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NORWICH BULLETIN and Courier 126 YEARSOLD O ————— Bulet's Busines Office, Witimaste Office, 81 T Asmclatd Press B t te we for sepublieation et s paper n price 130 & week; 50c & month; $8.00 Telephone Calls. .. Bulletin Editorial Rooms 85-2. Bulsda Jjob Rocm. 853 Chures 8L Teleobone o asd alse the local mews published dgte of repobliestion o eclal des- win are reservec. CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING AUG. 15th, 1922 PLUCKING THE STEEL from water ihe work of coal at one-thind the cost. Furthermore be used as fuel This is & time thing more than claims are desired. & & time when there needs to be a sat- Msfactory demonstration of such claims. It the fmventor has got what he claims now is the auspicious time for offering it to a worried people. pared to swallow the bait, pinker on the strengtll of assertions, h-n THE OFFICERS, the in by con- o return or number of of- men. When » government of an efoient t particularly so larger army in cessary to better set eoreed that the army hing else to upon the those to be drop- The aim must se to be Of abl; waitin age w!u that interests of | The 7 to be re- the actfon that proposi- realize the might be| he well known ar of the few months age limit Wil be- be over- Iy under the foreign poliey forth of present ditional help can be ebtained in. of an efficient gnd cheap substitute fu which would be available for well as for industries, it is that the invention has w and undergone sufficient tests it being offered 1u-mnu« who now seem to be threatened -erk:u-hmuoozfiuauflufl ing winter. In view of the progress belng made no the position to cement HOW WARS DEVELOP. In connection with efforts made in be- half of disarmament attention is al- ways directed to the fact that it is met so much the actusl work of ome na- tion for the protection of its defemses causes the endless sivalry in the construction of navies and the organi- zation of armies as it is the suspiclon aroused by the mctivities of the others. interpretation of activity on the part of others may be entirely wrong and unjustified but that doesmt deter nations from spending great sums ani so stimulating thelr activities apparent- in opposition that trouble is invited when peace ought to be mafntained. This is to be noted in the activity un- derway at the present time in the Rus sian army where it i3 claimed & large number of German officials are engaged It is.an occa- trade b REPRESENTING US AT RIO. The sailing of Searetary Hughes for Rio de Janeiro means that this eountry is going to have most satisfactory rep resentation at the exposition ahbulh‘ the Brasillan centemary. sion for Brasil Jike the ohservance of| the one hundredth anniversary of the independence of this republic served at Philadelphia back in 1876 and circumstances honor could be done the South Amerioan| pq, republic than the sending of the head|d, of the department of state to carry the message of the United States to a sister| republic at so émportant a time. Having so admirably established the this administration what Seoretary Hughes has to say to the Brazillans will carry much weight. It is a time when both countrfes are on the best of terms but when there is an opportunity for improved lations. This of course halds good with the other South American countries and the visit of Searstary Hughes’ will un- questionably supplement the good Work, that was done by Bilthu Root and others who have carried the American view- point into that continent and served to of United States among the nations of the western hemisphere. It is mo small responsibility that See- retary Hughes shoulders but he goes with the full confidence of edministra- tion and nation and he will unquestion- be received with all the honars due a personage of his position. It is & visit which should serve closely than ever the friendly relation- sh'p: of the respective nations. That possible it is evident that the sec- ot state is the man who can ac- «u'nplhh it. as ob- greater rela- the more be donein reorganizing the army of the bol- ng the army of those|shevists -along the PolMsh fromtler. It re t est fittdd to vacancies|is admittedly a bad combination and al 14 create down the Hne.|situation that might be expected to Sedit ¥4 make Poland a bit nervous, Quite nat- WAGE INCREASE, |[Ural m of the steel compan-| a voluntary increase in ands of employes wo important Tocality steel industry is one of the unor- ] 22 far as Mabor s con- and the increase which has now oves, restoring » which have jons, can be rpretation that the e relied upon to look af- he condition of t come as t it serves to re exper!- s companies waz r hand i is probable that w of stheir throughout the coun- od of un- en though future. running to ca- the situation ! companies in- sentment with- the fu- Irish, August, a dated. ded when the ou e it must stand as has been lurk- has begun in gowns. SUBSTITUTE FOR COAL. nt has bee: he search gasoline. something that oal and cost hearty recep- are thése who have shortage to change vstems. Presumably but if a subst :d that will do as, less and require h:w‘ ainly would be a rush| a permaneney to it once| d and found effective. reason @ osriain degree of| to be aroused by the| tor ®n New York to; can provide a fuel| crude- ofl that will do, and he maintains that for a motar it can driven ve- of course whem some- 1t| great They_are not pre- hook and h*.—&mdw where neighboring watch each other as a cat does 2 mpouse. There is a meaning attached to every move and it doesn't take long under the might encouragement to have the flame, fanned into a bloody border war. Whether there is any uiterior pumpose back of the army reorganization by the bolsheviki and the strengthening of the Polish forces, there 1s sound sense back of one suggeston that has been offered to the effect that while it Is evident an undesirable situation may be developing! m what reglon the most effective time. for stopping it 13 before it starts. Thers! is no reason to believe that those peo- ple are so eager for war that they can! totally forget the frightful of the recent wi s it that Poland should be aroused to its owh welfare and should hasten to increase its army by a fifth, 1t is a nations ocondiitions and the desirability’ EDITORIAL NOTES, Disorder and murder will strikes any more than they will umset the demands of the big majority of the The man on the corner says: can be little comgfaint 'against those who do the best they can- under the circumstances., of avoiding anything of the kind In tha Prevention {8 of course prefer-. able to be‘ng forced to rush to the sup- port of one or the other later on. Wholesale drunkenness in Austris will cause many people to regret that they are in this country. These are the days when the. owner of a hore garden has a'chance to bray. about fresh vegetables. Thoss advocates gf no more wér are neglecting their opportunity their influence on Ireland. to use not win Those who have sought hot days in cool days in August and wet in August have all been accommo- Young women have been at Paris for ejan athletic meet but there's no chance that they negleoted the latest wyinkles There B e Ford finds the answer to a coal short- age in oil burmers. But it all should do that it wouldn't take long to create an oil shortage. With China's president ready to re- isign in favor of the head of the South China government it looks as if Sun was Tieing agaim in China. T U B It Is ‘interesting to note that ome of the first things following the agtion on| the tariff by the senate is an inmoreasel in wages in the steel business. From the way in which' fire has de-| stroyed villages to say nothing of the amount of timber in Minnesota the need of forest fire prevention speaks for dtself, —e It is only & matter of ten days now i Unexpected success is being obtained| | with ghders, and one of the hest fea- tures is that there s no danger of aj fuel shortage with them. ter avallable ¢ the present. time. are we quite just to the profession in confining our reading to only faverite authors? What chance does it .m to new writers of ability to get & ing? nwmb-mnmm-fl our favorites. How absurd it would be to hear only GalliCurei sing, or only Charlie Chaplin act. No baseball “fan would be satisfied in seeing only “Babe" Ruth play ball. But when it comes to reading many people confine themselves to only this or ‘that writer. If ene is satisfied that a writer s delivering the “real stuff,” what difference is it who he is or where he lives? We are not sure who wrote the Psakms, but somebody has given us something that will live. . One of the most important things in this world is habit, and it s fully as serious as it is important. It is im- portant becauss it is Tepeated action along eertain lines; it s serious because it may be repeated bad action along ecertain definite lines. A single act nev- er makes character, but a single act may blast it. Habit is the seriss of steps we take in the formation of char- scter. The steps we take may’lead us up into the tower where everything is bathed in sunshine, sor down into the ungeon where it is total dotkness. The direction we take is determined by our own will power. And the process of going up or down, step by step, is what we call habit. At first we proceed in either direction timidly. We take the first rung of tall ladder shringingly, but gain courage as we go ul we feel our way going down cellar at first but soon get used to the darkmess. The young lad hesitates in the first steps of sin, but the gutter drunkard doesn" Habit is not only repeated but acceler- ated actlon. Language is the vehicle of thought, and words the expression of ideas. The least discriminating will recognize the difference between a parrot and a prophet. With the former, words are nothing but prattle, with the latter they are revelation. The parrot learns tse sound of words and attempts to imitate them, the prophet feels the power of ideas and seeks to transform them in- to living speech. The parrot has not the least iden of what he is talking about, but the prophet is so obsessed with ‘his utterance that to him it is a matter of life and death. We are either disgusted with & parrot or we laugh at him; we seldom admire him. But unfortunately ®ome parrots are not clothed with feath- ers or kept in a cage, who go up and down the land using language they lit- tle understand and expressing ideas of which \they know less. It would be only light comedy were it hot for ¥he fact’ that some people take.them seri- ously, which of course makes it trage- dy. When shall we distinguish the rar- rot from the prophet? Recently a book has beem entitied . The Comguest of Fear, it is worth reading. Few people real- ize what deadly effect fear has upon hu- manity in gemeral. Its sway is not so extensive as it was in the so-called Dark Ages, but the dark age in which fear is not manifest has not yet wholly passed away. No single element is 8o responsible for the enthronement of fear as fgnorance, and naturally the more widespread ignorance is the more dead- ly is fear. Fear ig the greatest disease of the immature. The child is afrald of the dark, so was the childhood of the race. In boih cases darkness was not understopd. When the child learns what darkness is he ceases to fear, &0 has the race to a certain extent. Intelll- gence s fear's greatest Waterloo. Think- of what fear has dome in the name of religion. The history of pagan- ism showp the place that fear oocu- pies. An@l even in Aur Christianity, man has had the audacity to say, “Be- lievé in my ism.or you will be eternal- ly damned.” We sre still humiliated by tear. Tt Wendell Phillips were now living :|and lecturing he would have anether item to add to the wonderful things he said in the lecture, The Lost Arts. He would perhaps refer to meditation as o lost art. We have some thinking, more writing and speaking, and vast- Iy more talking, in the present age. But real, quiet meditation seems to_be large- ly a matter of the past. The individu- a] s not wholly to blame for this situ- ation. This mervous, high strung, rush- ing age is mostly to blame. We don't have time to look calmly into the deep- er recesses of the soul that was one of the great privileges of the past. And we are losing out in the sum total of perso\clity. In our great haste we are spreading. ourselves over a larger area of human knowledge than formerly, but in so doing we have grown terribly thin in spots. We are so magnifying effi- ciency that we are neglecting that quiet background out of which efficlency springs. Omne of our problems, as yet by mo means mastered, is to accommodate our- selves to sudden climatic changes, When we congider what nmarvellous things have been done by sclence in the last fifty years, it may not be unreasonable to believe that the hamd of man may have much more to do in moditying these changes than at present, and still W this latitude sudden changes will probably always .take place, bht very Iikely scienee will show us the way of better adaptation to them. Take for in- stance the matier of frosts. In the period of vegetable growth, a slight drop in temperature will ruin some va- rieties entailing great financial loss. There is reason for belief that danger from this source will be greatly lessen- ed through the application of scientific principles. Scientists have already as- serted that refraining from false artifi- clal stimull better enables the human body to resist these sudden chang- es. Sclence plus right living are vet to do wonders. Do we fully realize that our form of government was a logical inference from our @ttitude toward religion? Our democracy was the outgroWth of the Pur- itan eonception of life in general, The early Puritans in England coneeived the idea that they had the inalienable right to worship God Recording to the dicta of their own conscience, and aecordingly they protested against the laws of uni- formity then in existence. As this was denied them in the homeland, they sought Holland where they found the desired spiritual freedom, but other things be- ing uncongenial they at length sought a new land which they ecould call their own, where they could propagate their ideas of individual spiritual liljerty. ‘While crossing /the Atlantic their ideas broadefied as seen in the Mayflswer pact. They reasoned in this way: If the peo- ple have the right to govern tWemselvee in religious matters, why mot in civil as well. At least this is clear, logical thinking. If ome is interested in the foibles are there; is scant js the bathing suit. and the bulk of the business will he over at the short resarts though cream of the weather may still be un- the ed, and, of ¢ of our common humanity, he will find enough food for refleetion from the pavilion of a popular bath- ing beach of a Warm summer day. You are impressed with the profusion of nearly everything; the people are there in great numbers: all concejvable ages all possible colors are dis- played; every degree of intelligence is represented ; all sizes of perses are pos- sessed by the crowd. The enly thing that Some of the very finest ‘and most striking are made from last years pair %of stockings. There is a great deal of beauty dis: ‘played, both the powdered and unpowder- d, painted and unpaigisd, penciled and unpencil se, vanity in pl-"uhn u me ur« century of its in azil ww wl\bnb.in uq» T of ; great de Janeiro. lf. il an occasion and a ceremo: which the people of the United Staf are particularly well fitted to \lnder- stand and appreciate. In a nu ways Brazil stands where the States stood 46 years ago, tbau(h h\ many others, of course this neighbor of_the sputh, equipped wita modern 39 machinery and assisted by modern methods is far in advance of the Unit- ed_States of 1876. Brazil is much more than ‘“one of the South Americhn republics” In area it is in a class with the United States. Its flag floats over practical- 1y one-half of South American and one-fifth of the western hemisphers, | Leaving out Alaska, Brazil is actually 200,000 squdre miles greater than the United States! It has boundaries with every. other country in south America excep' Ecuador and Chile. The land boundary of Brazil, follow- ing all the twistings of rivers and mountain ranges, is probably not far from 10,000 miles long, and there is a coastline of 6,000 miles as well. The largest river in the world, tremen- dous, potential water power, and huge deposits of minerals are among some of the other physical features that mark Brazil out for big things. 1t is particularly in the posession of vast, undeveloped resources that Bra- zil is comparable to the United States of half a century ago. It too, has its West; but it is a West strikingly dif- ferent from the plains country of cen- tral North America. The equator crosses northern _Brasil,. and more than nine-tenths of the huge country lies within ‘the tropics. Brazil's West consists for the most part of a dense tropical forest—a veritable ocean of verdure—rich in hard woods and rub- ber trees. Into this largely undevel- oped country stretches the broad Am- bzon and its tributaries up which ocean vessels steam for 1,000 miles —as though ocean steamers in our own country could steam up the Mis sissippi and Ohio past Cincinnati. Riv- er steamers ascend the main streams for another 1,000 miles and run up numerous tributaries for several hun- dred miles. The possession of this great Amazon waterway and its net- work of tributaries greatly cheapens transportation in Brazil in comparison with & country in. which dependance must be placed largely on railro: In addition to its northern fores Brazil has a prairie country in its “Middle West"—the south central por- tion of the country lying north of Paraguay and extending northward in- to the hill country. L’Arge herds of eat- tle #re grazed and there is room for great expansion of the industry. The southeastetn exige of Brazil, paradexically, is the heart of the coun- try The white population, numbering probably between 9,000,000 and 10,000, 000 is largely concentrated in the re- gion of temperate climate in the south- ern coastal highlands which extend in- equal degree. Dej't delude yourself by supposing that vanity is the sole pos- session of the fair sex: Look at young Adonis strutting like a turkey gobbler before the girls, simply dead gome over himself. Well, let the dear ones dis- port themselves—they have nothing ejse to display. SUNDAY MORNING TALK THE LOVE OF GOD. “Keep yourselves in the love of God.” —Jude 21. The sea hath its pearls, the earth hath its flowers, the sky hath its stars, but the human heart hath its love. God hath mads us to love, He hath given the brutes instinct, the birds wings, but to man He hath given the power to love. The affections of man are ever seeking some object on which to lean. They re- samble those plants which cannot stand alone. The ivy seeks the oak; the hon- eysuckle and jessamine clinch the trel- Ys, and if they cannot find a support in something stronger and higher than themselves they will creep along the ground in search of a stone, an old and Totten stump, and an unelean and broken vessel. In like mamner the heart of man will cleave to something whether it be money, worldly bonor, lit- erary *distinction, or even some, domes- tic animal The human heart must #twine around something. It must love. | But how cad it is that It should miss its nroper aim and seek to satisfy its long- ings with something lower than God. The love spoken of 1s Aot mere human Tove. It is mot a love that has been de- veloped, as love for_the oreature is/de- veloped. “We love Him bacause He first loved us” He awoke our love by “shedding abroad in our heart the love of God. In this cupernatural operation His love and our leve like His will and our will, become so mingled there is a marvelous omeness. It is this love thac we are urged to keep. The term “keep” is & military one. It means a garrison or fortress. a place where every appli- ance 8f military skill has been employed to make secure from attack or capture. “Keep yourselyes in the love of God.” Garrison yourselves with love. But why this earmest injunctlon to guard and preserve the love of God There must bé something of inestimabdle value in this love, or we would not be urged so strongly to guard and keep it. “Oh, for this love let rocks and hills, Their lasting silence break: And all harmonious human tongues The Saviour's praises speak.” It is said that an entre oak-tree is odntained in an acorn; that with a good microsoope, all the parts of an oak-tree may be detected within the little nut. You plant it, when it is grown to be & majestic tree of the forest, you see nothing more than yeu had in the mut, developed, indeed, “ In its proportians, but unaltered fn its mature and in its essential form, so it is with true relig- fon. love is the kernel, the ream, the es- sential substance-of true rcligion. We are to keep ourselves in the love of God, because love is the link that unites us to God, perfect love secures perfect safety. An ordinary professar of religlon may get over an ordinary difficulty well enough, but when a great trial comes in his way he requirys something more than the common amount of religion to overcome it. So the erdinary temptations may be avoid- od, but there comes times which try the soul, great temptations or unusual diffi- ¢ulties, and great love ‘is mecessary to overcome them. A ship that is only strong enough for fair weather will go down in a strong gale and a Reavy sea. A lukewarm sol- dier may serve very well in a dress pa- rede, but called to meet the enemy and engage in battle he will count for very little. So the Christian who does" not keep himself in the love of God will be e to come to a grievous fall at last. hen a-strong man armed keepeth hig palace, his goods are in peace; but when a stronger sen he shall come upon him, he taketh from him all his armor wherein he trusted and divideth his spoils” The soul that is kent in perfect love is ¥ike tha pond lily which draws nothinz but its necessary. nourishment from the ° earth, and that through a very slender tube, while it onens wide its bosom to the light and ‘air of heaven. The sanctified be- Iiever has narrowed all these avenues of his soul which lie earthward, while his whole mind is onen 1o God and s of His love. as a nnly n unim) try's life, but (fifl a-rlll nu.w H M portion of Brufl’l map with eities and towns and with a. eiis“:!i network p(‘ is in th - glon of nu;;l that m the country’s chief indus ! ETOW- ing. Thousands of square miles are Bagland, May T, tmton,e Brazil the fc coffee nas Best Atviea Tauatore! Brazil is not backward l'.';"}.‘"" # dnaugurated at Mom- contruction, having 20,000 s of track. Yet so vast is the e-unm mt railway construction seems barely be- gun. Bragil has yet to build its tu.n- cnnfinen:‘hl l::‘” With a d céption the railroads are a :l;ualtddon( _coast mi:?h to 450 miles dee) e exeeption exlendl!\spfrm the port of Santos m miles westward te Porto Esperancy on_the Paraguay riyer. Rio de Janeiro, eapital of lrull, in which tion celebrati vEp Sl L L Y Ve, g, Va., June 1, 1807, et aisd at Indian- centenary of is to be held, has a pepulation be- tween a million and a miilion and a hailf ard is therefore one of the great- est of eities. It I res roughly with Vienna, Osaka, 3 ‘Hankow and Caleutta the nnk tenth ecity of the world. In South America it {s sur- passed in size only by Buenos Aires. Set in a series of valleys, backed and all but encireled by mountain-like hills clad in a riot of tropleal vegitation, and ‘with a magnificent harbor at its feet, Rio de Janeiro is one of the most beautiful—many travelers assert the most beautiful—of the cities of the world. Man's hand has helped nature in bringing abdout this beauty. Broad boulevards rim the deep crescents of the harbor and the rough, picturesque| .- adjoining coast; one of the most fa. mous of botanical gardens has created; and avenues are lined hy towering palms, while stately build- ing are set in spacit parks, “As -multicolored and varied in beaut}y as the butterflies of the trop- ics” is the characterization of one re- cent visitor to the metropolis of Bra- zil. “In splendor of hue and setting this great city of the South is un rivaled the world over. Here granits peak and turquoise, sea, tropic forest and rainbow-tinted town, meet and harmonize. This eity of lure terraces up from a glorious bay—the Bay of Guanaba- ra, mountain-encircled, isle-bejeweled. From the shore, whers parks and bou- levards are fast crowding out the old Rio of narrow street, rise forested hills on whose slopes the lovélier por- tion of the city lies. To see Rio at its best and loveli- est one must go to these mountains ithat tower over the city. Turning bayward, one looks down, through a frame of tangled vines and branches, onto the tree-tops of the sloping vir- gin forest. Far below, set in verdure, gleams the kaleidoscopie city, wita its crescent shores. In numerous crescents the creaming sea meets the beaches—Formosa, Santa Luzia, Lapa, Gloria, Flamingo, Betefogo, Vermel- ha. The bay, set in its amphitheatrs of hills, sparkles like a sapphire. To eand fro among the ships at ancher ply the busy paddle-wheel ferry boats to the islands and to Nictheroy, the little sister city across the way. In the distange tower the blue spires of the lofty Organ meungaing. Oceanward one looks down on ti- tanic granite mountains 'rising sheer from the sea. There is bulky Baba- lonia, and flat-topped Gaves, like a great sail unfurled. Between them lie Rio's suburban beaches—Leme Cap: acabana, Ipanema, Lehlon—in a glis. “tening chain, their _white villas nest- ling between hill and short. The Av- enida Atlantica, which connects them is equalled only by boulevards along the mediterranean. One can motor frem the city to these- Beaches and on to Gavea over 2 new road cut in the rock high above the sea, climb to the divide at Tijuca and drop down, on the bay side of the range, to his starting place in the city—a wonder cifcuit of forty miles or more. Avenida Rio Grande, Rio's !ln.lt thoroughfare was “hand made"” the city had attained prmmny lu present extent. In. 1804 it was dect ed to carve this great modern avenue out of the ecity, over $00 homes being sacrificed. The avenue, ‘more than a mile in length and so wide that it consists of two distinet boulevards separated by a row of shade trees, is thronged day and night with automobiles. The gidewalks the widest the tray- eler is likely to tind in all his world travels, are of black and white stones laid in mosaic designs, like those in wogue in Lisbon. Both stones and ‘workmen were brought fram Portugal but similar pavements eonstruc! later in other parts of the city are “home made. Les De Fopest, -i-.dmu-m- less telegra nal telephon seeking to raat nn.L tures, born at cflmdl ufts, Ia., vears ago today, oseph. u triet, born at Wasrensville, Pa., 47 years ago today. fajor Robert T. Motem, principal cf the Tuskegee Institute, born in Virginia, 55 _years ago today. Jesse L. Barnes, piteher of the New York National leaguo baseball team, ::1,1\ at Guthrie, Okla., 80 years ago to- FAMOUS NICKNAMES “THE SWAN OF EISLEBEN" To Martin Luther was given the niok- mame of “The Swan of Eisieben. mility, and they as & term of L'Enfant gravely selstes from an old author that, when his mother took Huss to Prague, to enter him at the univer- sity, she carried & goose and a cake with her as presents to the restor. an incident regarded as an omen of ewil, at which the poor weman fell on hee knees to-recommend her son to the divine pro- tection and contfnued her journey with 2 heavy heart. It is satd that when the Bohemian re- former, who was burned at the stake July 6, 1415, was on his way to the Dlace of execution, he uttered this me- merable prophecy: “You are roasting a lean gooss, but after a hun- nnyuumwmhnm.m.rn swan which-will arise from ‘my ashes, whom you will not be able ta roast.” This was afterward interpreted to come one, in a few seasans, who would ho a rarer dird than he, would not be able to énenare. Théreafter it & that Luther was Xnown as “The Swan of Eimeben” named for the town in Prussian Sax- ;-r’mm he was born in 1483 and died length portraite of Luther have the Swan at hia fest and many suppesed at ons time that it must be in soms man- ner intended to répresent his nl arms, but anhn #hows that, though his wife arms are dllbl&]bfl his own are not, Just a century after, as Huss predioct- ed, eame lather, “the Swan of Fisle- ben,” and Pope Adrian in” 1523, in a brief address Ao the diet of Nuramberg wrote: “The heretios, Huss and Jarome, m.:o be Hving again in the person of Hups, although his presursor, by a hundred yearw, was the savior of Huss, for Charles V's bespoks for the mafe gonduct guaranteed to the latter om hin Journey to Worms was undoubtedly ths outgrowth of the asandal wh'ch had ee: Dtm in e fellow's Blood, The lving bitd went free.” ‘The nla\umme flm of Eislaben' seami to Luther, when we regard him ln another light than the reformer—as a maker of hymns l'zva for music iy well known. IN THE PUBLIC EYE the devil and makes people joyous affer a|theology. T gave.to mus'c the next place ul the highest honor. ? that grand sone, “Eine feste Burg I-t unser Gott,” Carlyle says: “Thera s something in it m:- the mong of Al- pine avalanches, or the first murmur of earth mys in re- “Luther r ol merits ‘Bisiben ‘The first woman, to go to sea ship's engineer is Bkely to by uh- V(o toria Drummond, who aitrasted wide attention some time when ehe eom- pleted a_full in one of the big words in To become & ship's engineer is Mies Drum- mond’s declared ambitlon, and she is the first woman to be fully gualified for. B Cmesrmg aspiroment ot - in the e ent 10 owners of one of the " hig Liverpool aumsmp tines, but there are a mum- ber of difficulties to be overcome hefore che can actually go w0 sea, Miss Drum- mond is a god-daughter of the late Queen Victoria and a granddaughter of ‘The Swan ing of Tnttiters vaey, whose soul went singing to its roost.” NEW REFERENCE BOOK, FREE THE CHELSEA PRIMER (JUST OFF THE PRESS) Gives Valuable Information Absut the Savings Bank B Condueted by THE CHELSEA SAVINGS BANK NORWICH, CONN. \ (Cut This Coupen Out and Send to The Chelsss Savings Bank) Piease send a copy of The Chelsea Primer teo Name. . B T T PRI UA PRR R Er R ve of God and your soul will be ‘like a well tuned harp, ajways in tune with the music of heaven. and all fear will be cast out forever.” Address. .. whom they |, Mr. Editor: The Bulletin that the prohibitionists are still venting their holy wrath honest ty, by seems demn cause making ther the ") LETTERS TO THE EDITOR SALE ; fords—$1:00 “a swan-like end. fading music.” Hans Sach called Lu- ightingale of Wittenburg.” —— That Jewett City Case. 1 note in recent letters to and righteous against John Potter. Even an and impartial verdiet of mot guil- & jury of representative citizens not to alter their desife to con- d persecute theiy nelghbor be- he seeks to follow the time-hal- lowed custom of our ancéstors in making cider and vinegar from the juice of the apple. In the minds of these self-appointed ccntors of the morals and habits of our people, when viclation of the liquor laws. there Is no such word as fail prosecuting a person for alleged Murders, retbers, and holdups produce not a rip- ple in ds. for a the calm sea of their infantile byt let a man indulge his desire little cider, wine or other bever- ages made by his owh hands, from his own products and he becom for-their slurs and maledi end. How the target ons without ever, let them rant and rave while they may, bacause their power is short- 1 The time is not 1ar off when these laws will be wiped from the Constitution and statutes and the era of cant, b: sy and moral reguiations forgott: of “fre: CLEAN-UP One-strap Patent or tan trimmed—$1.00. -, Women’s $4.50 Kid 2-strap Sandals - $3.75—$3.50 grade $2.95 Women's Sport Rubber Sole Ox- One Lot Bathing Shoes—50c 3} One Lot Women’s Button Shoes Sizes 21/, and 3—50c One Lot of Boys' White Tennis $1.00 ' Tan Shoes, sizes 11 to 2, $1.00 Sizes 27, to 5',—$1.25 One Lot Men's Work Shoes—$2.00 BARROWS’ 90 MAIN STREET Opposite Porteous & Mitchell Co. in|Blue Laws normal agal Yours truly, Willimantle, Aug. 25, It sounds unreasomable, but ms giris PWP‘: and well be almos JORMALCY. muhlh'-“ Amerieans will pass into the limits of "1 Nnflgmmmnh en things, a8 its predecessors, the | | didn't believe anything would come it, but the first time I used Rcd- nol itstopped the itching, and now my SUCH PAINS AS THISWOMANHAD This is an E. Pinkha: Vi mpound bnufl:t rTs‘ult‘l"l‘?{:fi "trygfi L. chestra. EXCURSION Wilson Line Steamer Major L’Enfant Sunday, Aug. 27th Another Long Sail on the Sound, Stop- ping at Shelter Island and Greenport I, for Three Hours. Bathing at Shelter Island. Refresnments Aboard Music' by Philharmopic Dance Or- skin is entirely clear,” Leaves Norwich 9:30 A. M. Adults $125; Children 50c ickets at Tyler Regers, 56 Broadwayi | Alee .t'cm’v...y-. Office, e SPECIAL EXCURSIONS TO BLOCK ISLAND EVERY TUESDAY AND THURSDAY—$1.50 via. STEAMER NELSECO I SAILING EVERY DAY — REGULAR FARE $200 LEAVES NORWICH, MONDAY TO FRIDAY—8 A. M, LEAVES NORWICH, SATURDAYS—10:45 A. M. LEAVES NORWICH, SUNDAYS~—9:15 A, M, (EASTERN STANDARD TIME) FARE BETWEEN NORWICH AND NEW