Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 25, 1922, Page 4

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might no tbe under conditions during the war. Posstly this decision of the court will have the effect of ending a lot of the Gelay and the Ted tape which too of- ten surrounds cases of such a character. There 1s no question but what such a character, branded as undesirable and anxtous to remain here for such trouble (X as he might cause, would do all that is possible to handicap the government in its action. It is not to be supposed that 126 YEARS OLD been matilated recognizable. i " A True Detective Story—Copyrighted. 1 was late in the summer of 1903 that could possibly supply a clue to his ification had been removed—even the labels had been clpped from his clothes —and the manner in which his face had Tendered him totally un- to TR G S e ] CONST Enailin histrs whis i Tonson the| Ts the Curse i and 90 per cent of the start of ir must have been interested in a Buroj iid system which persists every serious llekun-—qnulntu- pression of spirits, irritability, in indhstrial organization of his own province to this day, and in the drowsiness, loss of appetite, cor- rect this trouble at once, and you Crusades which have their annual terpart in the Mohammedan exo- will be as near proof against pos- sible infection and disease. It was the str Whom Flynn entering thé’ st had seen i Te Which he had been- Teeling certaln that hers was a sign which pointed toward the operations or the gang which he waa after, Fiynn had the body photographed fro ma number of angles while experts in physlogoncmy re- constructed the features to something ap- ¥ from his capital to Mecca, a jour- ney of five or six years, during which the pilgrims combine religious objec- Pricted sy day B the year emept Sundey, Subecription price 130 & week; 80 o month: $6.00 ® Butersd i e Pogtofice et Norwich, Coon, 20 vend-ciaes memer. Telsghone Calle. Bullets Dusines Ofies, 480 Bulletta Wommentie 193 e Norwich, Wednesdny, Jan. 25, 1022. Office, 33 Church St OF THE ASSYIATED PaESS Amcdlated Prews i exclusively entitied ouslication of all nows dematch- o &t er zet etherwiw credlied fo Phper and elen the local mews published righte of tepubliestion of mecls! des- An pakchen Boreln am so Teserved. CULAHOR Iy ¢ the court is desirous of aiding such peo- Dle in establishing obstacles for the gov- ernment to overcome, but when it holds that thers should be speedy actlon taken one way or the other within a- definite time It 1s & move that should serve to clear up & lot of the delay and possible Injustice. It indtviduals are undesirables and have committed acts which establish that fact they are subject to punish: ment, which punishment might, as has been done In a number of instances, be imposed until &uch obstacles as prevent | tmmediate deportation can be removed. | LIQUOR AXD AUTO DRIVERS. | _Whlle Motor Vehicle Commissioner | Stoeckel of Connectftut has been call- ing attention to the fact that while thera has been a decrease in the number of automobile fatalities involving —chlldren | but an increase of 221 per cent. in the nstances where driving under the in- uence of Iuor, Was concerned, there is 4 statement from the registrar of mo- tor vahicles froaching a life like appearance. Then, armed with these post-mortem pictures, Flynn to a trip To OsSining to ste if any But, just as the case abaut to be en- tered upon the book of New Yori's un- tive with advantageous trade all along the way. v activities mysteries, it was cleared up through a coincidence so startling that no writer of detective fiction Would have dared make use of 1t. On the night of the murder, Willlam 1. Fiynn, then chief of the Eastern dlvi- sion_of the United Secret: service, with headquarters n New York was working on one of the numerous counterfeiting cases which occur so frequently in the Italian section of the metropolis. Flynn himsglt elected to trail a pair cf Italians whom he had reason to believe were working for or with the counter- felters. The trail led to an Italian groc- ery where, from the shadow of a dorway across the street the government detes- tive could see into a lighted room in the suspected house. A few moments later a covered wagon drew up in front of the house, a man got out, entered the grocery, and made his way into the very rocm ghat Flynn was watching. The light from the lamp fell directly upon his face, and the secret service operative relaized that this must be a new addition to the gang, for he Was certainiy no one that he had seen be- fore. Then the curtains to the window of the members of the Sing Sing could identify the dead man. The idea proved to b a convict whom Fiynn serving _time peaceful hard-working never been implicated in any the crimes of the Itallan settiement. ‘Worling backward from this ciue, Flynn and the other secret service operative trailed the Italians whe seen in the grocery stor on the night of urder, and it was not long before they had made @ complete roundup of the As was to be expected in a crime of this mature, alfbis were lentiful, hut, as was usual, these were none too well the gang. supported by fact, and atively simple matter for tie police to get at the bottom of the case, once the iden- tity of the victim had een established. A judicious application of the degree” brought to light the’ fact that Bendetto had been killed because he had gotten wind of the counterfeiting. llot, for another counterfeiting case—identified the phctographs as be- Ing those of his brother-in-law, Maurena Benedstta whom he described as being a ‘As a state Katsena has been swal- lowed up in the province of Kano in northern Nigeria, due ‘east of Lake Chad and about half way between that marsh bound inland sea and the Niger, As a city it has shrivelled within its mighty walls, as high as a three story buflding, and thirteen miles in cireuit. ““The city of Kano has outdistanced Katsena and 'become the Chicago of] this ferfile region of grain cotton, giant vegetables and luscious fruits, and al- so0 of indigenously developed industries that range from cloth making to man- nfacture of glass. But Katsena still is the cultural center of the Hausa peoples, whose tongue is the most mel- lifluous of north Africa and so rich In its vocabulary that you may find words for eight periods of the day fion&unrlu until sunset. sHausa is “Ttalan ectonyin good one, for ew—an Italian citizen who had om the chief had ants To Levy Sales Taz To Provide Adjusted . it was a compar- the trade language of the area between the Benue, the Niger and the Sahara, and it is one of the few African tongu which has developed a native litera- ture, “The Hausa genlus for trade and farming, end their comparative liter- “third WEEK ENDING JAN. 21st, 1922 In Massachusetts showing 1’7‘ 3 1412 revocation of licenses last year to §%0 Ir 1920 for operating automobiles 2 TG while intoxicated. Thus while the per- centage of Increase Is different, Masta- | chusetts showing a gain of but 62 per indicates either that the nelgh- g state has auto drivers who have t Leen indulging so freely in the stuff muddles or else they have been e successful in getting away with were drawn, and Flynn abandoned hi: chase for the time being. The next morning the the place where Flynn had hidden himsel| the night before, It was several days late that, the overative read the official accoun cel with Dblood-stained sawdust. The dat: sugar barrel, recalled to the operat mnid the fact tha an Italian grocerf at or abou: that the foreigner had been ki to satisfy/ himsclf that there was na con. nection belween the counterfeiters and th. there is an increase in the use oxicants by auto drivers is the re- that comes from many states, and nteresting statement ‘by Reg- of Massachusetts that it pecause of the fact that more r is being drupk by drivers byt be- ¢ the quality of the stuff. "Once| drink and| and esamined the body. The rect tia | the hair splayed out above the promin s apd the blood-stained ha green murdered man was discovered, nearly half » mile from of the crime and noted that he bedy had been found in a sugar barrel, parly filed of the murder coupled with the use of a he had been watching the time led. Merely murdered man, Fiynn went to tie morzuc shape of the foréhiead, the manner in which and because he was the brother-in-law of the man who late ridentified the body—a man who had {ncurred the undying enmity of his compatriots by turning state's evi- dence. , The inflexible aws of the soclety i |to which they both belonged—one of the v | soofeties which rules Little Italy with a t | rule of iron and a hand of blood—demand- ed the sacrifice of the fext of kin fn the event of information being given to the police. But if Flynn had not happened to be watching the grocery store the night of the murder, the chances are that the crime waeld still e unsolved. The lead- er of the murder gang was found be be - | Ignazio' Lupo, one of fhe very men Fiynn o after, but the government allowed the ocunterfeiting charge to hang firs un- r | til the expiration of Lupo's term for man- siaughter. Another Lupo, brother of Ig- nazio, escaped at the time, and was. not t | captured until ten Vears later, although £ ary superiority over 'their negritic " neighbors, docs not extend to govern- ment, so that they are ruled today by the Fulas, a people without a country who generally have dominated but not displaced the populations they conquer. The Fula chiefs, in turn, pay ‘allegi- ance to Great Britain which exercises a protectorate over Nigeria. “During the Fula siege of Katsena, which began in; 1507 and lasted for seven years, the inhabitants faced star- vation many times, and lizards and snakes sometimes were sold in the market places. After the conquest the Fulas destroyed records and documents Which if they could now be read, might throw more light in the origin of the ancient Hausa tribes. “The native historian will tell you of seven ‘legitimate sons’ in the origi- nal Hausa family, each of whom had a specific duty. One was tb defend the family, another to do its dyeing, another to engage in trading—and thig as possible to drink and which had been found in the barrel, told | Fiynn an dhistassociates were on the lock- s other en g irink and get by without attracting at-|the Story beyond the shadow of a doubt. out for him all that time . 0w tention or becoming involved in an ac- r cident, but today one drink s often 3 3 =it t t 1=h to upset the whole order of| there?” inquired an inquisitive 1 make what might otherwis: 1 assume the appearance Famous Trials X tribes on the lower Niger and along one to motice that. g s < i Aves 2 e b it e o o ung It there JUst | the Benue which the Hausa consider it Kinds stz < peaple are. There | the Benue w i T W been ad. hich the driver feels obliged to| peopie in Were talking to me | 8FSAUY. "‘he‘“"“ e 5 - . He is hea o avold. JAMES HARRINGTON 3 all around the desk and you | EVen the most extreme styles which . T E t is th lity or the quan- i ond 1o, Bee the doughnyt may have been noted by the Emir of Congressman Lester D. Volk, of 3 18 the quality:or. auan-| gooner than phss his life away in 3 - Katséna on his northern trip must| New York, has introduced a bill f Tiquor, it Is plainly evident hew-| one prison or another, Sir James Har- Every Dad Knows It's True have scemed over dressing; but the| providing for “adjusted compensa: - | ever the only safe thing for thos| rington, when in prison at Plymouth| “Johnny said a neishbor to the Jittle |USe Of cosmetics certainly was noth-| tion for veterans of the World n drive antomobiles is to leave it|for endeavoring to change the formt of by next door, “how do you like your ci- | ing new to hym. For the Hausa maid |, war” by the levylng of a sales c 2| sirictly alome. That js necessary for | government, at the adwice of a Di nt that wasgles his bead carries in her native ‘vanity box' tiny | ¢ M0 R e b F s Chbers and . cwn protection as well as that of | Dunstan, drank guiacum in such g el and. your cames ar brushes of hark, frayed at the ends,| '2X On WMARUTATITCE J08PerS AL 51 othors with him or Who may be in es it is said, as to injure his health 1 that nans round on its own with swhich she applies blue chalt to| Wholesalers. e AeTesation p s th i, ¢ disorder his brain. He was| “Weil, I don't know how I 1 her eyes. In addition she wears a per-| Was Chairman of the delegatio: b b eifast Pibee | HoIG and allowed to go to London been home ~ith a cold manent identification scar, to denote| consisting of forty-seven Congress- a the authoritiss | [F Mmedical advice, but he was never |piay 1 tihem all the time. Lut ne has | her tribe, that for the Katsena women| men, representing thirty-one States, SRt o B the authoritles | ove "o req. {10 &0 back to the office tomorrow and then | being six strokes and a dot. which left Washington November 2 i 5 vigilance and| ©'6; 5 gark December morning in the | I'll have < chanct to find out.” “Salutations often furnish a key to| 27th last, and spent a week in 2 ith drivers who have| year of the Restoration, a certain Capt. ST the character of a people. BoBth the| Canada studying the workings of n getting to their destina-| Short knocked at the door of a cob- leisurely quality of Katsena life, and| tnis form of taxation which is in n. The voorer the quality of - the| bler named Dugard. He demanded 2| LETTERS TO THE EDITOR | the value placed on various pos o ke ¥ ConEressoinh NAIE AR B > er the damzer to th:|man within who gave his name as ey sions, are suggested in a greeting e ed with all . 1 the sreater the need for in.| “Bdwards” and who Short said was Fishing for Pickerel Through e wherein one must first ask about. the| Deen actively connected Tt 5 % - Ja s arri cot r g = movements for the betterment of S protection. Of course it | Sit James Harrington. The cobbler| Mr Eiter: As there is some question | Bealth of the stranger, then about his 2 Nt do to.expect tHem 'to stey | S2VE bail and guaranfeed that the'pris=ilyto ool Tty Fon e 8 Se s wives, his horse, his cattle, and canditiops--af ‘thy Eorwar Sold)acgs % Red s S0 s el R joner would be at his home within call | the U R ? that is yours. Affer each reply the in-| He served with the American Ex: A% Bne duink ting ‘ jbut in the morning\when the Royal- |throush the ice, particularly for ricke: terrogator reiterates. ‘Allas be praised| Peditionary forces during the late § , ST G;z‘\ ists returned the birds were flow |on lakes, ponds and rivers regarding tie | for that' before putting the next quoa-i war as a first lieutenant and was a1 'j From this time on nothing was, see governing sxch fishing. I wi Hon... 1 connected with the 312th Remount P = i Pl The Ger conference hasn't opencd | of either; Harrington’s propert by it herewith the interprotation What baseball is to America and the | Squadron and 88th Aero Squadron. ¥ 2 . t known how many countries! confiscated and he himself sank from ucted my deputies to carr bull fight is fo Spain the wrestling 5 hin e ps a representatives to it. In fact|public view. But only for a time, for| Al ponds and lakes are cl for the {rlflf‘ch !sdw the Hausnl tnb?shtl’el:ha‘ws o - = o A . of this country has not as!one year later he blossomed forth as|taking o kind of fish frem February'| this sundown spectacle migl CUEr | ;s satisfied with the results 2 ” 3 cen definitely dfsclosed, and yet | plain James HUarrington supposed to|l April 301, both inclusive. \ (Trot | be compared to a horse show. For the| S Sil<fed Wuh the re m:_‘g ’::}: ? & "l \e are learning that the soviet govern-|De' a second cousin ' to Sir James. He | n will read-thig eep.) Wreatless must gompete for gitention > invariably destroys hi - ¥ ao ning that the s ‘govern- | be T i ko e Sk o e rel or wall [With the bizarre and barbaric color e T i Ste . o ssia is looking forward to the | WFOte 2 good man 0/ts, Q) | : i faction by, for irstance, building or n will be ta | G v ¥ fom *Ina” a satire on the ruling of the Com- is from Fubr ist to Aprd |Splashesirepresented by turbands andiy, jeling for - Wim & mete. perfect fon ¢ hment of sreat things In IS ponwealth of England by Cromwell|30th, beth inelusive. Tais includes bernouses and coiffures of what Welihan nix To.lose keen dellght thronen S BE SUm R Some of the dignis 1t London taker from rivefs as well = | would call ‘ratted' hair, agains a back- own efforts is an irreparable losd 1 NE SELDEN ENGINE Soviet Russla hasn’t been getting 0| presced it, but Cromwell after rea and ponds ground of statuesque camels and palm R o 1 ‘gen- | © nh as it seems to think it|3t, said he saw nothing wrong in zehor wall-eyed pikee may Pe taken | tees: THE over 1onpio the entlre miv- L igaer [ia () inaturel Deed & -4 are | w i Ubat weantd long Hine | B 60145 st SUBl D Dieihg e fror e waters or from |ture is the bronze brown of hundreds | von in chiidhos . whe oo b wreTone 5 th P t ropean finan- | confusion following the death of Crom- o or et or enclomd (0 oL HEIE nodG EneRint fully guided, acquires habits of disor- Jus 3 S o be_under discussion | well, Harrington formed a club called |or the purpise of stocking other waters or = deriiness. He frequently finds himself Bussia r that it will be asked to|the Rota, to discuss the introduction |fF the purpose of prorazation. surrounded by a mass of playthings in at it will be ask | ot 2 S Pickerel can be taken from rivers uinfi | oo —— e 3 4 . show 1ts hand in relation to its: Ften.|Of. his politica] schicies. e . an untidy room. His mind becomes! tired d , -af ns which the difterent | . When Charles Il came into power,(FQ ISt CHILD TRAINING AT HOME and confused, and he turns away Indif- r 8 the Rota was suppressed and once A T e % ferently without having realized his de- | £ t gt My i ¢ to Russia at varlous|more Harrington began to write. b e e T CIUBRELE, > s sires. n 1575 that Mr 1 at ‘ther they can expect tolthe guggestion of his friends he wrote| ° Wardos MLy Esh and, ey TOYS AND PLAY-MATERIALS. Granted children an attractive nur- r < . The amswer may weilla paperof ‘Tostructions” showlng his| oo POREY o o0 5, By Ellen Crecimaz sery, mo matter how simple, with suft- " . i ¢ in view of the inability y how he could govern “with e e The child instinclvely attempts to de- |able, but not! necessarily an expensive n ' “ conntry to look after its starving, to the people and safety )t to give the impression | to himsel: ers have been forgotten. | Oliver Cromywell, gave orders for h st and imprisonment in th Lendon. Despite. the plead {ings of his sisted, La . Har n anticipation of just such point | INStant arr s now reported that ths | TOWer of arles, less tolerant than trader was Katsena. Furthermore there were seven ‘illegitimate’ children and these, according to the Hausa version were the founders of certain other friend eping it warm id John? “You'ra the first / s : 0 : WOMEN'S COATS AT GREATER REDUCTIONS Women who have waited until now to buy their Coats should hurry to this Sale. Finer Coats for Women and i mart models and styl- ish materials — many with lux- urious fur collars. The prices in every instance would scarcely pay for the materials alone. HERE ARE THE PRICES! COATS, FORMERLY $35.00 TO 42.50 $2 4' 0 COATS, FORMERLY PRICED FORM In addition to the foregoing, we offer two other special lots of Coats in limited quantitics only 3 Qoe Rackof $10.00| S $17.50 PRICED FORM $50.00 TO $59.50 $3 I L4 oa Coats, at Every Coat offered in these two lots is easily worth two and three times the prices asked. WOMEN’S SPORT HOSIERY A great showing of Women’s Sport Hosiery at Special Clearance Prices — All-Wool, All-Wor- sted, Silk and Wool, Camel’s Hair and Mercerized —every wanted kind and color. See our spe- cial showing of Sports Hosiery at 59¢ and 95¢c. THE PORTEQUS & MITCHELL CO. expected; Without this result the de- sired progress is impossible. Bother of High Rents The trouble with high rents is you- 've got to keep moving.—Harrisburg Patriot. Wisdom is a Gift A Philadelphian appreciated his cook so highly that in his will he left her his automobile and $50000 the latter possibly to provide the wherawithal to run it—Pittsburgh Gazette Times| Most frenslgd fmanglers reaitze the fact that there is more money to be made from a big failure than from a small suc- cess. g - Take Yeast Vitamon & - Tablets To Clear p his mind through contact with hi environment. He wishes to gain know edge of it, to come into sympathetic re- ation with it, and to fulfll a part of equipmen, a few rules necessary for the happiness of all must be enforced. There must be no Infringing upon the rights of others. Individual toys must not be appropriated without permission READ YOUR CHARACTER | | By Dizby Phillips, | | l: « prese: o St 2 and play-materials offer him one |of the owner. There must be no un- b oning to present, !0 lvington was thrown on, but at Copzizhtod 1050 of expression. The child's 'im- |necessary distribution of toys and play ron A iropean governments amd|per suggestion, Charles granted an ear- agination is very keen, consequently his|materlals, but a degree of orderliness States claims aggregating | Jy examination, and thereupon sent g Writing toys should be wisely selectad. They |during the day. and all toys must be . lke 50 Dbillion dollars for | three of: his ministers: John, Earl of | % : : shotld be simple and very durable. There |Put into their vlaces at night by the g Are you hunting fq n optimist, fo | 4 1 have resulted from anti-| Lauderdale, Sir George Carteret, amd | g n e tor an optimist, fOr | should be dolls, doll furniture, balls, |children. If these rules are enforced, - - hevik, activities. Possibly there are|Sic Edward Walker, to examine the “.thr _“",“-lf? fl( ‘}»“‘»‘ o “‘?f”“_’(ai‘ rts, boats, wagons and other toys |interest in play, appreclation of confi- o e A Mgt ol o ety {ed, for the kind of a person who if he [ £3Ti% boats, wagons anc dence gratitude for their privileges and ) ion, | does not at first succeed “tries, tries Y 5 o ssia would lfke to ask of | A(tflér a rigorous cross-examination, | Jo7% VOt At S nes, “The too finished toy chills the im. |800d Will towards one another may be T 3 slg il 4 o | Which consisted mainly of defining |282in%" agination,” il to the Genoa conference | WAIEH CONSIstel —malhy friends | The sign of this mental character- |2Eination” and the child frequently is 3 . Showld group them all togeth- | With Whom Harrington Iriends, | e D A et ftten |Scen to find more enjoyment with a . e B o | with whom he assoolated, the counci- jiStic lies in handwriting. & yrriien that time might be conserved | of the more sharsl, lors knew just as much as when the began, and inevitable answer | impressive as it Is| presented. o the EDITORIAL NOTES. man on /the corner says: It'1s! 1rd to say that the girl who has just beea repainted JoaRs.as good as new. | | turned to Charles. For five months th poor idealist lay a prisoner ere h from the High Court of Parliament. In it .was with a sense of!| failure at not having implicated him | in some outbreak or plot that they re- thought of askin for his right of trial| the medwhile, Lady Ashton was trying in every way to regain Har- crude toy of his own construction. The little girl will turn from an elaborately dressed doll to lavish caresses on a rag doll. One child turned from a large | number of ‘valuable Christmas presents | to play with his father's bootjack. A lit- tle girl given a beautiful doll by her amncle laid it down and svent the re- mainder of the day using the box in which it came for a boat. Later she thanked her uncle for the beautiful boax jlines slant upward to the right you have found the man or woman you are hunting for. The people whose writing rises in o | this manner are of naturally cheerful o | and hopeful disposition. They look up- 1| on the bright side of life. They concen- trate upon pleasant memories and for- get the unpleasant. They keep their thoughts fixed upon the chances of success,not upon the.fear of failure. When a cold is neglected it attacks the lining of the lungs— then it's pneumonia. Father John's Medicine treats colds and = Why Colds Lead To Preumonia tection of a E that n tion of the air as well as tr n nd sea has been engine It miust & to the man who rel world o see what een made of it and what more than man large contributions s respec permittod othe: who have to world advance- DEPORTING UNDESIRABLES. Some attention has probably been at- tracted by the decision of the United States clrcult court of appeals by which f.is decided that ady allen Who s al- aged to be undesirable ¥annot be held longer tham four months after he hag exhausted his legal remedies. Eithelf he must be deported in.that time or be released and be allowed to remain here. This was the decision in the McGregor Ross case, an 1. W. W. who had been peat to New York for deportation. There bas been a dispute as to whers he was Bern and what his natiomality is. The department of justice maintains he is a British subject and though he has been In detention stations or jalls for a mat- ler of two years, no action was taken in the way of deportation and the court ordered his release. ¥ In fis finding the court held that it de- pended upon. conditions as to how long a time shouid prevall between the conclu- won of legal steps and the actual do- portation. Under the present conditions R held that four months wers sufi- o scpomplish he deporting of a to- Great Britaln, although i3 Another week and it will be time to or tae first reports on the present of the New Year's resolutions, carry the mail. the bill Let us hope they better than the unsinkable riticlsm wpon the proposed revision of the city charter should be based upon th: changes Mctually proposed and not hearsay, Get g interested in the proposed char- revision, dlscuss it, let your views | e known and then act at the polls when the time comes, One Indlana town is without money to pay its bills. How it must envy that Long Island town which has secured a 100 per cent. collection of taxes. Canada is now kicking over the amount of liquor that is being taken there from te United States. But who in Canada would /think of drinking moonshine? are the merry, jingling sleighbells, but as the big blizzard dldn’t come till the tenth of March we still have mnearly seven wecks in Which to be satisfled, —_— The United States doesn’t Mie the idea of sitting at the same tabls with soviet Russia even though it is at Genoa, and inasmuch as we will not recognize the government It doesn't seem inconsis- tent, Municipal ownership is well illustrated in the repair shops which were run by the city of Chicago but have now been closed. It cost $5,000 to get six Ford au- tomobiles repaired, or more than new machines would have cost. N ringtons' freedom. The King referred | her to his Council and the council to the King. She then applied to the court of law and asked for a writ of habeas corpus, forcing the Council either to relax their grip or prove him guilty of some crime. The judges yielded | the writ went out, and then poor Lady Ashton thought her work was done and her brother saved, but in the morning news was brought to her that her brother had been spirited away in the deep of the night and carried | off in a warship. She went all around| trying to gain information as to the whereabouts of her brother—to the To- wer, to the Secretary of State, to the This does not necessarily mean that they are such innoc timists that they disc of failure too much, common sense or judgment. Their op- timism is the result determination. There resistible urge in these people to keep on trying to do better. They are neyer quite satisfied with ax they have dore. They given the opportunit again they would do i Welcome the Opportunity to prove this to themselves as well as 'to others. It is only when the he had sent to her. When the child can use pla prevents pneumonia -mate sy ‘;Eg‘g;“{m‘g als, he should be given blocks, boards, | because it nourish °S | beads, clap, er, sciss d crayonstt ¥ ana that they lack D, DPap! scissorg and crayons' es the system an also miscellaneous articles from which drives out the poi- : he may choose. ©of ambition and| ‘yhen the child may safely be let. sonous waste mat- is a constant, ir-|ajone in the nursery or out of doors, ter—any other way of treating a cold he, should be free from the continuous uresence of an adult. He realizes great- The Skin Build Firm “Stay-There" Flesh—Increase Energy. -you want to quickly clean your skin and complexion, put some frm ot s Yo e v and power and look and feel per cent. better, ply try taking two of Mastin's tiny yeast VITAMON 'hfl-' with each meal and watch the results. Mastin's VITAMON Tablets contain highlyjconcentra- ted yesst-vitamines as well as the two other still more impor- tant vitamines (Fat soluble A aud Water soluble C) and are now being used by thousands. They positively will not upset the stomach or csuse gas, but, on the contrary, are a great aid to digestion, to overcome consti petion and as & general condi- tioner of the whole system. Pim- ples, boils end skin eruptions peem to vanish like magic, the complexion becomes fresh and clear, the cheeks glow with ruddy Eealth, the flesh becomes firm, the eyes bright. Mastin's VITA- MON Tablets are positively gire you new ealth, energy and ambition and improve your_ appearance. Do Dot accept imitations or, substi- tutes. You can get Mastin's VITAMON Tablets from any good druggist. aranteed to OFf what use are fine features with an mottled skin, fabby fles! nken uches under the eyes or a careworn, face? Let Vitamon correct thesy conditions. Are Positively Guaranteed Put On Firm- Flesh, e Skin and Increase ny piece of WOrk |or satisfaction if thrown upon his own i HEA 1D eed 4 Clear the Skin an “‘r‘ayds felfl that | resonrees. The child’s nower of concen- R 56 a Energy When Taken With y to 'do it over|tration is weak and many parents, in- = 5 Mo t better and they | stead of slitting quictly by, direct the “cough syrup” or Every Meal or Money Back child by continnous remarks about what he,is dofng. Parents and others may ex- press sympathetic interest when the child _upon dangerous and upward slant of # “bolsam” depending Greatly missed this winter thus far | the writing is very marked and unusu- al that you want to watch_ out for such an excess of optimism and am- bition as makes a person impractical visionary and extravagant’in his am- bitions. = Tomarrow—The, Cruel BEye IN THE DAY’S NEWS KATSENA! “A Rome of the tropics, peopled by | the Israelites of Africa, center of a farming region which supports a pop- ulation as dense as that of England and exports a surplus of foodstuffs—such is Katsena, in northern Nigeria, which | recently has been frequently mention- ed because its emir visited London | and also because of surveys of Lake Chad, northeastern limit of the Hau- | sa states,” says a bulleting from’ the | ‘Washington D. C., headquarters of the/ National Geographic Socety. “A civilization may be incongruous in contrast to another, and yet not S0 primitive as the strangeness of its customs would indicate,” the bulletin continues. “The Emir of Katsena is re- ported to have gazed in amazement at &an airpiane, to. have wondered at the parsimony of a rich nation which did not provide servants to wave large fans over their ruler’s head so he migh not be annoyed by fiies, and to héve so ! heartily approved one morthern luzury that he purchased a brass bed to be ljeutenant of the Tower. She herself called it treason, treason to snatch a man from justice to {nsult His Majesty | in the person of his judge, break the covenant of law. Treason of the high- est class! The poor lady had still to learn that law is not for men like Harrington. Four weeks later she re- ceived a note sent by/him from a little rock near Plymouth at thé Chapel of St. Nicholas. Here it was that he took the poison, for he was fast withering away, for {he was unable to walk and forced to {drink brackish water. Yet he never ceased to dream of the great Oceana f which he had written. He finally gained his point at such a cost'and un- der seéurity of 15000 he was released At London he partook of Epsom wa- ters, but it was too late and failed. His emaciated form was laid to rest at the litws Church of St. Margaret at the side of the grave of Sir Walter Raleigh. Stories That Recall Others l Testing Out the Public Iife is just <ne interesting thing after another according to John B. Hg never ladks ideas for refieving the routine of his datly work, as, for Instamce, when he hunz a doughnut on a projection Cf his electric desk lamp. “What's the dea ef a sinker hanging appeals to ‘them, may play but no for him. Self-effort I of progress. The child's ideas his facility of expression crude, but he | with him, s the law j CLanEAg weakening drugs, B but a food medicine “~=and hodv builder. Worcester Rendering Co, Mfrs. AUBURN, MASS. - RESIDENT MANAGERS Permancnt position selling imported and domestic dinnerware in your locality. Direct from pottery to home. Liberal week!y compensatiog and a real opportunity to secure & benus, Bornus Class No. 1—3-year full courses at Harvard College, 2—Chevrolet Touring cars. 3—Trips around the world. 4—1-year full course at the Collece of the Spoken Word (oratory, dramatic art, motion p:cturs acting, etc., etc.) “ Full sales instruction by mail or at our nearest branch sales office. Larcest organization of its kind. Wide-awake, youny men will take advantage of this opportunity to make good pay with an equitable opportunity to tecure a bonus. ' Send fof copy of “Roviow.” Give age, education and two references, « INTERNATIONAL SALES SERVICE CCRPORATION 851-857 Boylston St., Boston, Mass.

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