Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 25, 1922, Page 4

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NORWICH BULLETIN and Coarier 126 YEARS OLD Privied ewry @a3 In he S et Sustes, Subeription prics 120 o Werk: 600 & wwath: B8N » rour Botersd st G Puiofis 8 Nawid, Oms, w sewiod-clams matier Trimtens Caa Bulltts Dustass OFien. oho. Bulletia Bditerial foems £5-3. Bullstin sob Recm, 8.8 -"Hl—fl--nn Coured 6. Tolhone Neorwieh, Saturday, Nev. 25, 1922, — SLBCER OF THE ASSAGIATES PRESD CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING NOV. 18th, 1922 11,942 THE NEW JUSTICE. Once again Presidént Har@ing has been called upon to name a member of the United States supreme court. If the pames that have been. suggested have all received comsideratitn he. has been devoting that serious attention that is to be expected to the important task of making the selection to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Justice Day. Soon after the resignation was an- uounced the president let it be under- #tood that the wuenessor to Justice Day would be chosen selely because of his fitness for the position. That is what was o be éxpected and that it is be- lieved is what has been donme in the naming of Pierce Butler of 8t. Paul, Minn., to the bench of the highest court in the land. Mr. Butier hasn't been sélected be- sause of gignal service that he has ren- dered as a judge. for he has not had that distinction, but solely becawse of the ability that he has demonstrated as a lawyer during his activity before the bar. He is mot of course the first mem- ber of the supreme court to be chos:n for that responsible position to come from the ranks of lawyers who have rendered Aistinguished service, That he has not held a judicial position dogs 2t necessarily mean that he could not have obtained should an appointment had he ®0 desired. It is often the case that iwwyers prefer to aveid the menmetony ond restrictions of the bench, and like- wise the emcluments that come .from private prastice. ‘When it comes to supreme court> ap- vointments politics is- not a guide to se- lection. The appointee, & democrat, will succeed a republiean, and.it was only aj few weeks ago thit a i sus- ceeded a democrat. With qualifications adBefed to as the, guide for the selec- tion of justices of the supréme court there is not much chatice that a poor, choice will be made, SCHOOL SAVINGS. In order to get ideas well grounded and principles firmly fized. it has lomg béen appreciated that it was important to impress them upon the children. To 2 Jarge extent this is dorie through the sdhbols because it is all 3 part of the educational effort and it is. through.the sebools that the ghildren cam be reach- ed in a body: In the guidance of the minds of the young it has been re¢ognized that the ow'artunnr of . impressing upon them the” imMportance -of theift should Adt Be neglected, . and ithis has developed into the Bstablishment of & system of Naving which has gained widespread endorse- mént throughout the country. Having! been shown the value of it, the personal advantage to be steured and the impor:-| 25 bearing which such traifing ia sers tain to have upon futuré confuet, these to whem it has been presentéd have not: only “beén favorably inclined but their eftorts have resulted in gétting a mueh lafiger number 'intérested. It was enly a year ago that thé sys- of the puplis in all schoals afe emgaged in saving and have bank AggTegating about & half mil- /ito get buey after Mr. Edison said col- corfiparison “to plan s bound mmmnfiw.u. to “have upon the lifetime. It tesches the Important difference between thrift and. waste, e i UPHOLDING THE LAW. ‘When it comies to lenfency in dealtig with - Jawbredkers it doesm't wawe wiig for seme cowrts to find out that it 't appreciited and that the geperal result £ FhigRRRECRNR L] E it 3 = | necessary. ERaffed RE when, through the violation of it, it is possible to become rich in a very short period because the fines that are im- posed for the violatioms, when arres:s ‘happen to be madé, are so ridiculously small tha tthey amount to no more than a tipping expense. - This judge in a circuit court in Mary- land is net the first to recogmize this faet, and he is not the first to sense the need of applying the right pemaity :if enforcement of the law is going to amount to amything and kept from be- ing made a joke. Men go out of busi- ness because of a fear or a jail penalty, whereas they would coptinue indefinite- ly at the game could.they feel secure in the payment of sizesble sums when- ever the goods were found on them Even then it woul be cheaper than a real license system. THE MAN WHO TALKS ‘Why doesn’t some grest and learmed man write a book on The Nobllity o? Am- bition? It is a subject that needs to have the barnacles scraped off of its weather- beaten sides. As a matter of fact, ambi- tion is one of the important mainsprings of activity. The disposition to rise in life, the desire to make the most of the possi- blities of life, the impulse to develap what is innately potential in -oneself, is ambition. 1s not faith, hope, ambition the fundamental triad in the humen per- Sonality 1which produces the necessary effort leading to success? Leave obf eny one of these three from the triad and the result will be a Sort of consumptive ef- fort after success. One of the grandest sights in this world is the poor lad mov- ing heaven and earth for an education. With faith and hope gripped by ambition, his few pennies seem to be touched by a magic wand. 1 am not at all sure but what it is better to be clutched by a false ambition than to be utterly ambi- tionless. Just how far cam ome trust to appear- ances in forming judgments? We do this every day, and there is some justification for it. I once attemded a big expositiom and, getting tired, sat down and watched my fellow viskors. Amone them was 3 thersto. And yet tbat is what is now|large man of distinguished appearance. f6und to be the case. He was well ‘dressed portly, had side- Inasmuch as information is what the| Whiskers, and YTad such a good face that commission was crested to get, and; I set him down as o Saney ]w‘?fl o 3 5. perintendent. Now the floor elevatjon b ooty By :i‘m;:; Exhibit B was about two inches Migher S it DS Y| than that of Exhibit A which evidently that is the pesition it appears in just|my sunday school friend Qid not see, now when it finds that those from| picause he stubbed his toe rhost lament- whom it seeks facts are igmoring ques-|ably, and began to sprawl about most tions being asked and the commission|undignifiedly. Whether it was pain, deep finds itself powerless to do anythinz.| humiliation, or just a momentfry lapse Thoss. who are refusing to answer are| from virtue, I did not know at the time, probably acting on legal advice and( &nd have not been quite able to determine 3 since, but as a matter of fact he at once, ore aog avamtage of o Tom Taesse| PRI 3 momem's’ warmiof. bagan 1o that the purpose of congréess is being thwarted and of course calls for the that T was celuctantly compelled to revise my judgment as to his exact Sunmday strengthening of the zuthority imposed in the commission where needed. school status. It has also come to light that through The affair troubled ne beeause it re- flected upon the acuracy of my judgment. the acceptance of thé appointment to the commission Judge Alschuler of Chicago The more the matter was brooged over, the heinousness of his act seemed to stands in & way to lose, according to| abate somewhat. First. his undignified the court regulations, his seniority |act Was not the result of carelessness or rlghts gnd other disadvantages. Tais|abstraction, because his abdominal ares of course was not eontemplated by the legislation creating the commission. He that he could not possi- ‘was chosen because he was regarded as bly sce his fect when looking down straight. Secondly, judging from the 2 most valuable man for the commis- slon and certainly in the rendition of things he said the mind was not acting The manner in which he con- ® regions with the people such a service it ought met to be per-| who built exposition halls showed that mitted to interfere with his work on|he was swayed more by his feelings than the bench later on. his reason. Thirdly, two important things These are matters wh'ch have e e disclosed since the commission began Jts; oo Mlpien " Chably had been injured work. Without any question they ealll o "hig mndignified sprawling. As-he was for. such amendments to the legislatlon| ;" jiw ‘man he had a fair sized bumion. as will eliminate them. It meems im-|That bunion vidently had been touched, probable when the situation is explained| for he held # in his hand and said things that congress will do otherwise than hasten sueh legisi e changes as are Recognition of the fact that they exist is reason enouZh for appre- that ace usually omitted from the opening exercises of the Sunday school. Does not ciating the need of making the amend- ments as soon ag possible. A commm- the Lord give latitude to men with bun- ions in a state of activity? I think, after sion that cannot have the men it needs and cannst get the facts it is after all, that he was & Sunday school worker. We need to revise the mesning we give might a8 well not estst. SOME NEEDED CHANGES. Rt was not the intention in connec- tion with the creation of the fact find- ing commission that was named to delve into the coal industry, that It should be handieapped in its work, or that any member thereof should be pen- aliged for accepting an appointment ‘been to certain words we freguently use. Just what do ave mean by the expressions “common things, common people?”. The popular internretation, I am inclined to think, is entire wrong. Genefally the word “commén” is made to express un- worthy, inferior, if not objectionable, hab- its and qualities. Strictly spesking, it is nothing of the sort whatever. As a mat- ter of faet. “common things” and “com- mon people” do mot ifvolve the idea of condition, value er worth. but refer only to numbers—numbers considered in thé mas Common things are these which FOOTBALL TBAFTIC. November has presented some we- markable weather to the great enjoy- ment ‘of a fast increasing number of autotsts. Week-ends have seen the highways filled with more than the cus- tomary number of motor vehicles at this season of the year, and sad to re- Iaie: there ‘have been too many acci-| we are. constantly meeting; things in tes dents and fatalities. It Is somethinz{ mass, where one is very much lke an- that cannot fail to.be deplored by'auto-| other, nejther greater nor less, alike in mobilists as welt & those who have no| shape, size, color, weight and utility. If car. It fe a condition that ought not to| there was only one handful of com in exist. Highways onght to be safer in-| éXiStence, it would be put on exhi' §‘on. stead of becoming more dangerous, I It is common only because it is plentiful, It 18 not going to be possihle to pack| N°t Pecause it is unimportant. the Yale bowl today with any greater crowd than that which jammed i when West Point played at New Haven, but it is not improbable that there will be a larger number gomg from this end of the state and over Connecticut high- ways from states té the east and north than come from that direction a few weeks dgo, Thé Yale-Farvard contest never fails to arouse mterest, and eacn Year sees & larger, number making tn: trip by autemcbile. No mére timely advice could fherefore be offered. than that which has been put forth by the motor vehicles com- Missioner in which there is emphas placed upon the meed of respectig fules of the highway and the richts o others: Inereased trafic may inerease the liability of aecidents but fhe situa- tion can bé met if there i the proper €oopsfation on the part of all users of the highways. It is mot a time for reckless driving, overspeeding or cut- ting in, and it 18 to the credit of the motor vehicles department that it has arrangéd for the policing of the main thorotghtares to see that those who at- tempt such are properly dealt with, The ~= tha crowd the greates tno oo that sheuld be made to contribute to the safety. The importance of the so-called “com- mon peonle” is seen, first of all, in being now, as they always have beén, the main- stay of our churche¢s. It was the every- day peasant folks— representatives of the rank and flle—who flocked to the stam- dard of Jesus. Rarely did the learned has béen the “common people” in all the ages who have done the world’s manual Jabor. There are four things absolutely vital to human Hfe: food, raiment, shei- ter and fuel. It is common labor on the farm that furnishes us with food; com- mon labor in the mills that provides uve with clothjng; common labor of masons and carpenters builds our houses; and the same in the mines and forests that gets the fuel. In gvery age of the world the\ rank and file of men have always fought the world's bastles. éveryday boys ' in colleges, Workshops. counting rooms and farims have furnished the material of armies. The importanee of such cannat he overestimated. It has been proposed, and the propost. tion is a reasonablé one, that severe re- striction should be applied to immjgration for a term of years; first, so that the immigrants we have may so pass through the “melting pot” as to amalgamate with our American life. If we are flooded with those who do not blend with our life they will swamp us. The projeet is to keep out all undesirabies, but admit brain and muscle. This idea is based on the asswmption that a nation 1€ ag in- dividual has z right to protect itseif. But there is another side to be looked at. A student of economics has eecently asked: “When the present generation of workers in stéel mills, mines, on the railroads, on the farms, and in domestic service will have grown old, with po fresh influx ol new recruits from Europe. thers will eer- tainly be a loss of 3,000,000 workers, and possibly many millions more.” Who then will do our manual labor? Anxiety is a peremmnial sffiietion for the sole and simple reason thit we poor mortals are perennial beings. Anxjety all the year round, because not we then others just like in pronertion as we, gass off on who stew and fret qnd and fidgit over things cannot be heiped, or at- vented. Bver since the Adam_ intelligent mortals EDITORIAL NOTES. It @ids't take lomg for somé of them lege men didn't like to work.” THE man on the oBrmer :l"!l An- other day when highway safety should Be keépt in 2 comspicuous place. - A serious drought is menacing Penn- sylvania industries, but no claim is made that prohibition is to bldme. New York seems to be having another erime wave, but that §s set the on'y 7lsce where they break in and steal. The tellow owning . 3500 hen was fas is } i 2E i gest to hasten the reply? > taining improbable nightmares. We s<em to have loot &Il faith in that eplendid promiss: “He that leepeth thee shall neither nor . We are so constituted as not to waolly avold anwiety, but its worst fea. tures would be toned down with the im- troduction of a little more vital fadth. 1 onee séw several ants frylag t6 would be tnteresting to know sboui much the coal ghortage has been| by e ; been providing. the head, which . thing. It surely was more natu says she dosem't know | drag a bug, or any ofher anim . Rumania can pay on her war|dead or afive, forward eatber ‘whefi - ghe / NORWICH BULLETIN, SATURDAY, NOV. 25, 1922 EARTHQUAKES AND TIDAL WAVES. A sipgle graphic example of what a tidal wave in Chile can do is provid- ed by the expgrience of an American naval officer, during a similar up- heaval, whén his vessel was carried three miles up the coast, two miles inland, end dropped at the foot of a range of the Andes Mountains. Earthquakes and tidal waves are discussed in a bulletin from the Na- tional Geographic Society which also quotes a _communication by the Read Admiral L. G. Billings, whose unpar- alleled adventure occurred some hun- dreds of miles north of the recently devastated towns. s re is po natural phenomenon mbre déeply interesting and yet so little understoed as the seismic dis- turbaneés which have from earliest history devastated the earth and car- ried terror and dismay into the hearts of all survivors,” says the Bulletin. “Up to 1903, it is computed by an eminent seientist, Compte de Ballore, there hadl béen 169,782 recorded earth- quakes. Of later years, when more ac- curate records have been kept, they havt averaged advut 35 & year. There is comfort to the dwellers in most of the world to know that 94 per cent. of rétorded shocks have occurred in two narrow, well-defined belts—one caljed the Mediterranéan, with 53 per cefit to its credit, and, the other, the Cireum-Pacific, with 41 per cent— while the remainder of the world has only & per cent, widely distributed. U. 8. Had One Major Quake “The United States has been singu- larly free from recorded seismic dis- turbance, perhaps the most disastrous being in 1811, when a very sever shock occurred in the Mississippi Valley South of the Ohio, which was feit in New York in one direction and | the West Indies in another. This earth- quate changed the face of the earth. A vast extent of land was sunk, lakes were formed, and even the course of the Mississippl River was obstructed for a time. . “Most of the earthquakes occurring of late years can hardly be classed with the great ones of history, nearly all 6f the destruction being cadsed by uncontrollable fires. In the more sta- ble zones long periods may elapse be- tween shocks, as for instance, in King- ston, Jamaica, 215 years intervened. “The cause of earthquakes and vol- canoes is an elusive problem, not yet bettled to the satisfaction of the sci- entist. Tremors of the earth may be caused by many things. The explo- sion of mines, falling in of caves, slip- ping of rock strata, and many other movements of the earth may cause them; but for the great shocks which have recurred almost since the his- tory of the world began we must look further. Still Ignorant of Causes “Thouth many times there seems to be an iptimate connection hetween earthquakes and volcanoes, the law regardifig them has not been establish- ed. Some remarkable coincidences have been observed in late years. The terrible oataclysm of Mount Pelee, which, on May 8, 1902, almost in- stantly killed 30,000 inhabitants, was préceded by the earthquake which in Jafisary and April of the same year wrecked a pumber of cities in Mexi- ca and Guatemala. The distance be* tween these points is at least 2,000 miles, showing how deep-seated must have been the disturbance, if, as has been suggested, there was communi- cation between them. The gréat San Francisco earthq wks precedéd only two days by one of the mest vio- lent eruptions of Vesuvious recorded in many years. “It is also a significant fact that the fuming jsland off the coast of Alas- ka, called Bogosiof No. 3, appeared at almost the same time. A revenue cutter, visiting this island, was as- tonished to see that the mountain, or hill, some 400 Teet high, on the island, had disappeared, and in its place a bay had been formed. Soundings show- ed“a depth of from 8 to 25 fathoms of water. Quakes Precided Great Katmai Explesion ‘"Fhe greateSt of recent voleanic @is- and the great accent Him in his day. It | tutbances which blew the top off of | Mount Katmal in Alaska and gave| birth to the wonderful Valley of Ten SUNDAY MORNING TALK Thankful Hearts. Offer unto God thanksgiving and pay thy véws unto thé Most High; and call upori me in the day of trouble. I will deliver thée, and thou shalt glorify me. PE. 50, 14-15. __Thanksgiving dey is primarily intend- e a5 2 day of aksgiving for public Or national blessings. And a grand in- stitution it is wherever it is kept prop- efly; for thamkfulness showd fill every éart. Many a one who has been op- pressed and worried and has gotten out of the way of being thankful, is pulled back jnto the light of God's love, and realizes £iven us ail much to be thankful for. iness breeds thankfniness, and by the timeé ont has given thanks for mational pease. for Bational proge ress in a thom: snd ome ways and , be Wil r surely ‘There ought o be thamkful very good to :tmeml’ R3FRIE ‘Blenstres anew that God is love, and has; Thousand Smokes was preceded and accompanied by a series of severe earthquekes.” Admiral Billings described the great tidal wave which he saw at Arica, then in Peru, séme years mgo. He was an officer on the U. B. 8. “Wateree” which wag anchored in the harbor at Arica at the time of the cataclysm. 1 “Sometime after the initial tremér, he wrote, “the sea receded until the shipping was left stranded while as far to seaward as our vision would reach, we saw the recky bottom of the sea, never before exposed to human gaze, with strusgling fish and mon sters of the deep left high and dry. The round-bottomed ships keeled ov- er on their beam ends, while the Wa- teree rested easily on her floor-like bottom; and when the returning sea, not like a wave, but rather like an | enormous tide, came sweeping blck,' rolling our unfortunate companion ships over and_over, leaving some bot- tom up and others masses of wreok- age, the Wateree rose easily over the tossing waters unharmed. “From this moment the sea seemied to defy the laws of naturs. Currents ran in contrary direstions, and we were borne here and there with a speed we could not have equaled had we been steaming for our lives. At irregular intervals the earthquake sghocks re- curred, but none of them so vielent or long-continued as the first. Sea-bottom Laid Bare For Miles “About 8:30 p. m., the lookout bail- ed the deck and reported a bfeaker approaching. Looking seaward, we saw, first, a thin line of phosphorescent light, which loomed higher and high- er until it seemed to touch the sky; its crest, crowned with the @eath light of phosphorescent glow, 1}:' sullen masses of water below. Heraia- | ed by the thundering roar 6f a thou- sand breakers combined, the dreaded tidal wave was upon us at last. Of all the horrors of this dreadful time, this seemed the worst. Chained to the spot, helpldss to escape, with all the prep- arations made which huoman skill could suggest, we could but watch the monster wave approach without the sustalning help of action. That the ship could ride through the masses of water about to overwhelm us seemed impossible. We could only grip the life-line and wait the com- ing catastrophe. “With a crash our gallant ship was overwhelmed and buried deep beneath a semi-solid mass of sand and water. For a breathless eternity we were submerged; then, groaning in every timber, the staunch old Wateree strug- gled again to the Wurface, with het crew gasping still clisging to the life lines—some few seriously wounded, bruised and battered; nome killed, hot| @y Frnest Polfeck, attarncy-general of even one missing. A miracle it seem- | preat Britalfi, born In England, 61 years ed to us then, and as ] look bagk{asgo teday. through the vears it seems doubly{ Mrs. Alite ‘Avhes Winter, president of miraculous fio the Genéral’ Federation of Women's “Undoubtediy our safely was dué|Clubs, beta st Albhny, N. Y. 57 years to the design of the ship which per-|ago today. ¢ mitted the water to run off the deck| Biiss Petry, noted author, critic and about as it would from a raft or flpat- | untversity lscturer, porn 2t Williams- ing plank. years ago today. Stranded High on Shore e oy e “The ship was swept on rapidty for, Pl Dishop Fr i o time, but afier a while the motion | Cont- 83 Jukh Mavete, eminent Sis: 4, and, 1 e Brkigrivi g = ceased, and, Wwering a lantern over #8ucator, bor: the side, we found ourselves on shore, eh Iekad 48 yorrs sgo to° but where, we knew not. Smafler waves % S R washed about us for a time, but pre- 2 3 sently they ceased. “The morning sun broke on e scene of desolation seidom witnessed. We found ourselves high and ary in .a little cove, or rather identation ia beén carried ey, prices : - Assorted Chocolates, b. 40c This mixture contains full assortment of ‘90c and 70c chocolates with odds and ends of the $1.25 grade. An assortment of home- made Candies with few chocolates, stuffed dates, and others, Ib. 50c. 130 MAIN STREET the coast-line. 'We had some 3 miles up the coast and 2 miles. inland. The wave had carried us over the sand dunes bordering the otean, across a valley and over the railroad track, leavin(‘xnllt the foot of the sea- coast range of the Andes. On the near- régular teacher v perpendicular front of the meuntain “:l‘:i& w‘?fll not fivem-::’ Teg- ar Bavightor fv:ndbthe marks of the | yiar teacher todky cause she was sick.” wave, and, by measurements,| whom Lt S found if to have been 41 fest’ high.| er ambed e not including the comb. Had the wave] i 3 anothér weman an carried us 200 feet further, we would: un?:'::.‘ 30 SR inevitably have been Sashed to pleces| what was it they called her? againist the mountain-side” “Oh; yes, they o her an imitation” Pasl, ‘age slx; came- rushing home from school the othér diy to break the news of the day to his mother. He was much excited betause his room had not 1768—The English took Fort Duquesne and named the place Pittsburgh fn honor of William Pitt, / 1824--By proclamation of Govérfior Cass the people of Michigan observed m’ljhinksflvfl.ug day for the first 1872—A brilliant eteoric swplay was' visible throughout a large pirt of the United States and Canada. 1878-~Public entry fute Halifaz, Nova Scotia, of the Marquise of Lérne | and Princéss Louise. 1885—Thomas A. Hendficks, vice presi- dent of the United States, died at Indianapoiis. Borft in Muskingum eonnty, O, Sept. 7 1819, 1899—British under Lord Metlmen gde- feated the Boefs at battle 6f Gras- pan. 1918—Soldiers and maflors attacked & mass meeting of Reds in Madison | Square Garden, New York. 1919—Alexander Berkman, aaafthist, was ordered deported from the United States. 1921—Farthquake shotks causéd panle on I @ of Jamaica. &il itohito was hamed regent - ¢ : Fa L be Prince of Japan. s 13 " J gifes o5 CONFECTIONERS AND CATERER Agsin we beg to inform the public that this place has been reorganized and that Mr. Peterson, president of the firm, will personally manage the business hereafter. The store is to be rearranged a little, and the stock must be s0ld so that we may start anew once more. For this reason, we are offering these EXTRA SPECIALS for this Saturdey.—Please know that some of these Choco- lates we are offering are not our make, though they are good-—and we ar» closing them out at the following An assortment of Gum Drops, Jellies, Broken Candies, Chocolate Kiss- es, and other pretty can- dies—Just the thing for children, Ib. 40c. An assortment of Fancy Hard Candies, Butter Cups, and other filled candies, regular 70c mix- ture, Ib. 45¢c. A two pound box of Bitter Sweet Peppermints, Cream i] Ginger Kisses, Stuffed Dates, Nut Kisses, Peanut Squares, with few Caramels—65c a box. S. F. PETERSON, Inc. NORWICH, CONN. , the latest for which in its varicus ferms. labje. show expbris of sweetened.” ‘evaporated tened” and “dried and powdered.” Until recently the class known as “eom- denssd sweetened” held the lead i ex- but_ in very recent years the orated unsweetened” ls far in ex- cess of the “condensed Sweetened.” while the third groi dered” js compara governmental records of exports. Of The single group, “condensed WWestetied.” the exports in 1920 were disributed o 23 Furopean countries, 5 Amierioan countries, 20 I Asia amd Oocéenia and while islang &nd colonies are alte incloded under the genefal grouping of “Other British East Indies,” < “Other British West Indies” . “French Oceania,” and “Other British Oceamia,” so that the number of political units 6 which the profiucts of the American cow are woWw distributed Is considerably over 190. A large proportion of this compara- tivély new product for foreign markets, condensed milk in #ts various foftow, originates in the wpper Mississippi va. and including westérn New York Pennsylvanmia. The quantities of condenséd mflk &is- tributed even in the fiscal year 1528, whes the forejgn demand was of course far lees than during the war, were to Germany 56,000,000 pounds, to TUsited Kingilom 59,000,680, to France 13,000,000, to Poland 13,090,000, to Cuba 26.000,084, ey and ~{to the Phifippine Islants 10508000, % China.$,999.000, and to Japan 10,068.008 pounds. The prospeetive permanence of uub wew neid £or our domestic profSvets is illostrated by the fact that the qua: tity of milk now exported to Asia alesie is more than that sent to all the world in the year preceding The total value of condes its various forms exported UDIceu states from the beginming War to ‘date is, .in round terms, 000 600. In the fiseal year 1922 alone total value of the exports wast fall off in prices, §31.000,000, aga’ averae ©f but little Haére 31,000,000 per azmwms Priet. 10 e Old Saybrook—The - Valley passenger jtrain from Hartférd struck 2 big byck 1deer weighing nearly 200 pounds, delay- ing them about twehty mintfés to WOVe

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