Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, December 17, 1921, Page 4

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NURWICH BULLETIN, SATURDAY, DECEWBER 17, 1921 continued before the first of the s of course implies 8 Tecog- e abuses heing practiced by ite as much as if they w convirted. Likewlise # -imiicates avold conviction and mend Plainly the organizations been confining themselves to but _sponsoring gross-. ex- owingly or unknowingly. 1siety on the.part of the unions, s are betng brought to light, 156 ‘before they are made to focidod contrast to those Whers, even affer rirgleaders, thera ap- determination to cling to but unlawful activities of ation is one which the overlook nor should u tion n to believe “that called for in such instances CANCELLING DEBTS. 1d be a gen- war debts is by THE MAN WHO TALKS | If the scsther may be regarded as a kingdom, then eurely its ruler is a mon- arch: a vesjtable czar who has recently opened (e Winter Palace. King lce wisldijng his sceptre, and we ara be- gluning ko feel, more or less sevarely his enthronément. 1f he has not manifes ed hiimself very much thus far in south- ern Conmec’izut, he has been quite vis- orous along the morthern belt of Mas chusetts and ‘within the entire area the Berkshives. In people have experienced the usual scenas of his coronation. What dfsplay of autocracy the Ice King proposes to make in our little corner jof the world remaing to ba ‘'seen, but some of the results of his adminisiation we can foretell with tojerable accuracy. Should the winter be very coid, next summer's ice bills will ba very higli, hecause the ice is so thick. If the temperature is high, the bills will be higher, hecause theice is so thin. Whetper hizh cr low, wep or dry, thick or thin, it Js always the poor consumer whé gets caught between the “devil and the deep sea.” of a suggestion that | There are many angles from which £ winter may be viewed. The poet may s revel In the ring spangles” of an v ce storm, probably sceing more beauty ! t |in it than The Amer Telephone and Telegraph Company does. Poetry also expatiates on fields “eovered with fmmac- ulate robes of Whits” and it s all per- ering such a mat-)eq from ‘h orted to be favorable | utility that of all the war debts|evident that rature is not " X erson vho had always lived within ey | o | e | o way & | TiiE LEVIATHAN : . j i) should re- nd co ime not s nt would Today 1t ad- wned upon such 5 old ‘ N must 1 ts man ¢ snow. Ys there wny analory between external hature and the ra t later, nmervous T want 40 epnly t me n - v v T I the winter censon ever strike | 1t then (e Yee rules over the a winter ma i we wo let winter use be fit o for knew tha to cop hung up He n must put forth nto the sun! ther if weget out ght we sun pa winter at ise provi s put into Fuel 5 cold then come 1 (hing to be done is to put on Ay be horn wi ow als c Winter. Paul these sections the | e it was urged by 1| Ba abie scene of browbeating and, injus- | tice at last came to an end. * your lords “think that any 1|Jury would pretend a verdict | upon me after such s “Iil warn you, Mr. Baxter.” said “Jeffries, “dont You trouble yourself about that.” chosen by the partisan Bach holiday time brings the usual story about the Christmas trees—where they come from, how many, and the means used to bring hundreds of train toads of them to-the .market. But the Christmas tree and the holly and the other greens which go go far ti wards making the holida: ‘atmosphere” are doomed to extinction unless some means are taken to reproduce them. The state of Vermont alone furnishes five million trees for the ecastern m:u‘kbls' each Christmas time and unfess means are taken to conserve axy regfoduce the supply some time will be exbausted. The American Forestry Assoclation has fs- isued a Christmas tree fonggraplf on the / | subpect. “The fir: step to save {mas greens.” s savs, | ventton methods. Wholesale cutting by venders who never go into the woods ex cept at thls season and the ‘hold up" prices in blg cities are denounced. On the other hand proper cutting aids the growth of the larger trees and if prop- erly done is a help. The holly is being cut by the unthinkg in a way that borders on sliughter, only the right sort,of cutting will save this valued green from the holiday season. “Ten of the 25 kinds of fir trees found the Christ- | | h regard | it as the | | } hegan to rub his hands and face was restored. He found that th put h to keep brother | fort % | freez- warmth The King the: g in th Londo ted. In p: thou arre o the times i . sufferings of during the| | 12st few years of almost | un lcled. T ng in his| | conduct to justify g of war- | | rant for his arrest, in which his crime | | was described as ‘sedicious and scan- | | Baxter, fearing the con prison, went into the country.| »unsel moved, on the 18th of i Fortunately for English just are few records of trials like This trial of Baxter began on M 30. Sir Henry Ashurst, faithfy 1 through life, stood by the pri- soner. He engaged celebrated | Pollexten to defend him, and the wrath | of the chief justice burst forth when | counsel desirous of defending some | | xter's interpretations made a re Hammond, ! said Chief Justice Jef-| “I know vou well. I wkiil taj upon you; you are the patron of | > faction. his is the old rogue whol| isoning the world with his Kid-| | dermunster docirine; an old schismat-} ical K ve, a hypocriti “I beseech your xfen, “suffer me 7, word 3 ent. It is well known to all intelligent | men of this ation at the: k apply to the 1o do not ! who wishes as well to | nd the royal family as any one| | kingdom, and my Lord, Mr. | loyal and peaceable | would T | hopric when he came | e wout > conformed.” said the JJudge, what oiled the | blockhead, the unthankful villai | he would not conform? Was he | and better than other men??? In vain another counsel that used no language but that of | respect in speaking of English bishops. { | Baxter attempted to speak in his | own behalf, but a violent outbreak of | abuse silenced him. Many of the by- | | standers were in tears, and this miser- | m strong opponents of the ent through the farce of a minute of two, and| guilty. There were to testify as to his ine. and the lover of were not allowed to verdict was ren- was unmoved, had actual- hren that the pped through the streets at The scandal, however, of was prevented by the w Tefiries on’ a bre THE DWINDLING SUPPLY OF CHRISTMAS TREES. foremost Christmas tree of the egstern U be found & large number of little blister- like sacs of balsam. puncture the little blisters and there will flow a small quantity of balsam, scientific laboratories. Balsam fs also rezarded as an excell medicine. ing “is ‘better fire pre- | t and leave a bare central axiz and cushions, for the leaves when dried {0ds of propagating the I points of not v ited States. “On the trunk of the Balsam Fir will A finger nail will s clear as erysta ‘When refined, this is used in making mboresopole - Slides in onr It is used chief- Iy to attach cover glass to the slides t “Cones and buds of the Palsam Fir are also very distinctive. The buds are al- most round, about one-sixth of an inch long, clustereq at the end of the twig and appear to be cover with a coat- of varnish. The denes ‘are from %n four inches long, cylindrical, and st crect on the twigs. Thelr scales off soon after they reach maturity This is S R Gasinx oFcH R e n fa the Northwoods many collect . the leaves and ‘use them in filling’ pillows 1 emit a very fragrant odor, The wood is soft, does not contain resin passages and nges In’ color from white to brown. It 2bout 24 pounds per cubfe foot used “extensively In the manufac- and is ant supply of thr 1th the hor | s A 2row upon treem which are common In ¢ LY tose can the coastal plain f the sov il and {and found locally * vorth as Penn- were to and southern alo . Maine. W he t- mas Holly may nd a diameter 1s and Texas, in height and a J the extreme nor ural | voung f = RICHARD BAXTER ihe oty ol ) the accounts of the|Christma: times called | who bt the Middle Ages|® {ree thief, for it ets all its nourish- | turns to the thought|MeNt from the trees unon which it tives. | Would the men of today face such|” ”‘i“"r:-i\\- qll-;w. gee o :‘;!sv. | opposition with so much fortitude as| lterally festooned witt the Mistle. |en lke John Bunyan and othersf (- LIt sometimes grows In ihe form:¢ the ples of this| 1) i Rt ca _ | proprintes for its own development the ) Ap- 18 the ,age 26, Baxter ! lifahlood of the tree upon which it feeds. was clected to become minist e Eun it p i of o ton Kiddermunster, which duty he fui- Skl il sl 9 years during the SLOrMY | trapidk and mearly ali of them are the rel the civil { sitie ¥ Manv: varietlos. are. fon Eng o battle 'of} Unifed - States. They ocen ) Col. Whall siment. Now, | westivs ! n'all times, ct did more| w1y Oklahoma the mist T dit to his ¢ ousness ‘than | solcted as the state. flow 1t vou| to his wisdom. When retitediithl i on DM At s e | Acton in Middlesex for quiet stu o i s e G L el he was arrested for holding a meeti et . Solen e i of people that belonged to 1 Elohe L e e e church nor the other. He dragsed | turpentine, it o of?. to prison, k ur babeas | ¢ st us writ in the Gourt of Common |y Snian | aves of the m almost he sauare n the common raised at Mistleto by artificial wav an dequate supply m r th future, and all th ho contribute fo- rds the developing of suecessfui meth- lants wil the welfare and miness of ure generations. l READ YOUR CHARACTER By Digbx Thillips, Copyrighted 1521 BIG FEET. ss nean that you' nor yet that ed to serve e force. at tha arpeter nd feot t are valukjle force as | as in many of life. Ono of these is ageressiveness. Most people with blg feet are aggressive. Tn addition they are energetlc physically, and vigorous in their mental processes as well They re not upon tm athy may be strong when o s 2 thing not easily reached. It ved for the big things. ¢ to show ftself aller things the s ro- when it is lfke- big-foote want to hfar s Som | SUFFFRED WITH | ITGHY FIVPLES Also Blackheads on_Face. LostSlaep, Cuticura Heals: “I sufiered with pimpies and blackheads for more than a year. o = )\\{ seep at night on account | b _ My face was just covered | 3\ with them. They were red | } end hard, and tched a great deal. I could not & the irritation, ) edies but without success. | I began using Cuticura Soap and | Ointment which helped me, and after |- usiny and four boxes of Cuticura Ointment | four cakes of Cuticura Soap | was completely healed. (Signed) Miss Mary Fusco, 545 Grand Ave.,NewHaven,Conn., Feb.18,1921, Make CuticuraSoap, Ointmentand Talcumyour dailytoilet preparations. ‘Sample Bach Frea by Mail. Address: “Cutieara Lad. n the world are native to North Amer- |ture of paper pulp, crates and packing | | etateries, Dept.K, daldes 45, Mas” Soid avery- 50 UP cht eccur in the Pacific slopes and |boxes. ‘i"-"-%’:&ié&f.?‘f.:."‘;’.’.‘.&:’,.“’““ ‘7- Rock Mountain regions, and_only [ “Thers are twenty kinds of Spruee | . — nd in the eastern United | traes and.they peeur in every country States, one of these— n:-vr::‘lfirf\fl In the Northern hemisphere. ight are 8 limited to tha high mountains of Virginfa. I native to North America, thres heins TT] ED! North Carclina and Tennessce. Most | found in the eastern part and five In the | LE ERS TO THE ITOR | important in_(he western woup ats the | western part. 5| Buy American Made Goo u.r 1r, T,\nhr]l“ ‘r‘._ White i ]11 Deen ereen leaves which are armed| Mr. Editor: ou be so kind as| SOLID GOLD . Fir. The Balsam [Fir I8 uaaues: |with spines alons the marzin 4 ~1to print the in your valua- LAVALLIERES "\“\r' -";’mfi?"’q-;\ n;"r ‘;!,.: |ed Christmas Holly. The leaves ;m:( paper? our Christmas sea- With Beautiful Cameo distributed_of our native firs. 5 | bright -and- they: often réflect Ii son our people spend a large amount of S0 o e most beautiful everareen trees | pirrors The small brisht berrles are |Money buying presents for their friend $9 {natlve to North Ameried. Tt frequentsialco a helpful means of identification n | Now I would like to make the sugges- [bogs. evamps, and other wet pIACeS. |fall and fn winter. An old manascript tn |ton that tie of Norwich buy [Amone tits chief associates nre the lipe Pritish Musewm states that | nothing but American-made goods and in | Ameriean ae. Rl; Kl hath berrys as red as an rose | 80 doing they will be doing a charitable ficel and RE6Spice . TN eomORlOn ireopls Farand the ol of the Tolly a oviding work for our unem. many for {ow trees ca aviour's crown of nstand the extreme wot and cold con- } SILK UMERELLAS s of our morthern hors and swamps. H IRADY. i Col bonia of sixuoehech s M svaay il e et e J. 3. BRADY Variety of Colors e R s Re e e isc bl Eancy Handies S e LU L instance tans he trec = = | 5.50 UP e gite s ane Chvistmas s 1o B ety ertog s | SUNDAY MORNING TALK | $ many localities no other native | 1 BoTy stete for heteany o moel | e SUFFERINGS AND THE (.uuu.“ [Ten mes Chil pean Tir, |3t Christmas, hut In order that a future | “FO I the sufferings Erlineon barts of | SUPPly may be insured, e MOt E: SR couion A of{be taken at once to res " ared wit w shall B ; =S SEhE - ey et oD Romans vill, 18. common wi AR Ry [3081 & DAy hat al re. sufferings; SILVERWARE m lightly, as me Then how tl glor unwort ctions will hav in the past. at we had he ang .sacr vanisi Our on n worth > for H Failing of Politicians politicians tmplicity obey t ther least 200,000 | rule t s best to say nothing thing pores to the square inche. they t zo as to keep the f Trafling Pine mouths ington P s Pine, and Gr i Inventor Lake Has Perfected | ‘‘Safe’’ Airplane v to waste ihe They are. In fact, not au able of | Shorechatiniibe senaitive of o Is a “stable and safe airplane” N - possible? Christopher J. Lake, in (Tor ¢ Yead a letter to President Harding, i s states that he has just perfected Glory Enough to Go Around such an airplane. Mr. Lake is the But it is not friendly er part| father of Simon Lake, who at the of Treland nor to tain to| age of 1§ vears invented the sub more nearly gatned its own way. There| marine. * He believes that the air- speculate -over which element has the s glory enough to go around.—New York Tribune. vlane he has invented is free frc diving, crashing accidents, etg. m “1 tried all sorts of rem- | but I TOILET SETS of genuine French Ivory FOR MOTHER— A gift that she will appreciate ne of| he | ‘ We carry the largest] selection of IVORY PYROLIN in New England SOLID ‘GOLD SIGNET RINGS Engraving Free 135143 MAIN STREET We Will Gladly Cash Your Xmas Check ENGRAVING DCI'S FREZ Stories That Recail Others ~ One’s Self, Getting Tutor For Infants, Tnvalids and Growing Children The Original ‘Food-Drink For All Agss See Qur Xmas Gifts O’NEIL-McGRORY ELECTRIC CO. FRANKLIN SQUARE Solid or Auto-filler, NORWICH, Ninety-seven shipped throuj of the now MANICURE SETS 21 Pieces Leather Roll $5.00 UP Stone ard Diamond Centers $2.50 UP PEARLS Rare in Color and Fully Guaranteed ROSARIES Gold and_Sterling $1.50 to $25.00 FOUNTAIN PENS Waterman, Scheaffer, {Unbreakable, and othes imakes to choose from. ONYX RING Set with a genuine Diamond $15.00 The Plaut-Cadden Co. _KNOWN FOR QUALITY AND SERVICE—SINCE 1872 Man Who Gives Out the Filled .r Moore, ——— Y ——L Y —— S A ———— CONN. th Americans on the Sea the mer Jobs for INFANTS ana INVALIDS ASK FOR Horlick’s the Original ad Substitutes Rich milk, malted grain extract in Powder No Cooking — Nourishing = Digestibls

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