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'‘NORWICH BULLETIN and Courier 126 YEARS OLD Pristed very day B B4 resr except Sundwy, Subscription pries 130 & week 80 & mouth: WL Efl Ed g g g Is't there an unjusttemdency in thess days, and oné. that is seemingly growing, fo measure the valus of a man By his money-getting abliity? It goes wilkaut sAying that a man's abillly to ‘fi“‘ Property honestly is éné maédsuve of Jifs capacity, but it 1§ oné only. Man s & many-sided prism Whoss capacities ra- s ; T S Entered st fhe Postoffics i Norwich, Copa, & . s, Toptene Canta Bubetts Bustnem Offce. &80, Bullets Editorial Roome 851 Bullstia Jjob Rocm. 8348, el imnte Offics, 81 Chareh BL Tuitess Norwich, Saturday, Aug. 19, 1028. e ———— tmacn OF THE ASSOCIATES PAESS, T duodites [ —— R i = cwciied @ it or Dot otderwise credited o :':u 4nd also the local news publighed T ape o soustcatn @t awdat saiches“Sorin " e el F CIRCULATION EEK ENDING AUG. 12th, 1922 11,660 THE SHYP SUBSIDY. One of the unfulilled pledges of the Party in power is that which declared for government subsidy to build up our merchant marfne to a point commen< surate with our commercial needs and our national prestige That Gus has Dot been lost sight of i indiated by &n intimation from President Marding that unless a ship subsédy bill is enacte ®d before the adfournment of congress next month B will call an extraondis nary session whose business will be ta +Write & ship subsidy DI into the stat- ates. Joseph W. Powell, naval oconstructor, ship bullder, and umtil recently presi- dent of the emergency fleet corporation, 5557 il i is BOUTHERN RAILWAYS EXPERI- ENCE. Omé reilway that tried condliatory measures in the shopmen's strike has made no further proffess than those that adopted the fight-to-a-finish policy. This is the Southern Raflway, whose officers, when the etMke was declared, held the jobs open for the retuin of the old men and decined to hire new men to take their places. It offered la- 80. =t~ ~eniorfty hasnme the mooted point, to take buck the ~* i out bias to their ratings hannr~~ % had no new men to consider. Tt the strilers refused to acoept this offer and train servina -~ .- Somthérn became more badly demioraMzed than on the roads that adopted fhe othpr polcy. 1 b &§ il 4 by which the miohey-getter his fortune? 5 per “nnlt & hld'fl!tp Qifferent tastes people ing vaeation, and making comparison tween thenr It may not always to measure a man's capacity things he does, but it is a perfeet] test of his taste. If ome 18 not acting der outward compulsion, he is reveaing his innér self. The man Who &9y jBghy » 3 : i ©Of course it comes as near doing nothing as possible, and some men are qualificd for that sort of thing. When shall wé learn that the greatest bémefit to Ds de- ¢ived from vacation does not coms from Idleness, but from change. 'Fne mat who uses his mouth chiefly for elsven months in the year had béttér close it for one month and let somebody elss speak and listen to him. Activity ought to mark every vacation, but it ought to be activity of change. What is the use of men everlastingly trying to do the big things of 1ife, and tall short of doing the, biggest of all? And that is a véryicommon occurrence, we see it on every hand. It is perfectly natural that big men should be doing big things right along. Nature has endued them with adequate power for that pure pose, and we have & perzect right to ex- bect it of them. What a long list of military deeds have some generals ac- me,” confessed his surprising wife. “And 1 am éure that fiirting would dis- agreo with me just es violently, What you don’t seem to understand i that 1 want to b6 able to have polite filrta- tions if I Mke and then not have them. Why, vou sheud simply be délighted, Arcturus, % have e tall, handsome stranger look at m¢ as though he was thinking, ~ ‘Jove! ~What & Dpéach! You've no idea how perked up and selt- satisfied and cheerful 1t made me.” “Did you $by he was handsome?’ het husband inquired darkly. “I loathé these boulevard hounds. 1 expect he on spats and perfume on his hand: 'Famous Literary Mysteries Who Waé the First Post Laurentor? Thé origin of the title of post.lau- MAr has given rise o much specula- tién. It is generally conaidéréd to be b b s e e et Tecent laureatés. The post Ship is a development, the origin Which s (A doubt. e James F. Cosgrove 206 Main Street laureate- | middle life he was enabled to retire of | from business and devogh himselt to Practical philanthropy. Appalled ‘at the large npumber endeavoring to live: on charity in the metropolis, he concejved 5 L5 »3 3 B - omplished; how many leglslativy acts of d bus invited attention anew to this sub-| S Dersisting in holding positions epen| )\ laer have some statesmen |kerdhief. That's thé sont of men who ucem L%'e‘g»lanxhab:t.x‘:e::f e sect when he declares that the confcr-| 10T & While longer the road has mow|y ougn: to pass; what an enormous|Meke fooln of Women. e e T ey ence at Washington clmohsd for the | Do°n compelied to give up thds DONEY|y;1ume of business have some merchants| ‘Dewr me! T ougn | With the laurel & favorits post. For. ex- next ten years the supremacy of Drit-| 1t traim servies s to be continued.|(rgnscted. And yet how many have | Who Wes hif wife “Wou telk as MNOMER|,;ole Petrach was crowned with greai| Orville Wrieht, e of the irventors # sea power. The Britisn _empire| Presicent Faicfax Harscn satd in an-| fallen down before the bigger problem of YU Tors leeious Arctimus BnC @ i[solemnity at Rome in 1341 At Paris,|of the acraplane, born st Deyiom, O. §1 holds ks place as mistress of the seas| NOUNGINg this decisten: ‘®very effort| mastering themselves. Napoleon daz- bech gealous | befors in & thousand|OXford ~ and Cambridge the laurei|years ago today. because of its merchant marise and na-| D46 been made &0 o perafe our Drog-|gleq the world with the number ‘and bril- | oor S PRI W O HIUSHC) wreath was sometimes plac:l on the | Fred A, Stons, one of the most pop- a1 bases witch exceed fn mambyr and|TY At our men could homorably Te-|jiancy of his victories, but he mever|Jomv. (PSR DECWSS MR, R UiKeads @of scholars ditinguistied for|ylar comédians Of the Amerihn stage, rirength thoss of any otaer ns:fon/1t[fUFR to work. Every effort has been gained the art of selt-master; he foll o T owan o pcfectly . chasming | Karning ot poefry. born in Dénver, 49 yehrs ago today. . bas Deen & patent foct for yovoe ihat|made to settis with our men: we have|down fat before the fury of his tamper. | if it The laurél, the loaves of which tree| FHenry Ives Cobb, an eminent leader we cannot besin to approach equality | 50N 0 the extent of offering ¢he tefms| Disraeli, at one time the peer of Wurope in ancient Greeoe were sacred to Apol-|of thé architectural profession in Amér- x ears that they had previously agreed to ac-|in statecraft, never conquered his vanity. s and also |10, a8 such was used to form a crown|ica, borm at Brookline, Mass., 43 v gt e the Briish and in the| ot We have thus held out every reas| And thus ail of us fall short of that|TUNIAE with his own thoug eo- | O wreath of honor for poels and he-|ago toddy. - 4} | markets of the wordd uneil we bufid and companionship of friénds. - To some peo ) A e g entet . o 2 ¢ ma.|Sonbale Mnducement, without resuit. Wel greatést of all victorles, that of master- | SoPARORSHE Of TR D MOLL ULl | ross " The “word “aureate” or ‘legre.| Waltef e -~y N vyt i | must now tum 6 emploving others, for |ing ourselves. The sources of entertainmint do not 1ie |48 thus came in English ta signlfy |fustics of the "Norch Carciis siprefy Tipa of other mations Ameean ye|te road must be eum; we must £ive| Ome of the toughest problems we até | winic semialves. tney aré Noppy ouly |Sminent or aswcisied with glory of | eoutt, ; s R Gataat & oo | those we employ protestion, for it may|up against is to handls our past thé plan of réquirifig the payment in 1a- bor for everything recéived by, the chil- dren dependant npon charity and in addition instituted self-government. From these reforms came the idea’ of the “Ju- nior Republic.” put in operdtion. in 1585 and the suctess of which has attracted world-wide attention Today’s Birthdays 8he Should Bee & Doctor.” 3 Jull a very young littls lady, With Rer father, ‘wag vieiting the large 165by . er fathér, in speak. s 11768 | as others furnigh therr entérainment | WIS CUARGET: b oce laes 2 "nfit"rm.‘ "L lesing astress m?fi,‘&“‘i“:&?fii“ ramarked (hat the. &6 bulMing and costs for operating Amer.|P® that thoss we have up 6 this tims|wisely. The vesterdays of our livés 87 | fyay ges no bedutiés on land, sea of ot uncom: use A “laureate letters” to indicats the &'s-|the American stage, born in Neéw York |austics of the place were bad. After w \onn ships are higher than, for forsign| PTOSCted by léeming thefr jobs Gpen|persistent facts. ships. These facts hare agan hoen placed before the public by the shipping Board. M latest statistios show ‘hat, although fully rne-half of the idle ton- mage of the world &5 American owned, only onefifth of the worid's total ton- nage s ucder the American flag. The enactment of a ship subsidy bM in congress. supported by the admintstra- fon and pledged by the republican par- ty in platform after platform, should muke & possible for American ‘merchant compete with the merchant sesels of other nations and uitimately provide under cur own flag 4n adequate marine. Propagandists and domestic pucifists would like to see the ship sub- bl fall by the wayside. The de- the bl would be a triumph for may mow turn against us, even to an attempt to prevent others from work- ing.” This lends ground to the conclusion that the decision to fight to a finish has been forced upon the rallway executives and indicates that amy temdency on their part to devate from & fm wtand would be looked upon as a sign of weakening and might lengthen rether than put an end to the strike. EDITORIAL NOTES. The day of the 1922 straw hat i néaring an end. Lord Northeliffe Mved a lfetime in 57 years. It takes most men longer. We might import the Hohenzollern woodplile to help out the fuél shortage. ‘Whether they are good or bad we can't get rid of them. Any who will let the past dominate his present living is a fool. If we want to fali in our present duties then let the past be our lord. ‘The only way in which yes- terday can help today is to make it our servant. The man who sees nothing in the past but the greatness of his grandfather or the superiority of his first wife is bowing down before vestérday’s straw gods. How much valuable time, strength and spirit are lost in brooding over those things that lle just béeyond our present horizon. If the past Is gn- throned in our lives we stretch forth our hands in vain for the future crown. Thus we must not let the past be our lord but our servant. We must order him to bring out of that old store house of recollections only those things that will stimulate us to better living. The past sky, and they have no acquirements of instruetfon or pleasure. To love walking, to have the strehgtn to take long hikes without fatigue, w walk with friends through allurimy scanes, when free from ordinary care and burdens of life—this is one of the greatest pleasures of life. SUNDAY MORNING TALK GOD ENOWS _ How natural t is in s all, when we find ourselves or others of God's profes- sed people in great distress or anxicty, like the Psalmist in the same circams stances, to ask the question; “Doth God Know?’ How often is our poor fecble faith ready to wonder if God really knows how poor we aré, of how greatly tempted we are, how sor:ly afflicted we are or In what Ritter angisty e are. patches announcing a victory. John Skelton, who died in 1539, re- cefvéd the lauteats homor from both tne universitfés, and accordingly styled himsélf “Posta Laureatus” Attached to the heuseholds of the medieval Eng- dish kings were minstrels and poats. From the more general use of the term tached to the royal household,-first held by Ben 'Jéhnson, Charles II in 1617. to have been formally appointed poet lent/ to that. of thé practice of earlier times, when the veérisifiers weré a part of the retls nyé of the king. Richard Coeur de Liun is 840 to have a ‘versificator regis, cit. city, 39 years ago today. IN THE PUBLIC EYE Lo R. George, who “poet laureata” ‘aross s restriction 1n| ¢ a\*totay for tne purpose of found- England to the office of the poet at- ing a Home and colony for ld| feench war orphans and Russian refu- for whom the POS-| ceq at Chaveniac. the former home of| tion was, in its essentials, created bY|ine Marquis de Lafayette, is best known He does not eeem|,. e founder of the George Junior Ré- public at Fresville, N. Y. Born and bred lancylite, but Tds poskion wik-equivect; gn yp-iats town of Néw Yerk, aftr N Tacafving & commen school educhtion Mr. | estimated at The office Was really a development| senrge sought his fortune in New York with such success that while yet iittle while the little daughter pulled on her father's sieeve and whispered, “T dan't smell anything, daddy.” Not Up to Dat Two little flapperinos “The School For Scandh! at the theatre. ¥ “Have you been to the theatre thiy week?" asked ome. “No, we're thinking of going temot- row night. 2 ond go. kid, dom't g6 It gint & modern show at all. Théy wi fwigs and don't dress modern at all” — Seventy-five per esnt. &f all said to be pre \ 6 discussing 4 recent show il for youthful ¥ — et o The wotld production of sugaf is now 000,000 tons, Whichy about equally dividéd between cane | beet suga st not trampll down, but urge us|When our daily bread is hidden from us, | while Hénry 1II had a versificator. F e e Bt ool 5 ™| when our gold Is taking Wings, WheN | Vaster Henry 4% aarly as the Bfteenth America’s development as a workd| It may be called oic coal but the friends are forsakifig, or . eSpecially | century Edward IV had & “humblé poet : power end increase the measure of ouT| inexperienced Wil probably find it hard| This world of ours is full of people Sependence upon British sea powwr for protection and upon British benmevolence for & second or third place in the mar- ksts of the world THE WOMEN'S VOTE. Some surprise to friends and foes ke of results io the women's vote in the Lit- erary Digest's national poll on prohi- 3 probably been assumed s vote would add sub- bers to the dry ocontingent,| s quite opposite. The wamen's goes ahead of the wegu- ar poll in recording opposition to the prohibition law as i now stands. Com- pared with 23.3 per cent dry, 20.8 per and 40.9 per cent molst In to burn. i e When industiies on (ndividupls bid high prices for coal they make profit eating easy. Findig another renegade in the base- ball renks is an ugly development of the 1922 season. Italy's fasaist! display the same fa- cllity for kesping the pot bolling as the Irish insurgents. The man on the éefher éays: Mon- day used to be wash day but now it's the coroner’s busiest day. Many & woman who oould learn to drive an automobile in & week couldn't learn to drive a nau in years, both hard and soft, and which of the two predominates is quite feréign to the purpose of this paragraph. There are many ways in which they display both their hardness and their softness, and the difference is like that which disting- uishes the mountain from thé swamp. The hard man shows vigor and activity; the soft man inertness and stagnation. The hard man pushes, the soft man jeans. The hard man in surging ahead carries othérs with him, the soft mMAR w. a ging behind keeps othér back with him. The bAtd man sees the necessity of pressing forward to the accomplish- ment of any great object. In other words he is Willing to put forward any amount of energy to aceomplish what hé wants be it good or bad. The hard man, what- évér his other faults may be, is not apt to b a weak man. We sometimes won- der why such a man succeeds. 1t is when our loved ones are langnishing on béds of sickness, and the very dearest friends we have lay dying, oh, how nat- ural it is for-our poor feebie faith to ask, “Am I forsaken?? Oh, 1 wonder doth God know!"” In such a time what relie? to our anxlety is such a text as this: “Your Father knoweth what thinlgs ve haye need of,” or this, “The Lord God omnipotent reigneth. Surely the thought of Géd's almighty presencé is laden with the tenderest con- solation, t6 the Christian. Evary diseiple of Christ i5-In the constant presénce of an Almighty Friend and Helper. God may sometimes seem to leave us alone, but we may be sure of this, He mever 16aves us out of sight. Whether in scenes of grief or of gladness, whether in dark- ness or at dawn, whether wondering in the wildernéss or in his quiet home, whether in storm of calm, the Christian has an all-powerful and 16ving Helper, He laureate,” for euch John Kay deseribed himself. Moreover, the orown ‘had shown its patronagé in, various ways Chauéér was granted by Bdward III a pensfon of twénty marks in 1356, and aftef. wards, in 1874, he WAS given a pitcher of wine daily, one of the subsequént pérquisites _of the lauréateship. But Chaucer néver received an official ap- Doifitmént t6 the DOSE. Spéncer Was givén a pension by Queén Elizabeth, and W. Hamiiton clasées Chaucer, Gowér, Kay Andrew Beriard, Skelon, Rbert Wegtineton, h Samuel as “voluftesr lauréatés” On Desem. bet 11, 1688, William D’'Avénanit secety- &d from Charlés 1 a pension of $500 a year, but no“title accompanied the gfant, thus euccéeding Johnsoh. D'Ave- nant,’ however, was assumed ta be lau- reate, especially after the Restoration. Donse BROTHERS COMMERCIAL TAR The car’s long-cestablist ¢ 1: Twalion ; ‘ for faithful, low-cost service has fiot influenced Dodge Brothers in ‘their - b L . the women ehow 34.1 simply because he puts every ounse of |can shed no tear that od secs mot, he| S0 far as is known the firet English constant seeking after W ; 9 per cent wet and 40| New York fishermen made the catch|strength there is in him in getting what |an breathe no sigh that God hears not,|post to receive the title of post lau- 7 - per of a lifetime when they hauled up a|he wants. The half heartéd maa never | he can utter no proyer taat (iod regurds [réate was John Drydén, thé honor hav- A .-fi“fin( M.de”mm— 5 While this is the showing from only|barnacle-encrusted bottle of Halg and|sueceeds because he is never dead in[not; and neither death mor life nor any |ing b::; ?fm 'm;fl him on August semi: 3 latest ideas in % comparatively small number, the first| Hag. earnest. other creature is able to séparate him |18, 1670. Dryden recelvéd a pension of vided, em! the 20,000 votes counted, % looks probable PGS — from the love of God, which is In Christ [$1,500 &nd & “butt” of Canary wine. that the same propontion will be meaim- tained n the subsequent count, ¥ we may judge from the way percentages have beem maintained in the regular poll 48 the increaking mumber of votes have been tabulated. So far the gen- eral vote has shown that the clties and dustrial centers are menerally wetter the country and that the fastory workets are promouncedly wet. It seems fair to admit that the vote may be taken as an honest expression of fon, which offers suggestive ground thought TAXES HERE AND ABROAD. ges n the Unied States for the emt year are estimated to be $26.13 1 head. Hbw previous generations would have laughed at prophecles of levies can be realized by a study poblic apeeches and newspaper com- ment on taxation from the files of per- Jodicads of a generation or &tWo ago. The they complained of seem almost pial these daye. Tax complaints, like most other hu- san woes, are based on comparisons. sroaning over $2612 a head really, shows how lttle we have been sducated in having our share in governmental ocoets boosted upward. France is paying $41.74 a hesd in taxes exclusive of as- sessments of special war costs, and the Sritish ot is digging down in his pocket at the rats of $75.7¢ & head. LA FOLLETTE AND SENTORITY. The ramifications of tariff legislation are s0 far reaching that their extension ls dicult to foresee. It had not besn expected that the quastion of senfority rights, which are as dear to the na. tional legislators as to the rafiroad shopmen, would begin to complicate senatorial affairs before the next con- gress met. Some action on them, how- ever, can mot apparently be postponed, and £ all arises ont of the question of =l Man wants buf 1irs . < o omd as s00n as he gets & he has to look out that somebody doesn't take it away from Him. — Mark-down #ales of summer faseery berald the -1 A7 the Vacation season. Spot coal can be depended upon to hit the high spots. 1 an absolute -amemsiat 2~ 10 And fap- pinces. That eomes nepr making it a household nécessity. R s Lol Eleven states have furnished all the presidents but it takes forty-eight states to fuffiish all the statesmen who aTe in receptive mood. . Good roads eannot be malntained without the expenditure 6f much mon- ey. Think what &t must cost.to have all the detour signs painted. The accident reports continue to show that while the automoblle s fiot a dan- gerous machine, the automobidst is sometimes a dangérous ahimel ——e el If oyu have a 1Rtlé sympathy to €pare, hand It to & semats = - toh deep into a tariff BRI to quit and at the same time wishes ¢t had never started. ——— Thers was no mincing of words when Judge Thomas told the etriking shop- men what he thought of the outrages that had been committed in their name. Another American financial adviser has gone to Persia. Hor elther money or advice thé NaMbHR - Aa. ;;lomn‘ the habit of 100king to Amer- The people who are behind a cumor that Senator Borah ls to .be groomed for. the Tresidency muet fasl ¢Hat Some- what to do with La Folktte. Doing Something with La Folletto i not & gentle task, as he i Dot of a tempera- ment that is willing to stay put uniess B aporoves the position. The embar- thing ought to be dorie to check the Ford boom, ————— Prediction that the ocountry% shoft- age of gravestones fs to. be replenished A California. judge rules that kissing| The prizes of life are not contalned in the medals or badges which we wear, but in the things they stand for. The ability a man has to gain a prize is never displayed on the lapel of his coat or his sleeve. In the popular mind these things are apt to be confused. Instead of admiring the real but hidden thing, we fix our gaze only on its outward symbol. Badges and medals have a Story to teli, but they are not the story itself; they are merely conductors designed to transmit our minds back to the capaéity by which the prize is taken. Usually the ability for taking prizes is very mod- est; it is not inclined to vaunt itself from the housetops, but is rather retiring and reticent. Man who have performed acts of courage and daring &t thé risk of their own lives are the last to mantion It. How many brave lads in the World war, when attempts were made to make demonstration in thelr behalf, replied with a blush, “Oh, forget it." The real | objection heroes have to receiving a | Carnegie Meda! is that they are expéct- ed to wear it. It the act had been possible, the en- tire world of science and humanity at large would have strewn flowers on the grave of Alexander Graham Bell, in- vehtor of the telephone, far and away the most useful invention in the éntire history of mankind. The funeral ser- vices were marked with dignity and the utmost simplicity, which befitted the character of the great sclentific mono- lith. Had he been a British subject, and had died as such anywhere In the em: bire, the people, with much show of rea- son, would have urged Westminster Abbey as his mausoleum. But" to my mind grander and more impressive than the ancient splendor of Westminster Ab- bey was that moment of almost universal slience, When no telephone was ih use, as they laid the great man away. It would not be appropriate to perpstuate his memory in marble or granite as the Lincoln Memorial or the Washington Monument. Let the telephone be forever the world's monument to the _revered memory of Alexander Graham Bell. There is pleasure in walking under given conditions. It is .also a healthful exer- clse if rightly used. If one is urged to walk by-the advice of a doctor there is little fun in it. Jesus our Lord. God knoys. Tt means instast help for His children in time of trouble. “God is our refuge and strength, a véry present help in trouble” Often times we are like men down in some of the deep, dark coal pits. There are men there who hardly have a gleam of sunlight. How are they to get up. There is & cord at the bottom which when pulled rings a bell above and a powerful cngine lets down a rope and brings them up. So men get down into the deep, dark pit .of trouble, and ¢annot get out themse'ves, But let them ring the bell of prayer and God will heart it, and send down the rope which by His unfailing power wiil lift them out. At every such’iime each of us can say with the Psalmists: “This poor man cried and thé Lord heard him and delivered him out of hi§ distresses.” Today’s Annimun'ell 1711—Admiral Boseawen, who effected the.second surfender of Loulsburg by the French, born in Cornwall. Died in Surrqy, England, Jan. 10, 1761. 1847—Waltér M. Lowrie, American Pres. byterian misstonary to Chive, was murdered at sea. 1854—Brisi and Mario, the two most renowned singers of Europe, ar- rived in New York to begin an | American toffr. 1874—Lord Dufferin, governor-génétal ot Canada, was given & public recep-- tion in’ Detroit, 1882—The 100th amnivérsary of the bat tle of Blue Licks was celebrated ‘ih Kentucky. 1886—James C. Scott met death in an attempt to swim the Niagara Rapids in a cork jacket. 1897—Natlonal Temperance Society mét in convention at Baratoga Springs, Y. Y. B 1919—House of representatives passed the daylight saving repeal bill over the president's veto, With Drydén the post betame a regular institution, though the emoluments va- ried. The office 8¢ poét laureate of England is a rather trying one and it would be difficult ofor futuré appointees to come up 50 fully to all thé. requirements a& Al- fred TennySon, and even his predecessors, Bouthey and Wordsworth Being & court dfficial formerly, he was consider- &d responsible for producing formal and appropriate verées on biicevs and State 0ucasions but his actlivity in this re. épect has varied, accordimg to circam- stancés and tha custom ccased t> ta cbe gatory after Pyros deich 13 1313 ‘Wordsworth. st'pulaed, before - ac- tepting the henor, tmat ne formal e turions frem hin 5 ecasidere a necessity; but Tennysan was general- ly happy in his numerous poems of this class. The emoluments of the post have varied considerably, and the “terse of Canary wine” has been omitted as, to ° The tormenting, insistent pain of a Burn of scald is quickly subdued by rear axle design. The main housing is 75 per cent stronger. One lagge Timlen bearing at the hub r two small bearings and gives 100 per 3 cent greater carrying capacity. Larger sible a new, tooth shape, giving qutiet ~ operation and 45 per cent increase in strength. Larger front and rear 5 A propell&F shaft bearings more than ' double the drive thrust capacity. - \ * . have materially enhanced the af e iveness of the car’s appearafice: THE PRICE 18 $950.00 DELIVERED THE JORDAN AUTO COMPANY s ” 1020 MAIN STREET, WILLIMANTIG; CONN. 25 Resinol Ointment. Its cooling ingre- dients remove the inflammation, and . en the healing. Cover the bumn Or if he is, like a sol- R A out of his rank n third|soon has nothing to do with the state|dier, forced to march when he would g‘;iul:‘t.k m&‘d m‘"‘dfi'fl Of thé public héalth, but Is based on|rather reéad or ssleep, the pleasure will ing a large surface fthe uiderstanding that. the &ven|pe reduced to & minimum. To make ll'lfi)nl monthy Etrilte’ of stone dutters 8 &% | walking désifable ani entertain- 3 i 7 of peoted t end e i 2 6§ one must have the cos \ty for com -