Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, May 5, 1922, Page 4

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seem a considerable sum of money but t lssn accord with public demand that lthese who are guilty of any such act would be brought to light and made to pay the penalty. There can be no thonght | howing lenfency to tnose wno were T practice. It was a producing war goods o taken the view that because it was for the government they would reduce their ordinary protit. Soms aid so, but some, it would appear, saw the chance to grab and they displayed no seréples in so doing. There can be no disposition to dis- regard any such cases where the evi- WHY SHE WAS ANXIOUS said the bride with the ap-)¥ou have the piegn of. I dom't ukn:a: there is something I want | g’ who has sbsolutely no heart aid to ask you—T just thought of it teday,|who would be a regular vampire, and I and it's been hothering me considerably.|eXpect that she could have twisted you 1f you hadr’t marriéd me, Herbert, whom | &round her little finger if you had stayed would you have marnied ™ thers, a few weeks longer. Yes, I am “Huh?” asked the startled bridegroom, |0ertath you and Ansomia—" becoming alert as befits one when trou-|,_“Great Scott!” exploded her husband. bls looms. “I wouldn't marry Ansopia if she was “Becaus: you would, the last Womati on earth! She wedrs good on his fair young wife, :::l!-a; and is all right to take “Now. Mabel,” her perturbed husband |&round—-—" _ : Interrupted, “if you wll stop to think! “You do admire a woman who looks you will realize that it would have been |Stunning,” signed the bride, “and I am “Herbert, pealing e 1 know,” went leterminedly. month: $6.00 i X v little and insignificant! 1 could al Satter. dence is possessed or obtainable. The|absolutely impossible for me to have|So > _al Teleshene Calts. administration believes that punishment|married anybody If she hadn't been you.|Most believe, Herbert, '-‘;!‘ you marriéd Bullets Businws Office. ¢m0. | should be adminissered where guilt is be-|I Dever could have cared—" :Ied jntuwbe?maflq:e;mn:r:‘io: me B el B e, 13- ' oxist and where there is rea-| ..Ut Herbert” persisted the bride lieved “I did not!” said the bridegroom. ‘T a married you—" 5 “This s getting us nowhere,” &aid the bride firmly. “I just have got to know &1l ahout that eirlf" “What eirl?” “That's the trouble,” fessed. “It's the girl you won't tell me about! I think I could stand it better it yoy were not so serious about her, Her- bert, and didn't refuse to talk about with the appealing eyes, “you cared f 2 %ot of girls before you met me and—' “But not the same way—' “Well, it would have been a peffectly good way if you had never known met A person doesn't go around all his Hfe say- ing, ‘Dear me, how deeply I should be in love it this was someone else than who it is!” He just says he is in ove and lets it go at that. And I ean't help wonder- ng what she would have been liks. You krow you are fond of brunettes with dari_eyes and I am so blond. That Ir- ma_Intington, whom you went &round with just before you were introduced to me. is a brunette.” “Ridiculiovs!” the bridegroom cried. “Irma_was a nice girl and 1 tock her around a bit, but I never was seriou: “I'm sure you would have been,” sigh- ed the bride, “and the time may- come when you will wish you had kept ofi with Irma. I Just feel, Merbert, as though I had ruined your whole life and——" “Mabel,” said the bridegroom, pulling her wadded handkerchlet from her eyes, “you are doubting me! I— “The trouble is that you are so matu- rally noble and generous, Herbert,” the assurance of conviction, and such he case there can be ne ome con- nected with the previous administration who would do other than approve such action concerning those who had taken antage of them In order to get pos- on of government funds to which were not entitled. It may cost mon- to prosecute such, but it will be NEWS OF GREAT IMPORTANGE $15,000 Stock of Pants, Untouched by Fire, We Fortunately Secured from Eastern Pants Mig. Co. and Ideal Pants Co., 40 Thames St., Norwich, To Be Sacrificed Regardless of Orig- inal Cost. $4.00, $5.00 and $6.00 WEMACH OF THC ASSSCIATED PRESS, The Amociated Press B exciusively eatitled vews damatch- the bride con- 3o use for republication ef ».) - s I or pot ol Bl piber and ado B i bervtn. < AL fghte of repadlication er Buiches Beceln are sleo reservel the wortn 1 her. “Jusiping Jupiter?- oriedPthe hride- groom. “How can I talkk about something that fsn't? T've told you my every thought— ‘But there is no way of bfia abso- lutely sure” the bride informed him. “Wag she really dark, or aid she look & fittle like me? You must hive been orazy about her mot, to have spaken #bout her when you mentioned the oth- ers you knew and when I consider the terrible situation we aré in, Herbert, I think for your own happiness I had bet- ter go awayt” ‘“Mabel,” said the bridegroom deter- minedly, “how many times must I tell you I never did marry anybody but you, @ectal des- ARBOR DAY This is the day that has been set apart by proclamation of Governor Lake for Arbor and Bird day. It is a day in which s the citizens of Connecti cut and cially the teachers and pu- pils in the public schools, to give care- ful attention and thought to the value and preservation of our forests as well as the value and protection of the in- seotivorous and song birds. o you arranged to do your bit in omoting of the interest in these Are you going to lend your in- CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING APRIL 29th, 1922 11.654 DAYLIGHT SAVING When the spectal town me #aked for it wax for the purpose FAVORED the v things? ot get-| & i celop- | bride informed him sadly. “Youd cover|and never will, and if that lm't proot fluen and example for the develop: 1 L. tine an expression of the people of this| it ‘;‘mal:{ onthusiasm in this di.|UP Your sorrow and never let me know, |that I never would have Gone so, I don't Sty in reeara Eom A T et e e enoourage| 204 When I think that possibly you are|know what s just being brave it is more than I can stand! - Are you perfectly sure you'd mever have married Irma?’ erfectly!” Then,” went on the bride, tragically, “who would it have been? I always have felt that you never told me exactly “Well, my goodness, Herbert,” smifted the bride with the appealing eyes, begin- ning to brighten up, “Why didn’t you say & before? Al I wanted was to have it made perfectly clear and logieal instead of so sort of hazy! You do have a won- derful way of explaining things when Pressions that had been received thro organisations, that there wes a deman that Norwich should keep up procession and n harmony boring cities and states in th Thete can be no question what is so nmecessary and what is wor- |thy of your cooperation? 1t because $uch dutles as Arbor 1y is designed to emphasize have been too sadly neglected that the wisdom of directing greater attention to the need On Tuesday, March 21st, the fire came— you read how the smoke filled the build- with but what of arousing greater interest in \ a desirable effort since when there erted action better results are all about that girl you knew in New|you put your mind to it, Herbert! I just ing—how the m fought in l'dl" much interest prevalls in regard to tne[Nas been recognised and the Arbor daV|yo o anconia Hardware. The onelwanted to know 'for sure!”—Exchange. wubjeet, There are those who are anxious|Plan agreed upon. It is solely for the o aveld the isadvantages which wo tome with re to do fa as to quench the flames—how some of the affected by smoke and water only. The Insurance Companies made satis- floing, there are those who s taking any = | FAMOUS MEN. Today’s Anniversaries a halt cemtury since the Arbor dea was launched. During that time t has gained recognition throughout the n as a movement which serves to attention to conditions which can- overlooked. Through the is an fmportant education- much oe way or t The #xpression of meetipg was destred 1t showed High Grade Pants ALL AT ONE PRICE THOMAS MOORE. Thomas Moore, the popular Irish poet, was close to 60 years of age when he started on the most interesting work of his long career, the writing of a history of his country. He was asked to under- 1778—Sensation produced in England by the treaty of alliance between the United States and France. 1795—A law went into operation in Eng- land imposing a tax on wearing hair powder. Is there . ‘aken. 1 i, the g of| 10 SO, He wuw agiad o upder | Mg factory adjustments and stood the EN- " en concerning the importance| projected a group of histories of the figuze in the early history of Call- tiken # Kkeeping o o | and the need of giv-| British Isles, Sir James Mackintosh to fornia and later governor of New mE LO$; g poespaskie 3 ser | i to both, write on England. Sir Walter Scott on Jersey, born in Sussex county, N. = . D Within a few years greater attention|Scotland and Moore on Ireland. o g{»”l‘e'}“’" 15:}“4 e -~ - e heen directed to the demand for the| Moore was supposed to combine his en- 2—Karl Marx, the founder of Ger- H H ax Been voted 8 only 2 frectad to the AemEndiI0l, ) e Bt o ol i s man socialism born at Treves, [+] pra purposes every pair tncre: ., P! ; way and another, while| PrOmpted him to leave no part of his Prusis. Died in London, March B . aniged b depletes y 1 r. country's story untouched, and Instead of | 1821—Napoleon I, died In exilé at St Pants is ect. Every pair absolute- B SR st the pecple for day jitio t in tree planting has| one volume he dragged out the-history to Helena. Born in Corsica, Aug. 15, \ % ey A oy s ce the war by the man-| four, of which the last appeared in 1848, 3 - . = : U the BV TR ik fa] s L L6 Jak e xt5 persons under Wyeth left y new, at prices t represents e den oo A als and remembrance ,highways.| Of this wor ir John Russell says. Missouri for Oregon. < . - no danger, however, that the| “Moore's time was absorbed by it, his Rt. Rev. Harry P. Northrop, Cath- ufacture. e " 4 ¢ Arbor and Bird day will be|Nealth worn, and his faculties dragged ollo bishop of Charisston, S. G, cost to manufas your sion -l 3 1 - down wearisome and uncon; ial born in Charleston. Died there in * e genersl perticipation. gen re T e ot perepasion. |00 0 5 Toatscne and sncfinal] oy ne rs. The doors will open tomor- keeping the = 5 judge by the result as ta the latter.” - o = BEVERIDGE'S VICTORY | Nevertheiess, it was an honorable end wm 1 9 ,d wi th e tcome of the contest be-|to his long literary career. The easy st R ro orning at\ o ock" th egreat- nat Senator New and former Sen- (singer of light loves cloved his ceaseless ories That Recall - (] 68 Mt Sl Dol Do M e o e st e 1t Others est money saving event ever held in St Coal the |sonr ndicates cléarly the conti- | 5pent, savs Lord Russell, “in the critical . T i P L E e : SIZES 28 TO 50 WAIST Norwich: 2 o Boakiry didate of the s o35 e ared in a store SR St sl @oéat he at.|the November election. Both destred the | gwn o A BLaw o the Mifers own country. and Moore was at least well | 2hd asked permission to use the tele- tude woulid nation But oneycould get it and it ¥ justified in holding that urgent need ex- |Phone. “ae storekeeper overheard this tor and agat daylight n t en n that the man who has|isted for spreading among the English, | COnversation after the boy with persist- own meeting deen reversed. Thus t seen Dbefore the people of that stats|and stili more among the Irish, a know- | it endeavor had obtained the right sught to be question now, even and who occupies a place among nation. | ledge of the history of Ireland. number. It was elose. The decision ws " “Mr. Johnson?” right name). “Yes," Mr. Johnson, do you need & good boy to work for you?’ “No, I have @ good boy working for me now.” “All right Mr. Johnson. Thank you. ‘When the receiver was hung up the storekeeper said: ; ;"Yw want a job, boy? I'll give you a ob. 'No, sir, thank you. I am the boy that works for Mr. Johnson. I was just checking up or myself. Color or Contents? A little girl was sent to the library to get & book for her mother. Approach- ing the desk she said: “My mother wants a book?”’ “Did she say what kind she wanted asked the librarian, hoping to get some gulde in making a selection. After a moment’s puszied considera- tion the rejoinder: “Sure, she sald to get her 2 red or a gréen one.” fizures 4s desired by them as thel: ve in the upper house of con- next term, Both are of and while there ara vill look at the situation from n order to consider the po- bearing in this or that direction simmers down to the fact that between two men it has been declared by iblicans that they prefer Bever- s a personal victory for the former or. Each one made a thorough campaign of the state. It was a contest in which the ration had maintained the hands off”. poverigs mds ot iis campaign against administra- policies. He has indicated his in- pendence by his declarations against » group idea In congtess and agalnst agricultural group in spite of the fact that his state is much given to agriculture, But on that he has been no more outspoken than he has on other matters of state and national interest (which wasn't the Insurance Go.'s Loss--Your Gain Owing to the Low Price, We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities. 272-274 Main Street, Norwich NEXT DOOR TO BROOKLYN OUTFITTERS FIRSTS Nor was allehis time spent on the writing of his history, for he devoted much of it to the collection of all his Irish melodies, to be incorporated in on cation. It was a long labor, but the finally completed in 1841. Moore might have accomplished other things before his death, because his mind was as alert and as productive in 60s as it was at any time during his er. But fate held @ hard blow in T him in his old age being com- 1 to survive the death of all five of ren, and when the last one, who was his namesake, died in Africa, he noted in his diary: “The last of my five children now are gone, and I am left desolate and alone. Not a single relative have I now left in the worl This was practically the end of Moore's career. A severe filness followed the an- nouncement of the death of his last child, and when he recovered. says Lord John Russell, “he was = different man. And with his memory, his wit had gone aiso.” A WELOOME RAIN Repeatedly there are times when many |, not appreciate the rainy day. |, We may realize that s needed fn*‘; s breaking of & drough supply- Ing of needed molstu growing gropa. but do not like to curb our pieas- 4res the way we have to when a rainy fay ls sandwiched in among the others. Nevertheless, the rain of Thursday was just what we neded. It came in Ule manner, which permitted it and even though 1t as well as wet and possibly able, there was a benefit which cannot| be @lwegarded Weo may not like rainy fays, but we cannot very well get along Wwithout thesn, and It iy well that we give soasideration of something more than var pleasures once in a while sen: dmini; of the men who dragged the great blocks of stone into place to build the artificial mountains of the Phar- ohs, or who dropped seeds into the mud of the receding Nile thousands of years ago, even as they are drop- ped_today. “Bgypt's resources are almost whol- to Charles Piez To Study Inter- national Conditions Abroad In all &tvections and throughout many ates there have been woodland fires raging for the past fortnight. Lack of rain and the winds have left a covering and of &ry materfal throughout flelds and his having in any the att attitude must be regarded appealed to the people. He h: not stood other than as a republican and the fact that he has won does mot way ude indfeate a party break The Memoirs which he, himself a great lover and reader of such Mterature, had scrupulously kept for a peried of mearly 0 years, were always designed to be a posthumous resource for his heirs, and he had confided them by a will mede as a8 it ly agricultural, and in the agricultu- ral sceheme the millions of fellaheen are the ultimate units. They work long hours scratching the soil with crude implements, or tediously rais- ing water in skin buckets attached to pivoted poles that the thin stream NO SECONDS 30x31,—Cord .......... IN THE DAY’S NEWS .. §11.88 of Senator New who upon acknowledging defeat represents tnat of his supporters in that commonwealth. EDITORIAL NOTES forests which furmish just the kind of fuel needed to permit disastrous fires. Individual and organized efforts have baen resorted to in frantic ende: to many years earlier to the case of his friend, Lord Russell. The Memolrs could mot better have answered such 2 purpose, had there been heirs, for the Longmans paid $15,000 for the Moore Memolrs. may save their plants from parching. Taxes are heayy, and it is the lowly fellaheen who keep the treasury sup- plied. Living conditions are very poo: THE EGYPT OF 1822, A, D. King Fuad succeeds Cleopatra. “When Great Britain abandoned its protectorate over Egypt, and the Sul- 30x31s—Fabric ........ 30x3—Fabric .......... mud huts house most of Egypt's thir- csecseve e 37.M theck the advance of the f Gres Fou never & tan of the Nile country changed his|teen millions. In the fields they wear Jections of woodland have been burned |} omrteq” O o WOl the last vote dtle to king, he became the first king | iitle more than & loin cloth, and the 30x31 Tu \ 3 ver, valuable timber destroyed , pole| i 3 of Egypt since the Ptolemaio regime,” | younger children of the villages go flx o be steseiecsssssbene s sl "‘:; “;:‘fi: frores e Pw‘mwl R e L IN THE PUBLIC EYE says a bulletin issued from the Wash- | naked. When the fellah is ‘dressed up’ bulldings burned from the fires 4 wh ipgton, D. C., headquarters of the Na- tional Geographic Society. “The old Egypt of millenniums ago is in many ways more familiar to the world at large than the Egypt of to- continues the bulletin. “Pictures dc s a dec ept he wears a rough shirt and loose trou- bave been kindled in various w The rain bhas not been of the ki would serve to pit out of its which had become well developed in beds B s i “There is little cause to marvel at Bgypt's checkered history. A simple reason is that she began early. Here GOULD BATTERIES James Duncan, sixty-five years ol to- day, is one of the most widely known leaders of organized labor in America, . bar the mayoralty election two o the vote on daylight saving is one of the earliest places in which §€ Jeves and hemvy underbrueh, Qut |y might be called close. and as first vice president of the Ameri great pyramids and sphinxes, | man lived an ordered life and left rec- It wiil be of vast assistance. Wh can Federation of Labor has ocoupied g |1tS Columned temples and rock-hewn |ords of his activities. Some athropo- greatest servics will come will b h attention as is given to the|Position second in prominence and tnfiu. | tOMDS fill histories and encyclopedias; | logists, in fact, look upon central Afr| » goaking this tinder-llke material situation these days has to do|nce only to that held by the vetsran |@Nd inevitably the reader’s attention{ca as the place of origin of man, and thus rendering & less susceptible ith the automobile, President Samuel Gompers. Mr. Dunean |15 C°ntered, not on the problems of {upon Bgypt as one of the first way: some time to the vzrious firebrands that is & native of Scotland and a granite | 1048Y, but rather on the evidences of | stations in his diffusion over the oth- NORWICH-—NEW LONDON . 3 Aibos Ak e cutter by trade. In early man @ dead civilization. er continents. may be thrown In its mids o] B, Gey. A Jou sbing o pant 81 Ges it Rroetys wilk peie m’f:;:m:: “But aside from the fact that mum-| “After the long reign of the Phar- Those living near woodla have not |tree, o irub, or & vine to Improve| ., a piunite stitue ciftes th Balimore, | My hunting was for many years one |aohs Egypt had its Grecian and Ro- only fested because of the fires that|the appearance of property and city Identifying himself with the union of his {0f the leading private industries of {man regimes vrhich4 bTu%ht but flehv; gre Started, but that more menacin 3 R craft he rose to the presidency of the |the country; and that now convicts, | changes. Then in 641 A. D. came rate when a sharp-to: ed little boy | her fair a ones might be kindled. The rain willj let the week go by without show-| Granite Cutters' International Assoela. |instead of building roads, excavate |invasion of the Saracens from which came by and tlunledn‘}':er about th: Lhm‘hfln::nmhm.:e‘l:‘l‘l:. BIES ©5 Ssltgiany reaucs the danger vour contribution that you en-ftion in 1895. "In 1900 he successfully {tombs and temples for the govern- |time began Egypt's Mphammedan his- . gont she ran up to my friend, who was | Her platform manmer is one of and qulet the fe: While miflions have | dc the work of the Salvation army.|led the educational campalgn and ulti- [ment, the old monuments are mere- |tory. For a time the cummyhv;n;ta s e o 8 widow in her weeds, and thrust the | snoien friendliness T watehen - :.‘. B Sl forett Bres tt will tem P 44 mately the great strike in the granite |1y & background for a life hard enough | province of the Arabian Caliphs; lat- les Plez, former Tman | rope-end into her hand. : 8888 Jeat from * | o . dependent, though still| ef the Emergency Fleet Corpora- er speakers, all Englishwomen, and even greater| Ten days mow in which to get last :l“mna‘;nd"slry for ;she e&sht-l;our work- ;:"cer,:,ter dlocill 1thoushts mostly on = it - ;n Dt Lic Mamendh | tos SNGE conet Chon n:a A “Here, please do hold my goat while | depided that this friendliness is Lady o v Hia ay. Mr. Dunean 2 member of the ly bread-winning. [ohamm! , »; len| > " i e E5 Itu‘leclcan:df:xllz ;a\; s o e o e b L “Superticially Egypt seemg a large|and finally, in 1616 it became a prov- | Haring recently before departing I fight that boy,” she announced. m; rl“u:‘m America” guarantee. welcome rain g} o e ge ¢4 10 & MeW, American Academy of Political and So- |Country. The eye sees its color spread {ince of Turkey, which controlled it Then Lady Astor opened fire with - are no high hedges or for Europe, where he proposes to solemn London exteriobs to cial Science and has represented the la- make a study of industrial condi- bor movement at several over a considerable part of the north- first through a governor an dlater eastern quarter of the map of Africa through a sort of hereditary viceroy her fists—end won. hide a international I went to ses and hear this tombey | Warmth and will within, Bvery: PROSECUTING WAR FRAUDS rd {c the effect that Japan is mot| conterences held abrfad. and statistics credit it with an area |or khedive ke et i aegard 40 | neroine of my childhood at a recent|ls her friend. It is hail-feliow-well- Botit dince the time when the ar- have anything to do with Chi-\ R of more than 350000 sauars miles, | “For the third time Buropo ook 4 | their effect wpom the industries of | pubiio meoting in London. eager 10 | et (08 one -b"un. seems itien wan siemed ama e wom of |nAs civil war shows Japan in a favorable But the real Egypt—the habitable part |hand in the affairs of BEypt in the United States. He is to visit her judge England’'s first woman M. P. P for myself and from an American Settling wp the government cont i Ve acts —is like a cord with a frayed end; gift her the narrow valley and flaring delta when Napoleon won his Battle of the England, France, Germany and British drove the Today’s Birthdays Pyramids. The probably Peland. Mr. Piez is espe- point of view. Certainly in appearance SRction with the war there has been : LI of the Nile. Except a few scattored|French out in 1801 and turned thel ooy "inierested fn the Industria |Imdy Astor is the American woman muth heard in regard to the ed n those 1. W. W. are going Into oases, most of the rest of the nomi-|country back to Turkey. In 1869 came frandy that existed in connmection with|Russia change their dollars into soviet conditions in Germany, whers he sald there has been 2 tightening up in industrial erganizations with a result that there is a greater offi- clency and a stronger mevemeni *for werld trade than even under * still. She wore a simple hat and black nal Egypt is parched desert sand. costume, with plain white vest, but gravel and rocky hills. Of its more than a third of a million square miles of territory, about 12,000 are estimat- &3 to be capable of cultivation, and & considerable part of this has not the building of the Suez Canal by De Lesseps, which has given Europe an ever-growing interest in Bgyptian af- fairs. To protect European bond-hold- ers France and Great Britain made a Joint intervention in 1879 and for a Cardinal Gasparr!, secretary of state to, the Holy See, born In Italy, 70 years ago today. General Sir Henry H. Wilson, late chief of the TImperial general stal of the British army, born 57 years ago rubles they'll think they are milllonaires until they get to svending them. fhe profiuction of war materials in this fountry. Investigations have been made And we haven't as yet come to the time whem mew revelations cease to be made felstive to war contracts. the forest fires and the destruc- \ of trees many Abor days with ev- s : Jet been actually tiied. Ty Bakuose T wprisiit | 1o ey Norwich Market Growers' tion Thete were those who made big profits | lending a hand will be required{today. In comparing the Egypt of today|of 1882 against the Khedive was sup- 85 the result of war work and it h ¢t the ravages of the flames, Joseph P. Tumuity, who served as|With that of the dawn of history ome | pressed by the British alone, and after Joen freely charged that thers —_— private secrelary to President Wilson, {8 divided betwean workige at the |that they controlled finances without 2T No Native Dandelions after Friday. Another Spring Tonic Mot who took advantage of the emer- postal service improvement it{born at Jersey City, N. Y., 43 years ago |marked changes won the surface and}assistance. The government was in ef- LADY ASTOR geliky conditions to rob the government.|should ‘be remembered that a properiy] toda the lack of changes in some funda- |fect Egyptian with British assistance “An American Woman, may be mor writing in i = buch e easily said than prov-|and plainly W mentals addressed letter, with return lis Hawle: The Egyptian of today does|and with the nominal suzerainty of representative in —Rhubarb, in abundant supply. Eat freely every day, been altered hard Iy heard with satisfaction. It indicates .tHat at all. Practical- and prosecuting war |he 4 . e the “Westminster Gazétte” her impres- A o 5, not s; k ledged. P 2 e B W it doeant appear that tho|address in the corner, gives valuable as-| SONETess of the First Oregon district, | L 0% e o o N en he Worla War began Great |sions of Lady Astor, M. P, says:- A|| YOUF system craves its delicious acid flavor. Small quanti- s handicapped by anything|sistance, S kg Tt ey S ¥eaTs | ind he has—with the exception of & |Britain established a protectorate |dear old iady from Virginia used to ie8 of Nativ Frid of funds in bringing i o who is apout |SMall minority—adopted tire religion | abolished Turkey;s slxazl:rd;lmw, deapoued ?;acnvb‘: tor‘me t:::kvwmhmmorfio n‘x" ties ve Alflfll‘- y and M- '* responsible for such con- The possibility that General Wood will sheix g b v 0ut for Mohammed. But in spite of nu-|the Germanophile lve, and ap- e icountess or when a e " o ' o5 e Wb o grelire, from the sovernoship of the | merous invasions, the biood of (he|pointed another prince of the family |girl running baretoot in the couniry. || can still be had. Cabbage, Lettuce and Tomato Plants President Harding asks congress | longer (han at first expected Wil De| ounte, Ave. 58 voses aen tome o " |ETeat majority of the population has{to be Sultan. The British protectorate| Nanny Langhotne was proudly lead- of a haif million dol- = 2 5 is now being withdrawn, but ins ing a pet goat along by a rope. The D: conting freely to market—good weather to set them. powieg ik fellabcen, or peasants, might jef the former Turkish interest b day was sunny and very hot, but it is = A 2t intend to leave an untinished | president and philanthropisg. born at |have stepped from the ancient carv- |restored, Bgypt is set up as an i possible that Lady Astor's temper does - Apaingt the government, it may job, Albudg. B, 65 vears ago today. ings: thev are but o fresh generatinn ! nandent kingdam.” i ! ek R net need the sun {0 warm it. Af aay W St Sk

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