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: e ey SAR 1 & ks S & bl ;xuh-ln s Nerwich, Comn,, Telwphone CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING JULY ‘fbth, 1922 ll'm.‘ i 1allividuals thelr plghts, or to Provide proper tection th Property. The legislation was purpes of dealing with the @istréss- ing #Mitustion in the south where 1aW ls disreparded In ceftaln Instdnces more often thal Jt is respected, and even though the Injusties 13 rechgnised wo actiof is taken by ¥he hend or punish the , asmuéh 2§ states have shown thels uh- willingness to provide it. Whatever has been shown to e need- ed by the eonditicns prévalent in seuth- ern States, new and powerful suWpport has Been given to & federal ahtislynen- ing Bill By ths deliberats and savage murders Which have been eommitted n northefh states, whert meén have been killed for no other purpose than that they were willlng t6 wefk. There has been an awakehing In régard t6 this matter Which éannet fail to impress. It has paén shown that sonditions that kind are telerated by Weaken ptate authetitles for pelitieal sffeet, dnd be- cause they place the fedr of replace- ment highet than the duty whleh they have gWorn 16 perform. Su¢h Intelerable practices destrve to be caprected by the people within those state, who should be Qquiek to eall their sefvafts to account, but at such a time 1t is 5 be realiyed that there is o needed relnforeement to be. had throuzh the provision for federdl getlon under such eonditions. FOTURE HELP IN RUSSIA. Just what is going to be done in re- ward to further contributions to the reliet of the peopls in the famme dis- tricts of Russia has net Been definitely detérfined. It has not - been shown that it 18 thedisposition of the soviet goverhment to take over burden in spite of the promise of | crops from the seed that was furnished in paft at least from the Ameriean funds, If the reporis aFé true that the soviet government 15 putting forth the ‘elaim that the ald glven to the starving and sick Russians was only & lean ar- ranged by ths soviet government it ean be appreciated what state of mind is being eréatsll among thoss people. Likewits it i3 evident hew Much easiér 1t will b8, under euch falss elalms; to take from the people such grain povernment may chil for, régard the ameunt fheeded for sustenance. an effort, it correctly reported, that the balsheviki are ehigaged or 2 ning to engage in the heavy taxation of the people through Beizurés that the fiss. ¢ sk g ¢ i . i i i : i § : w £e o H | ‘e 3 g 3 $¥asd I g § i 4% 2 wE i 2 2 H H i . ;i?éé?% ) 2 ¥ ] 4 ) H T $ o : : 8378 ’%E%Eg §i3.84 g i g ré bing worn in my ne multitude 6t Suitors, . delf all the leading florists, ed: ‘bookstores in town to say the rising generation I like to mrésent a ealm. easlly oo ending af nee, a well-groomed matinee-idol effeet, which will make them think uneasily that here is 2 man who will bear watching. Though he must have yeark, by jove, he reat tolook at,and no telling in_what clevér way he may cut ’em out. It doesi’t do | 6 glve 'em the upper hand at all. ‘How éan I expect them to en to my words of wisdom later if once they have seen Famous Literary Mysteries *| Whers Was Goldsmith's Déserted Village? It has always been a question.as t whether Goldbmith’s “Deserted Village,' whith hé 8o picturesquely deserjbes as “Sweet Auburn! lovellest village of the se| Dlain,” wis wholly an inventlon of the Tt mibkes little différenice, What 1t 15 it éve 1§ to be war thers wmust be or- lof. This seerts to b8 Tully ré- at last by thoss Who &ré eon- of the danger &nd.undesifability t : the mevement. ARNY Gemmunities Have for réjoleing over the ore Jot sn antl mobquits asso- e z%ig § to & common end for the gen- Recognizing the faet that in unlon thete 15 strength great and good results ®e accomplished. It will fet &b- in & permanent solution In oRs year| of two, but through dévéted atention sugh & desirable end the Eréatér the numbdr actively iavalved 1n the many, Ways possible through sueh an ergani- Pation the communities of that atats should aiready be anticipating the free- dom Which has been seeured in othsr staten Where determined ymosquits wars have besn Insugurated. Connesticit still has the oppertunity| do much more than it has alfeady E H R EDITORIAL NOTES. ‘Whether it 18 80 oF not, Germany has) Feason to feel that all things éome to thosé who plead and walt. il Cuba thinks that ferty millisn wiil de but while it is about it 1t might just as well feel like sixty. The man on the cbtner says: Give andl take is a good gime tlll it comes to the matter of adviee. A st The *-afen the Back to the #ar move: ment dbesn't develop fAstér /ia Dieause of the realization that it means Back to work. Thoss who ars ndt satised uwhless they are Wwatéhing the thermémater are Ray- ing a chance now to keep busy and in: terested. F o Maine is interestsd in minlng aoal but it it doesn't proyide fusl encugh for the state the chances are 1t will have. potatoes enough to burn. The list of dpownings is growing so fast that there &f¢ reasons for believ- ing that these who gamnet swim should keep away from the water. Ec b A Those minefs Who would raitér deal directly with the operators than arbi- trate are unwilling 1o let-the faéts gov- ern, and thus far Heve tefused o eith. er agree with the opératers or 4 arbi trate. 1 iy * Tt is to Be expected new that thése whe had planned on oréting trouble and passibly causing blosashed will look upbn state and féderal protestien of thoke Who are WIllihg to WoPk as ah In- terference Wwith their s personal llberty. s o ot When Seerstary Heover” declarse wa. Kave been feeding ' 9,000,000 pesple in Rilssia it ean be appreciated that ths bblehaviki would llke to have 4his con- tifiusd Indefinitely, and then pretend to those alded that ft wag service they paid Just How much. effietent sgryice 18 ap- preciated is indicated by insistence t Hartford's faayof that the head df liquor squad who Has n - dolng commendable work st be ro- Poesibly this 1& one way ot Election exp post's faficy of whether it was-an actual village that hé was describing. The peem urm several deserted villages in Eng- 1and; but it is generally bélieved that the village hé desctibes was tHat of a littls settiement which les on the Yorkshire éoast, near Bridlington, and others that it was Lisséy. 'Thé desertion of the for- mer village was not caused, however, by the reason assignéd by Goldsmith, but by the iAréad® of the sea, which washed away the ehurch and the wkole village Wwith the excéption of one farmhouse, In all eatly copiés of Goldemith's ““Dé- serted Village” Is shown a vignette ea- gravéd upon the title page of a deserted village presenting & place on the seacoast with the fuined church ®. the édge of a Giiff, features which are said to bear a striking résemblance to those of Auburn, now called Holdérness. Moore, in his life of Goldsmith. 1s ef the opinion that the place was Lissoy. ili 18 & 116 villags a fow miles away from Pallas, County Limerick, Ireland, faf from the ceast. But he says: “To attempt to identify any village described by any poét who lived before Wordsworth would be as hazardsus a venture as to identify Windsor Forest from Pope's poem, if hé had fot provided us with a clew on the title page.” Many of the liies of ‘“The Deserted Village” were presufnably suggested by Goldsmith's recollection of Lissoy, and possibly some complaint made about the épredations of a local Tandlord, in a 8-| |étter which heé received froom his broth- €, suggesting the humble tragedy of the But it might be possible for a undred viliages in England to substan- tiate their claims to be the original of Auburn were the question to be decided solély because of their answering to the details of identification supplied by the|li author, % A good many English villages could no doubt produce their nightingale, and in that case Lisséy might easlly disquali- Red for eompéting for the' coveted posi- ion. Regarding Ligsoy, an #minent writer says: Could anYone have seen the Irish village as it actually existed when Goldsmith lived in his fathes rectory, fssuredly it néver would have entered anyone's héad that Goldsmith had it in his mind When he deseribed it the love- 1leat village of the plain. No doubt, howeéver, Gold@mith had no laes of roducing village life in Ireland in the teénth century wheén he wrote ‘%‘hl Deserted Village.” Though it may be untrue to Lissoy in many of its de- tails, the poem is still true to natuce in its spirit, its sentiment and, above all, its ¢haracterization. Goldsmith lived; in 8 place for sev- eral years. In fact, re than half his Tifeti was speént in Ireland, and yet it sésms t6 have béen thought remarkable by & g6od many peonle that he should possess go many of the terigtics of the Irigh and so little emphasis placed on this fact by his biographers. It was dur- ing Thése vears in Ireland that his char- aetér wag forméd—that he pequired those traits which. engraved umen such a na- turs as he inherited, caused him tojbe the most unfortunate as well as thé best Toved of men. - 5 Thé peérfect picture of the schoolmaster in “The Deserted Village” is sald to have been inspired by the poet's recollections of Thomas Byrne, but equally certain it is that the school was an English village school and not the cabin where Thomas Byrne “shouldered his cruteh and showed how fields were won.” “The Deserted Village” 18 undoubtedly i the best of Goldsmith's poems, This poem wa$ written in the year 1738, but it was not until thé May of the following year that it was printed. It I8 perhaps most eompact poem ever writteh and con. wéys to the réader a sensé of thé need for every word that it contains. There is no superflusus line. IN THE PUBLIC EYE One of the season’s “best-sellers” in London is “The Sower of Grgin," ths ayther of which is a young miner in the north of England. His name is Har- ] g3 8 ds H 559551 fig%lé : 5 ; e, BT, R - a8: 7101 Ghstarning b6 Be MRS . Tt 18 dlsturbin . the very Aiillh of one' m‘% 1§ #he golng “Oh, pickles!” Cardline eéri 18g further in the letter. & says she’ll Just be Here thres hours, between traing and Wants me to meet her down- town for lunch, and I théught—" “Well, nfaybe I can spare time to eome to lunch with you” offered the father f the family. 'd kind of like to see Ramona, agalh mysell, I want to: Know Whether she haseny néw tricks with hier eyes!"—Exchange. ¢ old Heslop and he 18 not yet twentv. The young author confedses that it has Always been Ris ambition te become a vrip and he completed several nov- s hé was twelve. was not satisfied with any of them, Rowever, anl burnt them ag soori-as they e finish- ad. arted thé novel that has x;‘n him famé in 1818 and speft evéry mo- ment of his dpare timeé on it until Apil of this yéar. “T felt it was as perfect is I eould make it hé says, “and de- cided teo try m¥ luck. When I heari that the publishérs had accepted it, I coyld hardly believe the néws. It was the happiest day of my life.” The young author has worked in th€ minés since he was a mers-tad, biining his chooling chiefly by stud¥ing nights. Clarendon L. Werrell, 1 areh op of Nova Scotia, born at Smith's 118, Ont, 69 years ago today. Alberto Santos-Dument, a famous pioneer of aviation, born in San Paulo Brazil, 49 years ago tod: _Rt. Rev. Thém‘;, 3 copal bishop ns’ sétts, born in Anglican arel Epis- ‘estérn Massachu- hiladelphia, 50 yeu“' 280 A ‘Walter F. Lineberger, répresentative in Cérsrels» of the Ninth California i bort in Hardeman county,! 6 today. 2 well-known middleweight pugilist, born in St. Paul 3% years ago today. Throagh The Shadews. By Cyril Allng- ton. Cloth, 228 pages. Published by The MaeMillan Company, New York. Price $1.75. The fantastic titls of the bask refors to a seancé with spirits which fors the climax of the story, but it gi¥és no ink- ;mg, of the follicking fun/of this tale of A house-party givén by Sir Richard Atherton at his English country éstate, in honof of Diand Branson, a lovely Americafi girl. The laughs bégin whén tour of (he Bnglish guests find thamselves compalled by various emergenciés to assume i gulses which lead them li& many difi- cultles. “ ' The stéry is full of surprising and ludicrous situations, hairbreath n;uve. from prémature and awkward éxposure, and laughable complicitions that resuit from all the masquerading. In the con- cluding chapters all the guests throw off thelr disguisés, the puzsles are e everyone but the tristing Mrs. and the solemn Archdeacon is unhdéssiv- gflidand Bir Richard” wifis his Arierlean ride, The fun of the story is shiced and its flavor heightened when the reader real- izes that its author, Dr. Cyfil Alinston, is held in high respect and veneration as Headmaster of the famous Eton, Scheol and chaplain to King George. It is a refréshihgly humorous novel that is bound to plei The Litile Cofner Never Conguered. By John Van Schaigk. Jr. Cloth, filustrat- ed, 282 pages with index. Published ~ by The Maemillan Company, New . Price $2. " This is the story of the Ameriean Rel ARMOUR’S SUGAR CURED SMOKED Shoulders, 1b.. 19¢ 'FRESHLY- GROUND Hamburg, Ib. . 15¢ LAMB, lb..... 40c Roast Pork, Ib. 28¢ Philadelphia Cream CHEESE, 2 for 25¢ “Red Cross Among the French Peop'e; and Hungerford’s “With the Deéughboy: in Francé.” g 3 i Petroleum. éfe and How to Find It. y Anthony’ Blum. Cloth, illustrated. 367 pages. Publishéd by Thée Mod- érn Mining Baoks Publishing Ce., Chi- cago. Price $2. This bodk is written for thosé who d &lfe enlightenment ofi the élements Sefitial to the production of petroléum and to suceéss in the oll businéss. The author for over a thifd of & centusy has béen in active service in Califorii Texas, Kansas, Afizona, Celorado, Mcn- tana and other states, as well as in the Dominion of Canads, as a geéologist, pe- troleum and metal mining engineer and engaged in the location, development and operation of-miners and the producs tion of metal, in working out oil-bearing geologic structure, l6cating oil wells aad equipping them, and in the pro@uction of petroleum. -~ = He represifity some of the pracfical aspects of the” oll business that have como within His persohal experience and observation, with the view to clearing’ up some of the prevailing misconceptions of the seemingly perplexing business, He likewise jmpresses upon the mind bf the reader who would invést thofiey in oil in any form, whatsoever, of the pitfalls and hasards that beset the war even of the wary in this fascinating industry. The volume is in Ave parts dea'ing with “geclogical phase, construetive fea- tures, operative phase, commerclal phass and fiscal features.” Mexican PetrOleum. By W. J. Aréher. Leather, illustrated, 30f \ dex and map. Published by The Pa: Amerizan Petroleum & Transport Co, New York. This book presents a2 great number of valuable facts regarding the oil indus- try not only in Mexico but in other paris of the world. The book polnts out that thers is lit- tie probability of the world's petfo’enm gupply becoming exh: ed dufing the présent century. Représentations that Mexio is thé gréatést producér of oil ars declared to be erroneous, although encouraged by the unprecedented yied of individual wells. 1t is stated that, acre for acre, the Baku flélds in Russia , | still 1éad the world in productién. Rumania is said to Purnish another example ©of an extremely rich flod. There an area of about 130 acres, at Moreni, 8 in ten years given 80,009, 000 barrels, or about 225,000 . barrels an-acre. Cerfo Azui, which-Hag been onet of thé most productive areas in Meg( , it is pointed out, would fe- quirs/a productien of 2,250,000,000 bar- rels to make it as productive as Bhi- Eibat, in the Russian fleids. George Otis Smith, director of the Thited States Geological Survey, »uts the proved area of Mexican oll fields at about 10,000 sguare miles, with resoure- es of 4,500,000,000 barrels and the po- tential output of unproved territory at Cross work for Belglum and is written, by a former lleutenant colonel in the U. 8. army 8hd who was formerly eom. missioner to Belgium for the Red Cross. this oné who participated in the ralef activities. The aecount was prepared after he had timé to secure a fair pe;‘s‘p:géwé,'h v pders should appréciate this eare- fully erganized survey of war Work, be- cause of Its very contrast with the b3xke hastily assembled to sell wWhily the w: spirit was running _high. voiuma fells sOmething of the story of was ‘n Flanders, of life in that part of Franec which suprorted Flanders, and of the work of the American Red Cross in Lelp- i Belgian hospital cheering Belgian lers, saving Belgian children \ and 2:2:1‘;:;5}!;‘: _o; misery which se‘tled n oth refugees and those who. rétused to fly. s ‘The book 15 one of the Red Creas se- ries Which has included Denison's “Sto of the American Red Cross Bk well’ "'nu Red Cross in Ttaly Fite’s “Thé Passing Leglons» Ames Vitamin Food Delicious and Energizing IP you éat white bread, lean meat, fruits and les, or drink tea, or pastetifized iddmormof 2 y to your " vitamin food brings health and power. Used by British in'the War itish Gevernmeént used & Paring the Hk et Grueettt o pracet for & o, o 8100 ar of R Al i 5 — ! s GLEANED EX PINK ALASKA Salmon, can.. 12¢ BEST BREAD FLOUR .... $1.00 " 1.8 BBL. SACK HOT BAKED BEANS, Ib. ... 10c OLD DUTCH COFFEE CAKES, each. 15¢ DELICIOUS CAKES, each. 20c 250,000,000 barrels, a total estimate cf 000,000 barrels, or a ly ade- for firty-five years at the 1920 Tate of export. 1838<=Augustin Daly, celebrated drama- tist and theatrical manager, born at Plymouth, N. C. Died jn Paris, June 7, 1899, 1847—Burial of Kentuckians who fell in the Méxican war in the state cem- etery at Frankfort. 1850—Thomas Corwin of Ohio became secretary of the treasury in the cabinet of President Fillmore. 1885—The trial of Louls Riel leader 5f the rebéilion in the Nerthwest, begah at Regina. 1891<At Bryceville, Tenn., an organized band of 1,000 miners overawed the militia and compelléd the withe drawal of the convict miders. 1893—A fight bétween stfikers and non- union miners occurred at Weir City, Kas. 1807—Dedication of magnifictnt monu- ment in Salt Lake City to the Mor- mon pioneers. 1920—The 20 to 27 per cent. wage ad- ¢ v;\:‘ou awarded by the railroad ldbor board was acéepted by the 2,000,000. FROM FOREIGN CHANGES Though 1,053 seems rather a nufiber of aliéns to be admited to LB‘:&‘ ish nationality in a year, as there were in 1921, more than h: of them had tafned the privilege by service in his majesty’s forces, In place of ofigin they range from 413 Russlan to one each trom Jugo-Slavia, Latvia, Monaco and Syria. Where Right 1s Right—The safety first council séems to have been sdme- what previous in taking it upon itselt) to urge the public to walk on the left be-. fore it was assured of officlal support. It may bé a very gdod thing that foot- passengers should keép to the left ,but a rule is a rule, and the existing rule is keep to the right: and wé-should Jike to kiow by what Suthority the safetys first council urges the publié to break it, thus nroducinz two opposité and con-. traMietors rules likely to make confu- slon worse confounded. Cost of Discovéring Ameriea—A pa- tient Investigators who has been digging among the archives of Genoa, has hit upbn. gome information which eénaples him to state just how mueh the di covery of America cost the Spa érown. Columbus, as a Spanish admir had a yearly salary which would be équivalent to £640 today. The vovagé lasted about seven and 2 half months, 56 the item of the discoversr's salary would be a little over £400. That of his SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY 150 MEN'S SUITS, IN CONSERVATIVE STYLES, BLUE, BROWN AND GRAY-—HARD AND SOFT FINISHED GOODS— . SPECIAL $10.00 95 YOUNG MEN’S SUITS, IN PLAIN AND BELTED MODELS—COAT, PANTS AND VEST— SPECIAL $9.00 BIG VALUES IN MEN'S AND BOYS’ FURNISHINGS AND PANTS. The Norwich Bargain House “ALWAYS MORE FOR LESS” 3.5.7 WATER STREET NORWICH, CONN. CORNER WASHINGTON SQUARE POTATOES. . 3% 15 LBS. PECK captains accounted for £450, and th« ‘mén receivéd about £4,250 for the voy- age. The fitting out of the three ship was done at an expénditure of roughly £5,600. America was, theréfore, discov ered ® cost of approximately £10.700 :‘hlych ¢an hardly be, considered exces ve! Diékens Haunt For Sale—Dickent lovers the world over know of The Lea- ther Bottle. 1t is the “clean and com- modious ale-house,” in the little Ken' villagé of Cobham, to which Mr. Pick- wick, accompanied by the faithful Enod- grass and Winkle, foliowed Mr. Topmarn on receipt of the plantive letter which announced that he had been ‘“deserted by a lovely and fascinating creature.” The Leather Bottle is now for sale, to- gether with the prints and Dickens rel- jes of all kinds which have for so lonz made it a place of pligrimage. < Thiz inn has been in its present ownershiz for 35 years.—London Chronicle. -Stories That Recall Others Hé Had Help Sister was intérested in the work of raising an_endowment fund for the col- lege, and she to do her part by sell- ing soap. 86 she got het brother and another by to take the soap to the hous- es of some friend ? Little Johnnie with the boxes under each arm marched up to one door and knocked. “Why are you selling thé soap? in- quired the lady of the house. “To raise $3,000,000 for fund,” as the réply. “Three miilion dsllars! And are you trying raise it all by yourself™ “No,” camé thé quick response, “thers's another little boy heélping me.” the college Fieres He was the piek of the schoel. fact everyone from the ers down took delight in pieking on him. One aft- #Fnoon he stayed, to make up some work. Laboribusly’ he worked Between intér: ruptions, which were many, for as éach boy passed hé bestowed & friendly slap on the shoulder or made SOME FemArk. He stood it for a whils" The climax came when some one in paSSIng twsaked his ear. “Say,” he said Rerealy, “there's only two tough guys in this town and I'm both of them” He turned to find himself face to face with his teacher.