuit court of the United States was the trial of John Etienne Guinet, was charged w. fitting out and ar ; 2 French vesstl within the port of I i Guinet stants were indicted on May . in the circuit court =t Philadei- the cr.me of - arming Les Jameaux to cruise and commit hostilities upon the subj and property of the king of Great Britain, with which for- eign ruler this country was then at peace. When Guinet was a not guilty. The ho gned he pleaded erial facts that ap- peared in evidence were that Les Jameaux entered the Philadelphia port the previous year laden with sugar and cof from Port-au-Prince. On her ar- mounted four guns and two Wi the master warden of the Philad T a ered what was being done hé ordered ¢ contractor to de and ccretary of war, who dirc the recent equipments of a yarlike nature should be dismantled and the vessel restored to the state in which she was when she arrived, ‘When Guinet'was ound in his Do g an account in his own handwriting between Le Maitre, one of his accomplices, and himself, i 1 were ‘charges for st nz and cannon, fors money’s sundry times on account of t and for commissions and superintending the Tepairs two, 0, one apprehended prosecution that had act of consress was d on the subject. , according to a treaty between the United States and France an American en had the ri iter into the e of the rnment, this position having received some countemant from the refusal of t nd jury only ! a short tifne before t ilis of indict- ment a acted in that After tb case against G the charges were prover the district attorney of Phi entered into a descrip- tion of the principle and advantages of an honorable enutrality. He contended, first, that the offense ha ond, that the defendant was knowing- concerned in committing it, and, third, that the indictment was founded.on the proper section of the act of congre In symm! to have been employed by her own t ha view to merchandise, and not with a view to w It is true she left equally true’ that when some distance below Phi she took on board more, and it {5 man were ready to be sen boat. “These cireum: conversion from gnal commerdial desizn of the vessel to a design of cruis- Ing against the enemies of France, and, of course, agains ta nation at peace with the United States, which is at peace with all the world, nor can it he reasonably contendéd that the board of the vessel were articles of mer. for if that had been the case they would have been mentioned In her manife: ring the port, whereas, it expressiy states that she sailed in bal. last.” The chief question to be the extent to which Guinet was aware of the use to which these implements of war were to be put, and being a Frenchman by birth there was no doubt from the tes. timony that was advanced that the objeet was to fit the vessel as a Dprivateer as soon as 1t could get well to sea. It did not take the jury long to find a e dropped to delphia harbor three or four st that other guns ances clearly prove a decided was | It was contended | Mistaisen, | Miss A was a poor student in class {but usually made her grade from | {her final examination. hi When she came up for examination i@ one subject the teacher watched her closely. She saw her pouring over an jopen text book which she held in her | ly four guns, but it is | to her by the pilot | verdict of guilty against the Frenchman, and this trial was used frequently as an interpretation of the law in the years that followed in which many similar at- tempts to arm such privateers in our neutral ports were made. READ YOUR CHARACTER By Digby Phillips, Copyrighted 1921 | Curved Backs | . The curved back is one of the minor isigns of character, and by it is meant ificially the back that curves in by other characteristics, shows a per- | son who is slow of thought and quick- | er of action; who acts upon impulse | and then thinks it over afterward; one ! who is rather open to emotional im- | pressions, and in whom the element of | stubbornness is lacking; a person easi- | |1y persuaded, and one who as a rule! | 1s content to be a follower rather than! o leader; a man or woman of sympa. thetic nature, tactful and diplomatic; {more easily led by appeals to emo- | tions than by reasoning. | As 2 rule these people have fine | sensibilities. Thei feelings are rather jmore easily hurt than with <he av- | erage person. | DBut, as stated befcre, .the curved | back is one of the minor characteris- {tics, and if if is contradicted by more characteristigs than support it, it is inot. of ‘course a decisive indication. | | But on the average you'll find that| 1 people with curved backs show the! ! foregoing characteristics in greater or | less degree. Tomorrow—Big Feet Stories That Recail Others Likes the Choo Choos. One youngster has, written to Santa Claus and it would not be surprising| om what he wants that hs wouid some ay e president of a raliroad. This is | his lette |- D two T anty: I want a choo choo train, oré choo choo trainsh-one in t. ulddie and one in the front and one b jhind, and a coal car and a red big wag- on and.lots of candy. Give me a clown two more choo choe trains and a big Christmas tree. -A little rocking chair like Sister Joan's and four more clowns, boy doll house and four more choo choo traims and a whole lot of tracks so\ the trains will turn. Hope I Sea you Ohristmas eve: lap, Her paper was examined and i™Nwas {realized that she had copied her work | word for word from the text bhool | She was asked to remain afte émhcrs had gone and was told: the Miss A, you copied your examination answers from Brown’s text hook.” “Oh, no, you are mistaken,” she said, | s she looked the teacher straight in the eye, “I copied it from Jones' texthook.” | GLEANED FROM FOREIGN T EXCHANGES During this month Nelson's Victo { Which has been the flagship of the au- | miral of the port of Porismouth for near- ly 100 years, is to be moved from her familiar moorings and placed in dry dock for examination. - ince 1903, when she Wwas taken into dockyafd for repair a iter being holed by the battleship Nep- tune, the old ship has been continuousty in the water. Naval experts are doubt- ful whether the anclent hull wiil again stand the strain of undocking once she has been placed in dock. A sugges- tion that the flagship should be retain- ed in dry dock has jpeen made by the raged chickens fiop afl over you or make ! you sit on haystacks which ciim| wn | the tiling drain—and just when you ‘have | - 18 the result of the Honors For sodes of the way. tracked down the commercé raider. red in 1889, mous dash out of Miners’ Wages wages hboard at | shire.. Tpis will for laborers. decision has been official organ, creages of 145 on don Chronicle. THE { “If the Pacific { cific problem,'’ i ! in connection wrth with | ference called by President Hurding for Xed,” | the discussion of the. Limitation of Arm- aments and Far Bastern questions. “In other words,” con inappropriaccly as | hazy questisn-mai problem of its isk fleet: he practica’ly imp powers of the wo fact in ea; antl began ta ously seemed of Ji: nibal feasts. Befor: idea of expl iting portant. With the uable parts that n: stations mig] developed a keen tiniest ro “As lanl bound the sit three Unite Japan. I tions hardly ini countries whos means negl the other wi states. le a Spain and now inte: 1fic: but in -uated the nwroblems . “What their coast lines. on in averv. gase, with more thsr both the sweep of Philinpines add a di 1,008 miles more on Rasst 3,500 Duteh New Guinea break of o 1.00 tralia and evy ustr: Ay a Pacific tain by far the Britlsh possessions the Dutch nossesst frontage on the models and all prices. and serges. $3.00 pair. 3-5-7 Water Emden officially announced it waste them. Something like that | jonn C. T. Glossap, C.B,, has been ap- pointed a rear admiral. Tecalls one of the most thrilling epi- commander of H. M. A, S. Sydnsy, which X den and put'an end to its career as was made commander of the Bath. Arnother notable adventure of nis oceur- He was on board H. M. S, Calllope when that vessel made its fa- teeth of a hurricane. by consent at a meeting of the joint that the miners' wages_be reduced by 2 1-2 per cent. per week @uring December in Lancashire, Cheshire, ‘North Stafford- about 101,000 miners. the month there will be a reduction of 1-4d, per shift for colliers, and 1-2d. Government Help the Ex-Service Men. —Of men employed on the various unem- ployed relief schemes of the government, 75 per cent. must be ex-service men. This of efforts by the British Legfon, saye its Dganches afligted to the Legion now number 1,385, IN THE DAY’S NEWS ocean devyid of islands or with as few bits of land &s those in the North At- ntic, probably there would be no Pa- says a bulletin Issued from the \Vashington, D. C. headquar- ters of .the Nutional Geographic Society “each tsland mignt be visualized not not so much ‘the#froblem of the Paci- fic' that is oothering the world, as the ‘rom home without fuel bas- ables had to span such dis- ces under water without relay sta- tions, offengive naval warfare and tele- aphic communi€ation over wires would t about a generation ago ing over island bases and stations in the Pacific that had previ- than stages Yor exotic dances and can- lands bordering the ocean had ben acquired chiefly with the only the iarrer areas were considered im- ht play In the future, there ks ard coral rings. ris of the ast bowl of the Pacific now rept vitally interested powers States, Great PBritain and sdditlon there are four na- sia, Holland and France. interests are coast Latin sted at least to the extent that Franes ted, have passed from the ‘nay°be called the the varions countries whose lands Hem in the Pacific vary greatly on a basi volutions of rhe coasts out of considera- leads in miles of frontage on the Pacific 4. and the part of Alaska above them. The Straft to Chosen (Koren), counting the coast_line of the sea ‘of Okhotsk, | parable o sizo to our own Guif of Mex- mee of ahout 3. land. may fairly be considered C forthcoming survey. Destroyer—It that Captain The promotion Captain Glossop was German a . For that exploit he Apia Harbour in the Cut—It was decided Manchester yesterday affect the wages of In Wales during FOR THE CHILDREN DOLL CARRIAGES TOY SWEEPERS PHONOGRAPHS : reached as a result an_ in- the last return—Lon- PACIFIC, were mercly a great SHETUCKET STREET the approaching con- tinued the bulietin, the dot under a vast, yTo split halrs, it CHAIRS " DESKS I N. S. Gilbert & Sons 1,000 miles; but their total coast lin counting that on the Indian ocean many times that fizure. China’s coa: ine, too, is screened by Japan. amounts to about 2,000 miles. French' Indo-China, behind the Philippines. has a copst line of about 1,000 miles off the | China sea. “On the eastern side of the Pacifie, Mexico has a coast line of more thanm|g; i 2,000 miles, while that of Chile is more | it Witk some than 2,500 miles. The ageregate Pacifie | coast line of the remaining LatinAmeri- | tan countries amounts to about 3,500 mite: “But it is the small scattered islands confrolied by these hordering ‘nations that constitute the crux of the Pacific prob- | o lem. Practically all the islands in the | Pacific_proper are under the control of ands. s had to be operated fome of et abovs ossible. The great rld woke up to this ittle more significance or flop over on e this, islands and the world's greatest of graVity their products, and through the iceb realization of the val- aval bases and relay | and Japan. All of the French and most of the British holdings are ted southr| of the equator, leaving the United States | and Japan in close that line. Guam is practicglly surround- ed by newly acquired se islands, formerly owned by anese lands—skirt “the three es. The United S large holder of Pacific owns the group which important strategically—Haw interest in even the domalns that lippines tes is not a | 0 but it | the most | terested—China, Rus- Among those by no ‘m and meriean Germany, ‘once inter- gion: fic ortion: f the re Mexlco, s o - GUARDING THE SHIPS = AGAINST THE ICEBERGS Coast guard cutters were scouting the North Atlantic all summer so pas- sengers and crews of ships sailing i northern seas might sleep without fes that an iceberg will creep up on them in the night. “These floating white castles of the North with their fantastic glamour threatening, death-dealing portent sometimes wander down to latitude 38 degrees—as far south as such sunny climes as Lisbon in Portugal or the shores of Delaware Bay,” says a bul- letin of the National Geographic Soci- ety, from its Washington, D. C., head- quarters. The icebergs which are to be seen during the early spring montbs in the Atlantic are great frozen fresh water glacier-ends which have brol en loose time he ing each has aecent- of the United States. akes' of masthead. ot Leavinz minor con- largest bal , the United States from thic Larr they f 000 miles, counting aEEich he) the Aleutian Islands make. them turn break them hard small rect frontage of about the other side of the 1s second with ap- miles from Behrins ther iceberg.” com- ieo. from the ice fields of Greenland and Jean Jacques Des: “Across the southwestern®corner of the | floated yrith the current into warme a Pacific, British territory stretches from | Seas. They ‘herd’ quite often off the{a rough and to' New' Zealand..a of Newfoundland. The warm wa- 500 miles, but with a miles between Ans- In a way, how- fatigable ene rope keep them back on far north as d few of them also in th ic except near northeas “Gorgeously tricked ouj ther-in-lagw 3 n white Philinines and the | 2 northern Borneo. ftheir breath ons have a’ directwith dread. ific of only about he chill of|dre Sabes Petio rariners ver L as pr part of Hall make MORE FOR LESS all lengths. Priced lower than can be duplicated elsewhere. A great saving on your purchase. A large stock to select from at a great SAVING TO YOU. MORE FOR LESS Street—Comer Washington Square cne breaking or melting shifts thes T The debris, wh the top quickly enor ound the South Pole, off in tablelike blocks and as grim sentinels of the sou ters. One explorer reports that counted as from the deck of his stea more than that could be se: “Like mighty derelicts, dwarf; 1i the firse e: plows having Great Britain, France, the United States | MOr¢ Of the heat of the sun ,soon slides into the ocean rate the debris sel berg far on its journey. Noth to mar the. purity of ]cxxerxor. They support littl and Jap_;m‘inule worm and :he“s.nn on | Scopic algae, which gives ow, belng their only “The icebergs of the Antarctic re- s are larger than those of the Arc. but not so tall perhaps. m stays ma 'y who, in 1801 defied the French géneral of Napoleo: and a2 French Army of firally forcing the the ‘island in November 1802, Dessalines wa$ born in 1758 Tk | Atlantic are pushed out from the wes: coast offGreenland ‘be‘ween Disco Bay Stiand Smith Sound or from the east It|coast south of €3 degrees latitue hem are as much as 44 the surface of the water this being about one-sixth of. - seventh of their volume. “As they sail away they r of the debr was originally in the bottom of the glacier. Much of this immediately fall jto the bottom of the ocean, having melted its way out. Often they de w the e le a 0us i whi at as er, en fron cance, their sides sometimes measu to_forty miles ia when they first-break off from the t out in I where the warmer winds and seas e out! their very cores, 1 turtle, ip into smalier berg: ips called ‘growl ‘growlers’ arg as dangerous as the mo- HAITI'S EMPEROR known a Jean Jacques I, Emperor of Haiti, wa: literate nezro of inde 150 es, s, Frenc the This has been our slogan for a godd many years. We always try to stand by it We carry a complete stock of SHEEP-LINED Clothing for Men and Boys in ulster A MEN’S AND YOUNG MEN’S OVERCOATS—We have them in all grades, all makes, MEN’S AND YCUNG MEN’S SUITS—Ali modzls, comprising worsteds, cassemeres, BOYS' CLOTHING—Boys’ Suits, Overccats, Mackinaws and Sheep-Skin Coats, e have a large stock, prices right. A If you need to clothe your boy for Christmas here is the place to do your trading. FURNISHINGS—We carry a large and comglete stock of Furnishings for Men and Boys—Prices that will tempt you to buy. PANTS—We carry the largest and most compl grades, makes and prices from $1.00 2 pairand up. SPECIAL for a short time only—Men’s Grey and Brown Heavyweight Wool Pants ete steck of Pants in ;he city. All THE NORWICH BARGAIN HOUSE Norwich, Conn. wh n Was w nort ti, and the second presi- “Most of the icebergs of the North}dent of the southern par- hick seems icebergs lite, a micro- red color habita one omtinent has for protes that gleams and sparkles in the sun-|R: re, Haiti, and sold a D O X 08 b i~ thess mouxies Salaves pgh gbl Francals, now cailed Cape reached hy flects fram the Pacifie, and | from the great sheet of ice that cov-|1791 he became one of the t matters I'itle from a naval mofnt of |ers Greenland. No architeetural feat|ordinates of F is Dominique ° view that half the water that bathes this |of the ancient Ezyptians or the I ssaint, ‘with the rank of lieute Joms shore Fra s called the Tndian |zantines, or of a Sir Christopher Wren | general. : i Ocean. Cnnatn adds anproximately. 500 | can compare with the n 1803 Dessalines was app(nim S Besepuiade hundreds of other temples Governor for'life, inaugurating his r “The ielands constitute Tapan | carved in their sides hy the agents of | with a_blood: - massacre o stroteh \alaiz Asia from nesr the tip | erosion. No marble pos the rain- whites leff on the island r of ochiiza to the southern nofnt of [ bow like tints of their columns, and|evacuation. In the same year he pro- Tatwan (Formosn), and thus have a |10 mar edifice has so fairy like, {claimed himself emperor and was A e ahout 2,700 | capricious, and bizarre a character.|crowned -with great pomp. His s e ilee. "The o 1 nan ijs mueh | The whole zamut of hlues and & jects soon grew l‘lr“d of the tyranny e o fowewsc s o the B vesict hide and seek over and cruel despotism with I frontazs on the Sea of Okotsk, the Sea su ruled the island, and ‘Dr was of Japan, and the Yellow and Bastern assassinated in_ 1806 Sox themselves in th their | officers, #enri Cristopbe 7 G crarnan Ty he ghostlike emptiness ar rern