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i o ot 3 peied ot (he ser| THE MAN WHO TALKS for the fighting of fires, while the first Once upon a time there was a house- quarter of the presént yeas shows an in-| bolder who owned a bit of land. Belng T peaa vy o Evening Post.) a cased fire loss ofe than 18 million | 2 Door man and Having a Wife and chil- 2 A 5 NORWICH BULLETIN | vt e " | S o s o i, o vt i o st s | o Bk B ™ This disclosés a gain when the aim has| ) o TorDe o cuitivats, tha < . South Affica t6 those of the empire, ai Couri e tne otner disdetion, 44 & i | [A1 {0 ke hunger from (e door, -1y by (e factors, Findt there 1s the| 3)"crying {0 win the sympaiich of s and Courier When construction opefations have beed :'hln:;gh 1;e was miy. 2 tiller of the soil by ;l:‘m”hmen the Sony.z:. gflufi party | Serman -un?n in the South African £ ride. In order that nothing might go Generat Smutz, e nationalist | rciectordts (which the Union adminis- serlously delayed becduds of the cost|{o waste. he put all the odds and ends %’e\i Dby Genéfal Hettzog. over “re-| crg as mandatory under the league of and when there is a big demand through-| into one cornér of his land to make a |publiodnist.” Under {hiS title the na- [ qqiions), im the hope that on thé uiti- out the country for better housing céndi- | compost heap that would enrich the soil | tionali claim the right of secessiol\ mai¢ framsformation of flie protectorate tions. Platnly it is an inclination in the|for NeXt vears production. Wren anffrom thc British empiré étther for the | into a provines of the Union the Ger- u ; riekd s 3 olicy: r e natios eh, 1918, s puar. ing the éffects of it by a "‘"“1 “}; eh | [ for 1o, and behold a mighty heap is | ond, there is the economic antagonism Pask ANE A1 i@ undoubtediy bitter, and - — Eeimed at ¢ Pokitled at Norsteh, Cona, & of a ;nr;m incréd# in 168%es for Mareh| pere; st will rot during the wintey 4Ad}Betwsen fows 4nd COURLEY, w;? thelr newspapers are fult of letters by Botfled Milk feczd-class maiter over February. e | in the spring I shall not ha farmer and miner or manufacturer. And, ith Africans” or * ¥ : in-AOEW Consumer' ‘Telesbebs ate. Tho situstion oSt TSt 6f Cotrss| my carnings on Dhosphatey ane. perddh | (ird, (here s Seross hede Weléd. & | Siaturs’ advecating. s compleve monst | 1ol Fditor; In anewer to Coneuineria Bunkia Budness Office, 480, that what efforts have been made in be- | and lime and hatness up frifions of bac- | VIgorous labor party, which 6Wés fio lif- |, ot Englidh goods and (he cutting off of dent that he does not know miuch about B e R ™5o8 Boom. 43.1. |halt of prevention have done nd good, but| feria to capture enough nitrogen in the | tie of {té power €6 the fact that it humi: | ali relations with England and the Eng- | (et pasinecs. i o G !"‘"_ Teimone | that yreet gs théy have beert theFe is still :lr to create sufficient acid phosphates, | bers in ifs fanks the bulk of tie White|jeh. However, the tMle Is running| Hotled milk s certainly much clean- opportunity for more, With the fact un-|{OF here is the substance that will bring | Workers employed by the governmeént steadily against them, and is,not itkely than milk out of a can. Bottled milk 3 doubtedly establiéhéd that had preven-|fOrth a harvest a hundred fold.” Al-[rafiways and is thus In @ position t0l¢o be reversed ¢ven by the attempls s bottied at once. uv::d and cooled off. orwich, Saturday, April 15, 1922, ” 3 though the houscholder did not say ft, | paralyze the traffie of & country which, | which afe now made to swell the ten guarts has tive méasgres béen adopted in accordp o g g S &) A car of milk eontaining qus e ——————n Y " g wich 1568 ut he gave this impréssion: “See What[OWing to its distances, is to an unusual | puteh pépulition fréshi immigrants | to be opened and exposed fo the dust and ” %Sl & wise guy am 117 extent dependent on #is railways. from Holland. WERLER 0f TAE ASIOCIATED PRESS [|the loss would have been much different. i e The Asieclatel Press 18 exciusively entitied o g thrée Tsges which rms on the strést ten times and i the Atter certaln days dprifg acrived, and | DENind thesé {inde divide | “Apart from {he natiomallst agitation, | Sitipen were to gef the tenfh quart I be- the householder, with fork in hand,| the White population there looms the|the white population fs_divided mainly |ljeve he would see the difference. And o aditea o I ot et otberwie civdhiod 16 GETTING THE FONDS. proudly aporosched his compost Heap, | Jrk shadow of $he native problem.|py the economic antagonism of country |lots of milkmen Iike to take a drink out e Biser ad also e iocai news pasished || Ono of the great troubles with the pro-| ANd When heé saw how big and rowad | WTHCh is the fote mefiacing betause it i5|and town. South Afriea is a farmer's|of the cover when no one is looking. Not Berste, hibtion 1% is 8 S which 1t has| 20d smooth it was. e had visions Of % x:‘r,gy faced with @n Hénest and singlé :&"‘"%’“"fi:’ s_falrmers p;:l]n-; only does the dust and Ferms :,,r;,,),l; Ny P g B 4 dae ) en enforéed. Ome of thé reasons why| ["Uitful sarden. With pride he fammed E ér, tic faFming population | she mine but he does mot get the rig | his fork into It, and lo and be Up to the outbreak of the great wat|is predominantly Dutch, and 160ks upon | proportion of cream. there hasn't been a larger number of efi-| was very Sofk. vnv‘nzoméfmi:hmfig fhe nationeliet céuse @i Bot make much | the fownsman 4nd thé miner as allen | n wases where & man sells two or threa forcement officials fs fhat it cbSts mon-|he said in gréat eurprise. “Tt ougni to| NS24WaY against Both#'s policy of cofi- | {mmigrants who have come to make their | nundred quarts of milk he always has ey, but it iy interesting to note in this|be hard and solid” But his heart sank | Ciliation and co-operation between ihe|fortune, dnd afé therefo e whit & Tt the i a fit subjects to | equinment for washing the ‘:'1"7‘:1 The onnection that Commissione aynes| Within him when he found was [ (70 b m? v be squeezed for the benefit of the farmer. | housewife has nothing to do with it. pcaescbdlizantion s atinin et o Sl i S nat Jt wat) taik of emancipating smail nations from | The WhoIE Eyétem of taxation and ne | ¢ 1s mo wonder that milk prices ehould A - =%} the grasp of the big ones, revived old | cugt, i i ing fmen of Ao exclaimed “An ériewmy HAth dohé ) customs tarlff are loaded against the |advance When one of the leading men fines, [::n:lllles and un:d:l == 1mnoad this " and he was dead Light. for whild | Memories of independence ' and turried | towns. The farmer éscapés taxation al- | Norwich lost seventy-five gross of bot- u:zos‘v‘l ors d\!fll Ing :_h:nrw‘:ll’x{i l::l’;": he was eating and drinking and Boasting thém again into Wving aspirations. Theé|mgst compietély, afd his fmplements and |tles in one year. of the admintstration - about hi: pro-Boer sympathies of Germany were | suppliies enter the country under a duty| Bottled milk for me every time bven if and a Ralf ties énough to pay for Pro- | mores, soncmeg of toer Ny S omed |recailéd. Moreover, thé matlonalists “THE HOUSE OF BON-TON AND ROYAL WORCESTER CORSETS” THE SPECIALTY SHOP 140 MAIN STREET Opp. Plaut-Cadden Co. CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING APRIL 8th, 1922 11,721 of only 3 per cent. a8 compared with a | prices do advance. hibition enforcement for the next vear. |with seven children, together with the | SOUPted on a German victory in the waf | duty of 12 per oent. and upwards on AN EX-MILEMAN. Under the commissioner's statement it |mother's parents, had found for them. (‘,','a g’a”;oe‘;’ ,’:g:g',‘,c?‘i oo g: other goods. At the same time, while| Norwich, April 14, 1822, versity. He has served as a trustee INSISTING ON EFFICIENCY. 1s_to be supposed that he believes that|selves a comfortable homé ifi hfs com- | e SRR Ltern Mo many ifp-td.dats foris, spied i s eutrality. Hence, in 1914-1915 r- 5 fafot] AN AAOD of the Carnegie Foundation and has ¥rom the time that the present admin.|(here should be enforcement along the|Post heap and had honeveomhed ft in el i R pess L4 i 2;"&’“2‘,;&,. l‘i'f e o mass| SUNDAY MORNING TALK tte,, G hiimber of religions and so- fstration took hold of the reins of gov-|Whole fine, that it should not be for thé| % “ior .l?h;in‘,’““‘fuichgp“h:; ot 2n | participation In e war. ‘The prompt|and knowledge of Bookkeeping and busi- The Riseh Christ. ciological works. srnment it has been insisted that the fed-|agents alone to make the arrests, or that| {J)*" G VA€ CORIDS QeED B0 TOC O] suppréssion of. thie revele, and Yater Ger- eral expenditures were too high, that re-|finés should be imposed and then sus-|yn; : ¢ ness efficiency afé far rarer than they “He is not here; for he is risen, as he E- ek ¥ Bl yor e ey ingiy’s fl;fei(.‘s:)q.l(e\;:l thetr %m énould bé.“ Ag a result, the ranks of the |sald. Come, see the place where the o rrenc! ded, but that there should be a deter- ~ 20§ 1 ke - | “péor ! " n a4 - | Lor X b H S e : ) e e a chot ts Mok Shouk (e nfoes | 1, 100 FONE o ek ths oind | i i ?“:lxd\’e;tuhfle ml‘f"c'e""mm"a B | shoxsors, ass conmtanity Deing woiieh b7 | EoncoiaTie e the mofine whea!| T0day’s Anniversaries intance as - Sk g 5 3 ;| Paris. But the deputation, which he per- | phsticcessful farmers, and the govern- | M: Magdaléne and the other Ma v Cago. of government affal T o e L e e e e Spected| they didn't get away at il T have had | sonaliy led, got no further than Mr. Lioyd | tent 1a under. unsemitiing pressuce. fof | my to ch sopulehme. thelc heasts Alled | about the lake has been set Those who have followed the progress|if it was to amount to anything. Certain-{a whack at the boastful householder, | George, Who pointed out to it that thé 3 of events have been quick to realize how|ly if the violatiofis are sufficient in num- 5 : feliet in the form o@rants of money, | with gnef, that they heard those cheer- | 1689—Richara Ward. colonial govern- |the government, and e yihe Bels @ ovhack at them. AS|Union had Dbeen voluntardy formed by | iand, cattle and «u;f:m &t the public| ing words spoken by the angel. “He s or of Rhode Island, born at|be made into one of closely attention has been given to such|ber to bring the amount of fines and pen- '15 ": '{m” mm) Rg;vr_"le truth com- | the four seif-governing colomie$ ant could | expense. But thers ¢4n bo wu wbws «tge | not here, He is risen.” Cah we imagine Newport, R. I. D.ed there, Aug & policy. It was not to be expected that|alties to two and a half times the cost| D ’me* e b " h"" ";J‘f aroused | not be dfssolved at the request of &) with the extension of iffigation by means | the joy that must have filled ticir hearts, 21, 1763. ned to harness the outiet government expenditures would be imme- | of enforcement thers cin be no good rea- nth degree and he spake accord- | mirority. The ey 5 b hatlondilsts thereupoft | 6f dams and arteslan wells there’is a|and shouid not joy fill our hearts on this | 1764—Marquise de Pompadour, famous | build at the eastern margin @ately cut to what they were befors the|son for fot providifig for an adequate| woo., the character of which is mot|changed their tactics to constitutional | great fitiire before the farmers in South | sered Bassr morning, has ot (Hat dgifation for sécession and i {hé il L and_influential in the of in & region of delighttal countrs, or the world, was Involved In|enforcement forcs, but much a force <an| muune nis 1ot b thimer e e peperis, | SEL(ation fof sicession and at {he next|Atfrica, be it In fanching, frult Erowing | sme Jesus suifered and died on the crues Louis XYV, of great industrial e war. That was out of the question for |never mean thoss aried guards who ac-|ed upon It. The sevon Ifttie moles stfl || oors proce tetarned in numbers equal | or genéral agticulture, that we micht have Ife, eternai life? | Versailles. Born De: ! [ : 3 g to the government party (S. A. P, 5o is 1] e . > there aro obligations and conditfons that |company & cofsignmient of Canadian Ii-in the innocent period of childhood, im- | whish wos faoe. w,,,,,fimylo(,,,y il ey L i‘o"n .5‘:,‘;:" c,:'{,;"”‘t | A e s e ot T 2L LITHUANIA must be met which will call for large|quor acrosy New York city only to havé | mediately were swept beyond the “smil- Y v " g to vy memory of that day, may wé give to Him | 1847—Prince Charles Louis Napoleon | Lithuania, the southernmost of the et ALl help of the unionists and lador parties | fact that practicaly all the unskilled — s #ums In addition to anything that was|it discovered at the pler that the liquor | Ing an e weeping. o 4 lives which He aled to Murat son of the forme: King ' Baitic countries carved out of pre-wa The safiic teridle | for a mafority against sccession. This | manuai Jab i ~hs | won aa- k) : cession. or is done by Kaffirs, the we member fis cer died i erself at the famil ever pald for some years to come. hag been replaced during the trip by soda | fate met the aged grandparents, but thé | position of unstable équiibrtim could i e S T . Wit 7 Resing fed n | Rugats MRSSE ) s : : white worker belongs to the white aris- | parting words, “Lo. 1 am with you ai- Jefferson cou 3 tions by aceept- But reductions wers possible and they pop, and no explanation given of where| {IUIL MOl managed o, cseape, Bul|not endure. Genéral Smmiés dbsolved | tocracy end eifher hossts & gung of ma-| ways, even uito (he end of the World. | 1860—Her. Joma Swerny . ;::"";"‘,l"&'::uw"“"‘th :’m, have been made. Senator Willis of Ohlo| the trucks wers for five hours when the | LU0 VRS Toles fwere Bind o6 most} partiament and appealed fo the country | tives or else Works a 4 ekilled job. To| Ho s with us in times of jog, in timés ot . Ror f 1| Court of International Justice, but has called attention to this in & pointed man. | trip should have been made in less than| s mor foair han oy [} to dispose of secession once and for ail|such a condition the theories of orthodox | deep sorrow no one can comfort like the Gectined &5 JoH atwrencs of Pa Highoe 4 amily had kent out of @ Com- | by giving the S. A. party a majority over | snotalt ¢h ? 4 PR g ner when he addressed a conventlon of |an hour. fost Heap: In fact, if all thelr ancestors | o1 ‘ciner pastics ‘oombined. The' Bitlons |5l et} oo consider the T8iMloA ncoln, sixteenthi | fic States to settle upoh a poliey paper and pulp men in New York thig| Enforcement under present conditions|had not preferred darkness rather than £ t. John, N. loving Saviour who has said, “Come unto | 1865 — Abraham 1 of cépital and labor without reference to|me, ail ye that labor, and are heavy a A 3 President of the United States | Genoa. e : , ists, réprésenting mainly {he -ty ¢ 3 3 t Week and declared hat not only had it1s bringing to lght large quantities of Ii-| light blindness FTould not be the curwe of | Gt Bngustr ey r::y’ons:d ffl“’-‘: ‘;;n i’&%“fl”’u‘mfi e T il L W e T o ’;‘,,,},..‘T;’l‘:"mf"'k{’ p ,J“",'f'l """W’:"" the United "::"'."' v Been proved that the late Senator Aldrich [Quor and Plenty of cases of violations. | the molé family. Whether Ve are Diovle| peal by amalgamating with the S. A. P. | worlers thifnk out an inteliigible 4rd hu. | You ask me why ! gave my heart to P " oyl n g "h"'“"'" Lithuania , a8 '““ '+ Mo it w hin insisted years ago|It proerly carrled out and supported|Or moles, if wo do not use what we have | wich, thus reconstitited; gained in the | mans polley for tho adjustment of {aeir Christ? LEhe New Yot liiabine pasi=] ia et ot 5“""1:“"” that proper cconomies would reduce gov-| it could do much more, and if there was| [ ToC [ WL PP oen muay. new house a sufficent working majority | own rciatihs to the Kaffir workers there I do not know. 4 2 g 288~ | principles of its republican government ernment expenses $300,000,000 a year|as determined an effort to uphold the law I : over all other parties combined. g ed a compulsory education Iaw.|were bortowed from America. A 8 bound to be a radical weakness in|There came a yearning for Him in my t v administration has accomplished |as there s to break it there need be no| The word “diehard” is eféfing our| Tn's résiit however, was achievéd nof | théir position. e Sl soul 1888 — Matthew Arnold, celebrated|jncident in (his SonfSectioh that five times over. Even estimated re-|question about enforcement itself beinz| op sxnrssdtnn o fov s nacular mode | by gaifis from the mitfonalists, who re En h poet and eritic, died 2t ,.santation by Lithuaninhs I u The weakest spot in the political life So long ago. . 24, i A of expression. It is very significant. The | turned y n - J Liverpool. Born Dec. 24, 1 jca of a ‘liberty bell' to the fuctions have been exceeded and th #bls to provids all (he funds needsd 10r | ord was izst arpiied (o there Who were | eaine. from. the. THiac. e e Ut o | of jthe whole ooun S nonghioout | ey e fowerets Wodld fade and | see7yrance and Brozil asreed to ar- |countey in _eommenoratios the entting that has been done the sav-|maintaining a much larger number of|insistent in opposing legislation, the ex- | half of Its seats in the (owns 10 the new | pEtée Tho tas ot mekiing South Africa |1 wept for something that could satisty : bitrate their boundary disputes. fourth anniversary of ing to the government, and therefors to|prohibition officiais. treme examples of which aré found in|combination 6f the Uniohist #hd Seuth|a “white man's dountry” is widely | And then—and then somehow I seemed e dence. The bell s to the taxpayers of the coumtry, s at the —— e s the senate of the United States and | African parties. The labor leaders angri- | pféached, but it rins 4n azainst the hard 1o dare national holdays and ratn of $4,000,000 a day, FASTER, among certain factions in the Irish tur- | iy protested that the seceseion issue H&d | fact that in the Union dlone (not count-|To lft my brokem heart to Him in 3 . mofl. They are certainly putting up a Not only has there heen the termina- Once again we come t6 the anniversary | tremendous figh of Resurrectfon day, thaf perlod of jov|The “die-hard: and gladness for all Christéndom bécause been a mere blnd behind which to déal|ing Rhodesia, Basutoland. etc.) there are e smashing blow at abor; ne fiiore thar 6,000.000 Kaffirs to about any feason to deny that a rediiction in|1,500,000 Whites. A vollcy of the strength of the labor varty in par- | ti At against the inevitable. " however, are quite nu- merous. Take winter, for example, that prayer. I do not know, 1 cannot tell you How, I only know He is my Saviour now. gon of war expenses but there has been 1 insistence upon efficlency which has a large bearing upon lowered expendi- historical IN THE DAY’S NEWS | tountry* saya a b > tional Geosraphic its Washington, ). C. ; n was actually émbodied & ve PATAGONIA “Over the present country it established hope, quickened faith and lingering spasms be- | llament was 2§ welcome to the govern: |land aet 6f 1813, according %o wirch no| You ask me why I gave my heart to \as long been ticketed in!ania once the largest state in tores. Just at the present time much 18 |fited 1é with & few meéaning. Baster net. IS It not particu- | ments as Would have been a reduction ifi | rative shall owil landl except in reserva. Christ? 5 3 being sald about the discharge of em-|emphasizes the vidtory over bondage and A e the siféngth of the nationalists. General {many s with Kamchatka and extending from the Biack Sea to the ployes of the printing and engraving de- 4 - tions or territdries sneclafly set apart for [ can revly, it is a wondrous story. i Baltie, the armies of Germany o 5, are so tenacious of Hfe? They are the|sSmuts would not have earned his T . % % tell vhy ind el i 7 : 8 epu- | the purpose. In the white miaw's terr vou why y 3 8 Russia crossed and recrosséd of efclency but offorts are being made] Of the God who sent Cheiet t6 confirm| drink. The main reason why prohbition | e~ O K06 (W0 birds with oné| damer, not as owning or even renting|I was alone. 1 had no festing place. to charee it to an attack upon civil ser- Ly 10 the hopes of the hufhan,race in the re-| is so hard to enforce is because the ap- ality of the lite beyond death. petite for rum is so hard to die. T Ot the risen Christ's continued mani-|Preak some Heople of their Habits you > ez . ® ed the country to capture catile and ome land. " But &0 far this act has been in- |1 heard of how He loved me with a love | FEDOTIe! O e o atuea the Russians counter-attacked 16 gain THE t of the natichalists are now | operativé, owlng 6 the unwiilingness of ( OF denth so great, of height so far above FOURINS § WIS THAFCTSE CHETINE. immediate results for the moral ef- chiefly directed towards (1) resisiing a|the white péuiation to €ive up sufficlent | Al human_ken, I longed sich love to| 10U e . mey viee, and a_return of the spoils system. Such charges do mot get very far for liberal jminigration nolicy. s lkély t6 |and, especially Sufficient 608 land. e | thousands . of yea Someth n:}“,’,&l_;l::""" et 400 NS the reason that If it was to take care Of | festation of himselt through the pardon| TPUid BAC {0 break éhelr neeks. We all| pring more pro-British voters Into (hé | the proposed native Tesrvation, | | And sought it theii upop my knees in|thi8 land which rmy harbos prems-| R, CSUSTREC, SHe g Gne e deserving party workers it would not|of peace, the comfort and power which he e cus have some habits that are ‘die- |oountry; (2) explowing evety incident| Meanwhile native labor is wanted, and prayer. o e o hinton, "IU% [ one million forelgh born AmerieAns htve meant the filling of their places o ‘anted chesy; for e Sk iss e Washington, o WS e cotside the depaitrient, When D i roece ot to be pe| TO fully fealizo the wtter lstegnra : e [ O o s mtqmeusework and | you ask me wity T thotight (s loving | headquarters of ‘the National Geo- e a% u matter of fact, as many républicans - T ome péoplé have to the value of human the white man's eivilization, and all such | Christ would fieed my prayer? | seaniic Boget by some philologists 0 he the oMest & 2 leased to complete, with man's adsistance, | jite, one need not hark back to the cruel | contact educates thé native and gives him | I kNow He died upon the cross for me: 1t the ideas of Patagonia generally b¥ ey B o] & Simoorats were discharged and subof gy wodx GHASE Belidn) days of ancient Rome whien Nero was| FAMOUS MEN. Rew desires and aimbitions. - wer ne fioe |1 fiailed Him there. - held are a bi ays the bulletin, AinE IRERABE CEY @inates, regardless of party but qualified| ¢ peloved friends gome Mnto the un-| Caesar, but can see it right on our own himseif condemned to a position ine\\'l\“ fi I heard His dying.cry, “Father, forgive.” | “there is good rea for it. for the fhe "pr'vln“wxve '}"m' 1;o !hm‘l; _ 10 Al the places, wers chosen seen world, but refofcing in the slcher, | Franklii square. From a trolley window thése desires and dmbikions must remain | ! 8% Him drik deati's cup that 1;resion did mot really bezin to be woli fietly dffterent Lo U6 SSISVOCE — fuller life of {hé realm inf6 which they | the following wWas séén: An automobile JULES VERNE unmatisfied. The restllt is a growing dl might live: known t eneration ago, and ally, HOME GARDENING FOR UNEM- |have entered, . baciced out of a side alley on to the sldés waik and stopped. Several school o 4 HalE of th 4| content which, as all thoughiful obsery. | MY head was bowed upofi my bréast i v i i r:"lvgillc-f'r:m;:;:!“::”:lfl.gx rl-":" "h‘t e vaik and stonped. Sev school chil-| During the second haif of thé past|ers recognize threatens one d shame ; P bl et T T B PLOYED. e eay's that have been|aren waitea 2 moment for it to clear {he | century 1o hoVellst was more Fead|into a serious Qanger. papectsliy i tme | He called me, and i peniténce T came. | that needs to be understood about by oquifing the chiliren t0. use PeRt: During the perfod of the war when | orort Of thelf ASaTelt Ohts, and of thosé) ;o it did not, they started 1o pass than Jules Vefne, the Fréfeh wilter|stiil existing interiribal animosities| B¢ heard my prayer. I eannot tell you is that it is not an effietal |5 LSTRERE (08 oKD written in Sh there was great need for stimulating pro- | "OUering between (°E ané feath. on, but as they were directly in its path . of descriptive fictlon. Verné hafl a|should merge in common amtagonism fo Low ! Lggdgbgths Stiie, nit oilly 165 out s but that| Of vietims of recent dlsdsters and of | the wachine shot hackward, and strilck 4 ! long litérary career. Born in 1838, be- | the white man. : | Nor when, nor where. Why, T have toid s of the United g“i;l;;:g‘:m” A v it Nétp out dles. all who are victims 6f conditions which | little mite of a fellow right over tHe eve. |fore the agée of tiwenty He had Writ- he reot of the trouble Is that the I oW up into | " ares. = m':“f’:“.hfl e o attantion gleen (o] T8 far Dévona thetr comtrol. He was knocked down, and the wound ten a number of libréttos for operas, | white eivilization fn its treatment of the B Y i 'h"‘.,.'i‘?;‘n:fl'".'.fil’-',“:'a T:e:'-‘ of the o e pantton &17¢" #| 0t human need and suffering In ang|bled profusely, but imost miraculously ‘ana at the age of twefity-two he had | native has two Contradlotory minds i | name, Patagonia, has been pushed off ; Which now s & " . he part which the indtvidm © imivart of the werld which we can ailevi:|h® Was not run over. The driver did not ! writfen a play of such merit that is|economic mind wants the native as per- s O e . Clunk 17| Massachiisetts and Rhode was & »iv o c"n";"" Ay !“h' (’““1‘51‘;“"“” L BT L Lo, 5%¢ | was produced at the Paris Gymnase. |manent hewer of wood ard drawer of Stories That Recall Others | ropular usage and probably will re- Vilna, whose narfow afd winding supply. Attracted to the city from the|*'™ J _| the injury he had done. He must have - | water, and justifies this polt y main for a long tim countrs and drafted for service, a larze| Of the jov of milllions of Hearts be-| ynoun that he had hurt ¢ie child, for the |, About the middle of ihe last cen e e ey o8 \hoee wha had formerly do.|cause of the Christ who died and rose Voted their attention to agricultural pur.|252In and of the cértain final triumph ot suits were otherwiss engaged, The indi.|£000 Over &vil, right over Wrong and 1ife ¥ifual who had time, but not necessarily |°Vr death. e ot h a g i tip of Argen-|streets, stony pavéments and horse- little fellow's screams could have been | tUrY Was the great age of inveation, | blex ‘;B“‘éh""'g mat's intereat inferior 3 < Ehe e AT ha | cars give it a quaint and almost medi- heard two blocks away. For such heart. 204 Verne utilized this enthusiasm to| v, Us Chrigtan mind resards the na- Angther Kind 0f & Rl b gy eomia in aleval atmosphefe. Though the seat of lessness ohe can find a parallel oniy in ; OnCelVe a mumber of imaginary voy- | (T8 2 DIHLT SN0 WAntS to make him | o was taken to task for not Drovid-| piee mumier of cacs. . Bat b region | €Overnment now is Kovno any of the paganiem of anclent Rome. To re- 88€S & trip to the moon, tiventy thou- s the eolorling for his family and made the usual’ o - A 3 : 1 the great events in Lithuanian history of his skin. A house thus divided against given this designation really covers, ] 8 voke the license of such a driver wouid |58nd leagues under the ses, to the cen- 5 St | protest against the chargés made con- ; e 2 on. | center around Vilna. & farm, could do mueh through the culti- yé‘l:‘x‘“"th';“:l‘;d“;‘! i i e b e o] 419 ter of the earth, etc. The first of these | I18eif canmot stand. and in South Africa, | Cerning him. Asked what he dig he oy |One-half the north and south exten vating of a &mall garden and the agere- |’ °° natere: , e no more thari anywhere else, there is ion of the Republic, stretching from | “Viina was founded at the junctios 3 wa A no . i s production would do much to oft.|%on that speaks of the abundance of lite| Nature revels in boundary lines; we ;“::‘!;‘1‘,:;::‘";:‘“ g:::i“““fi?e&?ge ot | convincing sign fhit the reconciliation of [P"S0° 1 o T am a pimper|Central Argentina for moro than Lopo ! of the Vilna snd Vilayka rivers by : ,,Z, u,.d' v,r:d,,c;,,,,' in the usua1| With all its wondefful hobes ang possi-| Sce them between ail of her gfand di- 3 s ! i > Gedimin in 1322, and is connected by 2 visionis. Go anywhere over fhe earii's | Coucetlon’. Thence forwart fof a E;fi:flfi::w R e [ oatt sntmhnzli:m.h‘x‘ Caries from about |Failway lines with Petrograd and Dbt billties, and # brings & message fo hu-| VSRS Ge anywhere earth's | quarter of a century scarcely a year 3 ¥ “Well, if you are a plumber you ought| {20 it 115 WL S 50 through Warsaw, with most of the o ¥ manity which makes the whole world n yom will come sooner OF|jaseed in which Hetzel did not pub- 150 miles in the south to 450 in the Home gardening became a popular| 1o later, to use a nolitical term, to a Soft movement that left such an excellent im- 1 : to make good money,” he was told. FriggE Bordy | capitals of Burope. When Ni - jater to use o ortien fermn to'e sokt|F*S5 0" ot of his santastic sto- | LETTERS TO THE EDITOR | *Ont ow"viks an ot sssmey»| orth and its area is nearly i : frrect, b | passed through the city n 1813 or T “ " of California, our second larzest S Giblianed to plant girdens, grow mch EDITORIAL NOTES, %‘le Mal:, .u‘u} is ‘ensxly' distinguished from | o 4 " B Mr. Editor: This IS my fourth letter| ‘“Well, just what do you do?" and economic development @f this vast | tioves ne would restors the old Lith vegetables as they requiro for the table| My it be a joyous and havpy Baster!|ns ‘fand throngh which 1t flowss as ing| These novels were so well written |Of sbragine. fe, why 1 dig ditches for the pipes. |27¢d can be conveyed hest perhaps b | yopian state, Near the city todey ther: throughout the sesson and store up a — island with its budding and flowering | And became so popular that they were |, qoto, b Be¥e whlten heretobefore gives| That's the plumber T am. B et ihe Erent West «r . stands a stone which tells the tragic sapply of products for the winter months.| The Man on the cornér says: It used | vegetation is never confused with the iranslated in the varlous Burepean |, "0l "G OI0R to instre a crop Nothing But Toys. e Gauthwest wwere to fhe United Story eimply: On ohe side it bears the They have found that there is & physical {10 be put up or shut up; now it is clean | surrounding element, 6o also the spring. | lenguages, and some even info Japan- 'ce. 15/ followed. Will{ the Scuthwest wers {0 benefit in the maintenance of €uch a gar-|up and paint up. fn ol & s E vos | WOrds. ‘Napoieon Bohaparte passed time, in spite of its strange overlappins, | ése and Arabic. The last of these Sto- ©_apples be good? Havine been under suspiclon for —aljust after the Civil War. There w o\ They may not. A muegy | considerable time a chap was visitea b ‘great America v this way in 1518 WiE 600590 e den and a decided relief to the pocket- - is distinct from winter and seems to grow | Fies, written b bt é’;’“s'_’c" cause” tang to Insrcash ity | tides who. aeaféli TP ROOBAELRRTINA &1 oy b SouBtY . thakl NI other side there fs engravel Lok, to say mothing of the delight that| From all indications Geéneral Semenoft|out of it. In ancient times stoné monu- | Years o 'fleé oiistance upofn & comet, |0ause all sorts of unhealthy frult con-|large number of empty half pint bottles couiq never be reclaimed. But with these words: apoleon Bonapart~ comes from having fresh table suppliesils finding that they know more to hig|Ients were built as boundary lines be- |8 romance of existarce upo = ¢ dition. If ¥ou have set yo h was gound In his hom ’ il , bassed this way in 1812 with 400 7 . ;i | » tion bégan your heart on ., the extension of railroads, {arms. SERtabls for fise. discreditover mére thai he thought they | T vrov}lzces, Cbanl meum.lAflse‘:'oe?“t::ms:&g};:ufm‘;“fi_ first class apples you must keep spraying| His explanation was: “T Was savin' "em panches and irrigatio oins. thilh ‘msr;_.h - p g ' o herefors, | atd, h B8 eulyfn 4 SomNACOSRIE 00 S| M it o all_summer at intervals, for my ittle nephew Willle, Willle likes novth Ameri bt s QieapOEi= e three former Russtan pro 1t 4 quite natural therefors, in h stone markers botween towna ‘and |ed N sttention fo s different siylo | STy 4L tnienaln, | tor g S Y g, America fdesert s GISaPRL” | inces, Viina, Kovilo and Buvalki ou e a t of employ’ - ey s b ' e e 1 Ing. . of the amount of unemployment that pre-| e el of fiction, and wrote his poptilar [The | iy yvicinity which T have not yet men.| “Half pint bottles are the wrong kind "y (o f ) etea a Of Which most of the present state valls throughout the country, that new coutry showing| pu¢ ine aivision bet th | Southern Star” and “The Carpathlan |'visn.3™ Tho worst of theee & conci | of toys for Willia” declared the visitor g hes been formed are not very pros sétention should be directed to the oppor- | INcroased earnings for February it 1s one| anq particularly betwesh Winter and | Chateau” when he was well past his | weeitis aro heetles. and. thiv e | and wWillie's uncle was taken alonz and dp?;”'t s B g i m:;n " perous looking country, when compar tanity Which lies befors those who are|'ndicatioh of Betteriient i business con-| spring, is peculiar. No sione monument | Sixtieth yeaf, He lived to the advaiiced | yeetien does more damags for the human | given time to think up a better excuss, A irrigation worke have alteady Pes” ed with that in the neighboring Ger- out of work to put their time to good | tions. or other Gevice of man marks the houn- |aEe of seventy-seven, dying at Amlens, | race than does any ofher family of in-. and millions of head of cattle and a Mah and Polsh lands farther south use unti] Aiffersnt conditions prevall. It P dary line. It is a voics, or rather & uni- | France, on Mafch 24, 1565, 1o | 55615 oD the Tasa of the earth: Our cot.] 3 vy course for| 1T a8 is clifined the rum smigsling is|son of voices, whoss song Is winters| Jules Verne was industrious with his Much of it Is marsay and ecovers' E 24 n sheep are supported ¢ the or toft erop 15 now menacad by a weevil Rk s ron. | With forests, Indeed the forests are e out of t - . o portions o E ::iybm undertake o provision their|8t Its lowest ebb it is not Aificult to| valedictory. This song admits of inter.|DPen Up to within a very Ehm”: ‘.‘;fl! it Was a weevll thich We used to delig} Today’s Birthdays f&d&i s ShBsaan A m(;x‘:nl::“: “oi 80 extensive that they constitute ene Homes in this manner, but # is decidedly | PTOVE that there ig plenty to be had by, Pretation, if we only give a little play to|of his death. He was always extrefe-|to fina in a chesthut. Weevils spoll Atter a fow thovsand more miles of G {he’ country's kreatest naturai re- Bt ts Going sothing. Tis’ tin|Pavind doe . our imagination—as the poets do, The|ly poptlar In society and Quring the |piums cherries and paaches. S Tew Ltndred. o “hovels shall 80Urces. Agriculture is the chief in- preferadle to doing mothing. Tho timg : s style of ths music gives us the keyhote |last five years of his life thsadlvlded Strangely enough it 18 not generally| puoo carman, noted as poet, author: | have been et to work, and a few mi- JUSLEY. and a surplus of some s that it will take for .enmvlh!ng to ShOW| yyorers one consolation if the session| to the character of the somg. It is no|his time for the most part etween | recognized that weevils are one of the a‘ itie, born at Fredericton, N. B. RhT ey ot encing ‘shall have Such as timber. hides. and x that 5p in the way of employment can be Put|oe wongresy comtinties during the summer | MaSination to say that a finely trained | Paris, his home at Amiens and his|greafest eninles of apples. Some years (a0d crif ago toddy. " T | bomn atretched in place, the Patagonia | Ner, neighbors need, is produced. to excellent uee. It cannot be over-|y.u. i b the ball games for the a.| TUSiCal ear can detect mefody in manyyacht. He was a member %f the Le!- ago I listened to an addreéss upon apnle s’m‘uel R. McKelvie, governior of | ‘desert’ Il probably go the “_‘a,‘ of its !, “The swain in 1ithuania, despite looked that it is a perlod when thritt| . noong of long Epeeches, of nature’s sounds quite apart from the|gion of Hofior ahd a humber of hiS|culture by an authority well known in Nebtaska, born at Fairtield, Neb. 41 Eit Amerioan, HORCMH, the tendeneles which baliny spring is should be ahown in regard to time. In=| s 5. Smescies so:gs of the birds. This voice is ho- rom:ncfl were crowned by the French (';': wf:ha“"rm;{m; tgemem:,d "'UWM‘,;:”E St L, N N o“ O Ty o thir supposed to inspire, makes the fall of P e — where a dirge i oring y. n. 2 S . r - 1 @ of permitting it o go to waste be-| re angwer to the German unWilling- | the desth of W mredeemar B 1o ments Aoy sn account of B8 WORABtul|f wia et Batec, THore was :f::fi:: Wallace Reid & celebrated player in | statements of a careful scientist — U0e Year hie courting season. because cause customary emplovment 15 N0t ;asg to accspt the reparation committee's 5 i farles ve he must be married in the winter time. - - o L g iy Rl and nowhere a funeral minor to be sung | imagination, as revealed in his sto- |sresvent like marks on the skins. Ho)motion pictures, born in St. Louig, 32, Charles Darwindid much (o &lve for than 90 per cent of Lithusoian e e oo 1x.t0 8900 | plan informs Germany that it can do bet-| only in the presence of death. It s not a | ries, was given the title of the “Wigard | suggestsd that possibly the blowing or|¥ears ago today, Kk 7. Donahue, Cath- | Loogina an undescrvedly had reputa- | weddings take place during the eold use should not be dlsregarded. The homelior by meeting the requirements than by | Single theme deveioped only on the lower |of France.” And it is not strange, in|the wind had scratched the apples| Rt. Rev. Patrick J. Donahue, Cath-|tion before the world. Darwin studied gardening habit is a good one whether weather, for the wedding lasts for a forcing the allits to do it for them. ..|TesiSter of nature's grand organ. 1t is|view of his family history, that the|against neighboring twigs. All the time|Olic bishop of Whee““%- born in Eng- | chiefly the forbidding desert coast ot TECNCE 08 Che NRCEE TUll ot ba there is unemployment or not. . rather a glorious Hailelifah Chorus run- | eldest of his brothers, who died in 1893 | these matks were thom imade by a fe-land 73 years ago today. =~ the lower portion of the country, and oo ' 3 0rom the fields and farms when i A The sending of & third of & ton of fir| NPE throush all the octaves known to|had attained the advanced age of 110.|male weeil, though as I was not an au-| John L. C%b e ffil;lfui'lfla ive Inlhis discouraging report was interpret. y tCh FHe Tl a na v e musical notation. It is a grand farewelll During his lifetime Jules Verne |thotity on apples, the people present did | Consress of the Fourth Ohio district:|ed as applying to the entire country. Winter time is the time Of fee- GROWING FIRE LOSSES. :;““ ‘O‘f‘"fl";" "‘:”:“fi‘l"‘l‘, VW:"’“ to winter in its great variéty of forms. |wrote more than 100 novels, although |fiot accept that explanation. born at xfiu;a}fo‘; 38 il :flf For decades no one thought it worth ¢ FIMEE QEOE 0 h What the fire loss in this country ana|the question as to what tedults have been| i time of his death but eighty-| Many of our varleties of apples ara| James J. Jeffries one-time champlon | while even to explore the hinterland. when Jack anads would Amount to it there were] OPUaIned from the quantities of tree seed | LiC feRtuaL 'mf,:;";\..",a?“;l:;‘;..%éufi"%f ‘fhem had been published, it | éntirely ruined of late years by this pest. | pugilist of the werld, born at Caroil | i1t is westward beyond the semi- | FYOSt turns every lake and marsh 20 efforts put forth in behalf of firs pre-| S O™ right after the close of the| tions, and all others as weH. Thero is|having been his habit to write them |Most of the young anples being stung «|O. 47 years ago today. ar. arid pampas or plains that the most|® MISEWAY. Interesting ad least thoroughly known | sye eider guck of Teelnd fa portions of Patagonia are found. AOng | yonatly fond of bright veiitlbn is somelhing which no one no'hing analogous 16 it In any llving|far ahead of the printer, and even todozén times or so. This stinging by the S —— kmows. That it would be far in excess of 3 e sés badly malformed frult and thing; and we can see this unless we|construct plots in his mind far ahead | Yeevil cau In connection with thé proposed city| mistake appearances for realiti Tn | of his own industrious pen.’ His story, | dirty black eavities within the apples wEat it ds under existing conditions g0es | charter it is Wl to Fémember that what- e I the eastern slopes of the Andes and | eqy nds, and at the the snringtime there ssems to be a res-|“Jean Marle Cabionlin” was written | Where the gfubs live. Spraying the small IN THE PUBUC EYE in some of the valleys between its br:um.a"m the ufi“ without saying, but regardless of What|eve, gives us an improvement over the|urréction of material forces, but it is an | after he had passed seventy-five years |2pples When about the size of marbles of . parallel ranges is a scenic and clima- | gayly chloted raes ana bells in s Being dons for the:prevention of fires |1 o¢ tne present city charter is desira.| appearatice only. 1t 1o new 1ife mant.|of age. Emall cheffias checks this pest. Picking (tic paradise. Grassy meadows and . attract the sttentlon of the Ascks o sad the steps that are belng teken f0f|ple sven though the revised document | [eSUIng Uiself, zof the old Kfe coming back | The great disappointment In Verne's [P il the f‘t"‘f“.!‘.“{"“ and destréying Bishop Edwin Heélt Hughes, who ' forset-clad slopes aliernate with sheer nests which have been carefally the bullding of fire proot bulldings there |igny perfect, again It i New pfass new buds, new |life was that he failed of election to |thom lestens the best. declares that “whenever a man is lazy |cliffs and towering, snow-mantled | for them on shore. sontinues to be that increase in fire SO leaves, new fgwers thal have never ap- éne of thé forty Academicians ot ity e Salirongy orsien et which intellectually, he is a sinner,” is one ' peaks; and scattered everywhere are - losses which plainly emphasizes the need Speaking about getting the arden im- a::;‘?‘o ::"id::"‘h I:efflre. We _certa.ln}l‘ysFraneE‘ They clllme§ thtit (}:flhl‘:&r¥. summer and fall apples suffer much of the stalwarts in American Method- | {nnumerable sparkling streams an af not only continued but increased agi-|plements ready for & busy season, a trip ces of a resurrection In the | were “not litérature” an riy ; sm. Wh o mah sky-blue lakes. This is, in fact, one FEELS LIKE A NEW WOMAN ! rrecti from this pest, but the red astrachans s By o S Pvung Bc } . e human family. Of the countléss millions | disappointed the old man, especiaily * achieved much success both as a pul- |of the most extensive and most won- During the month of March the loss ;:'_‘:I“lflh’ :‘:E':fl':nunqmgx’:e:{m&-n-,.-ml:: {¥ho have iived and died no 6né has ever | a e kiiew what careful workinanship ::d‘_;t:;.‘mu:m! mt:s?:l:.tl (;?; :fi':'q;iam:y pit orator and educnhtm'. end became | dertul lal(fe Jestont dlln u-e' world, A m:l:v':nT suftetet xianey troule t 1 g in the|boen fesurrccted. In Bibls times some i els, sometimes i 3 known as a man who can get close number of these bodles of water are 9om fires in the United Statss and Can-|flelds whers It was léft when use of ic| were broueht badk to lite, but they died | cwmrroy e e s pov! Ahil snple 1Y BHICK ways 1t cegs through | i 48 reached the large total of nearly e | iter B F B, ook ten times. . ‘to the people. Bishop Hughes vwas!comparable in size to Lake Champlan. fi" b 1o was concluded last sutomef of fall. again, and they sl remalf 1h AhSr | Cune st sew years of hit life he the tefidor skin afia the small larvae of Jorn at. Moundsville, W. Va, .{ 1 Ofly a relatively fow of the sma'ler |is SIN08, or shost a million - asid & graves. Ve have no evidence that any | was nearly blind, but he did hot whol- | was tow to ehjoy thase ealy apples is|received his academic training at che lakes have been named and some have third & dey. While conditions are not| Having passéd rofn fathér to son the | Wio have died Liave ever been restored as |1y gurrender to the affiiction And eon< | iy eat them in the dark. It is only the| West Virginia State Unlversity and beeti numbered. Many of them, how- the same in any two months it is impos-|South Manchester News is now appear- J““’R as. The only evdence we have!(jnyed to. write his novels. Ih thelr |sight of the minute pest that hurts us|the Ohio Wesleyan University. Then |ever, have not been explored. It is | Were to overlook the fact that this meant |ing twice a week and the afinouficement | Of % Resurrection is found in the sacred B Writings. and this 1S b d all themes keeping scrupulously abreast|uniess the fruit is over ripe. he ;o:k la ooursa “;1 g& Boston School Ir‘: tthls ‘mse;_mnu":x!uir la.kf" reslo: by increase -weekl; R Wis Is beyond all reason-|yyith 1ip-to-date discoveries. The last| There is no well khown remedy for the|of Theology an , yeare | that scientific expeditions will search | p: -mnn A y-: -::fl :;s': :;a::’fi.:::f ’A‘K’.Z.' ?:’ ::n 'el'mm.’;.{,‘,'?e T F,l.i;:; h oo yeat b6 lived he -had 1ad_plah to apple maggot. except the gathering and |after his graduation had bécomé a|for the strange creatures reported to orilies in duch 108els Whin efforts £0d de- |home paper 1 Which 1ié newspaper ser- {make up a series of romances on bus- | destruction of all fruit. As it is Impos- blsho]’;.l belmg 1'xht° ymnzel'l.,r to! ho}a have been sien ‘:en:;re.k“ b % No matter how i 1 ntrizale inteigues | sib) in this n year: eviou K o St o in another direction. It is in|vice 86 wéll itablishéd by the father|. O, Matter how . much a I3 | tneks Ufe. with the intricale intrizuss | sible to ket concerted action fn this there | the title sixty s. sly | “One of the own sure that a man loves her, she wishes|ef syndicates, trusts, combinations|is liftle to be gained by a few of us do-|he had preached for Séveral years In}Argentina is nearly 1,000 miles north a million And & half greater than in|promises to Be ably k&t up to the de-[it was more so she could ask Lim to|and gigantic deals, but he waé not|ing 1 Massachusetts and for Tive years had |ef Cape Horn. The area of this many- < month of January, A month of gim-lmands of the community, say it in bigger language. destined to éven begin this task. It is to Be hooed that someone will dis-! filled the presidency of e Paww Uni- | branched body of water is probably (¥}