Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 30, 1909, Page 11

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A FARMER'S TALK TO FARMERS. The “Sa-arch in’ Cold” hasa Long Arm---Conditions which ™ Prompt the Farmer to Philosophize---Nature’s Regu- lations Irrevecable---1he Sensible Rule of Living is “[o lake Things as They Coms and Make the Best of Them”--Too Many People Make a Bad Mess of the Common Lot—~The Roughness of Life Rasp Peo- ple Into Saape. (Written specially for The Bulletin.) When I was & lad, I used to hear a good deal about old “Sa-archin’ Cold,” and it was some time before I cleared up my mental ideas regarding him and “Jack Frost” and “Santa Claus.” They all came in the winter; they were all unknown to me except by name; the older folks seemeds to make a sort of joke of all of them, and yet 1 observed, dimly, that there was a good deal of respact mingled with their jocosit ow that I am somewhat better nted with the trio, I also desire to my respect for them. Especial. the first named—old “Sar-archin’ | suspected he was prowling around outaide, the other morning when I was am of being scalp- Indnan with a frozen. The k as it used re is not so th to be. I'm beginning se slder the question of night-caps. Eh?— Well, as s I could get the kitch- en fire g Ister on, I loc out of t door _to see w thermom id. Friend Cold” has a long arm, for, he must ave been _sittin, 1 the North Pole, h La 1 his fingers and had pinched it blue before I co ke sure in the dim morning degrees below y interest en, pulled my ut on my mit s ringly, for th Dig you ever not ringly slow a fire star jarly anxious to nav en the iron on th s dqwn the chimney in- ving up it, just when you k the hardest. want it Ever since then I've been “philoso- phizing,” i1 eabout win my sl country way and the various othe gs in life. Do I like winter” Jot for itself alone, cer- enjoy cold fingers anc ears L cold nose. I don't like to work in the snow or the slush. I don’t 1 to wear -tabs, and ve to feel of every five es to sea fi ) 1o or is still mellow. I don't like I'm the house, to have tc half of my time feeding 1 into the stove, thinking with ey ery stick of the work I must do t fall to tore the vanishing woodpile. don’t to shovel paths from 8 t , just to have them blow full again before noon. But “Kindly Nature” isn’t going to revige her statutes and make a new c just because their application doesn’t always meet my d ed approval. If I'm going to “make a liv. of it” under her laws I must take them as they are, find out as near as may be what they mean, and knuckle Tight down to obedience. Nor Is she run- any sort of kindergarten and 1 s>hool system to instruct me laws. “There they are; find n seems to be her ulti- matum. If you're a grown-up and drink water from a well fed by barn- vyard seepage and in typhoid hoid you may be of bacilll or how good your general morals. Tf you're an innocent baby and don't know the difference between a hot stove and a cold table, the burn your fingers just the . 1t you're determined to live in a climate which varies from 120 de- ees above in the sun during July to )0 degrees below in the shade during January, why, that’s your lookout, not hers. Take it or leave it; bless you she doesn't eare a straw. It's your af- fair. And it doesn’t make the slightest difference to her if you've no choice; if you've got to take it. Then you must take the consequences, too. Under these somewhat strenucus not to say drastic conddtions it would seem as if any human being possessed of ordinary intelligence would recog- pize the silly stupidity of whimpering. Avhat on earth is the use of finding fault with what you ecan’t help? Mind you, there is a very distinct line be- ween the things vou can help and those you can’t. You can bulld a house to protect against the weather; but you can’'t make it rain, or stop a zero wave when it starts across the conti- nert. It you Huild a house which isn't | quering or v and discomfort or| safe or sanita eickness result, it's your own fault and »9u ere the only one responsible. But that the top | { Nature's curiou: ~ | bility ing wet or the winter being cold. Our very first business of life is to find out enough asout the laws of Na- ture to be aole to dodge those which are “loaded for bear.” Qur next bus- Iness is to iearn how the others roll, | so that we can get into the rut be- hind them and, perhaps, hook our lit- tle apple-carts on to the procession, and thus be dragged along. But we've got to follow, not lead; we've got to g0 the way the big wheels are rolling at a safe distance we get in front w we try to go it alone, all by ourselv we happiest—please observe that I'm ng only about physical conditions the laws they e cile in obeying them, most reasona in recognition of their own limitatioas and most humble in the prese y impersonal inflexi- In other words, the only sensible rule of living, as applied to the re- ation we hold towards the material iniverse, is the trite old one: “Take things as they come and m: the est of them.” Which does not mean t all that you're to lie under an apple tree wher aupens 1o be a little hot nd 'let_the potato bugs eat up your ow e law which gov- lations of potato bu 1 can “justly be rithout ~ potatoes worse than ba- ing about we can't tural conditi | know—probably you all know—too mnany people, both men and wom 't sleep hines they ca so light, and when the s tar ey're afraid of t the or too incapab of the . , and so violate then n tin a day, T cause the punishn down on a hot s the w squal it burns, and mpathy from empt to a coo pe to 1ink that s s C fault that they aven't been ker wrapped in cotton-weol fror ind wafted through beds Of ease.” The oubles to dis the made them- seives wo! hey never get any- where ou this earth. seems in ible that they'll ever for in hea we *“ and it is dou The probabilities are that it is the very roughnesses of life which rasy ople into A smooth str thought seeking case and ¢ themselve i rd and unlucky as to chronic invse No, we cold and snow thunder storn earth es, or snake tight here prot much as some understand their schemea of thin very meeting, life ig the t: to perfect a hette manhood, LIVE NEWS FROM THREE COUNTIES, ® STAFFORDVILLE. Epworth League Meeting—Local 1in- torest in Henry G. Comstock’s Death. Mrs. John Fagan is il Mrs. I Mabel Chamberlin of Hart- ford was In town last week. Miss Maud Booth of Chester, Vt., was the guest over Sunday of her aunt, Mrs. J, O. Booth. and Mrs. Fred Sanger visited s in Wales, M K. meeting in t Supday evening. Topic, For Lo Sake, John 3: 16-18. Teader, Mrs, | Herbert A. Bosworth. Death of Henry G. Comstock. Henry G. Comstock, aged 46 years, | died at his home in Springfi week F¥Friday night, after fiv: tllness with pneumonia. He s wived by his wife, who was Miss Maud B. Amadon, a nlece of the late S. B. sur- son and a daughter, held Sunday at h home in Sprine- fleld. The body was taken to North | Brookfleld for burial BOLTON NOTCH. Oelsbration of Eightieth Birthday— Village Varieties. Mrs. Mary A. Long of Belknap cel- ebrated her 80th birthday Tuesday, January 26, at her home, The Maples, A reception was held from 3 to 6. About fifty relatives and friends were present Including man{ from Hart- ford, Rockyille and surrbunding towns, Mott White has moved his sawmill from the Willlams lot to the Quarry lot recently purchased by Perk La- throp, \ J. C. Stirling of New York made a ghort visit t6 his home at Belknap Helghts Monday, Mrs, Fred J. Olds was in Williman- tle Monday. c | the lecture by ( | some of the Will Amadon of Staffordville, also by one | gon The funera] was | | are Atklng of Hartford made elgarti | short visit to his s home, Ti Lilacs, Saturd Richard Thompson is confined to his bed with the g Miss Margar Manchester wa Fanning on Wed Miss Mabel Ho ter visitor We Miss Sadie New York Satur SPRING HILL. ey of South ard was a Manches. returned f School Children Selling Lincoln Post | Cards—Representative Sears in Hart- ford. Representative ¥ ng the legisla M. Sears is e s m at Ha H. C. & C. H. Harkins have recently shingled the town hall Fourteen Mansfield Center Nearly all of selling Lincoln themselves of the sary on the b coln concert Sund evening, k1A | Mrs. Edgar Sto Miss Ida May Storrs and Mrs. H H ins and daughter and Mrs, W. P. W in Willimantic Wednesday. New York Lecturer. The Woman's Misslonary society of | the Baptist church are to have a lec turer from New York before very lon to give an ilustrated lecture for the | benefit of the societies The M jonary societ met with Mrs. D. J. Flaherty last Thursday Not at the Polls. The passing of Governor Higgins of Rhode Island seems to have been re- gretted hy many good people of both all River #aald, TOLLAND COUNTY. COVENTRY. eeting of the Ready Helpers—A. J. Bowers Improved by Hospital Treat- iting Mrs. J. There was a good attendance at the morning service in the Baptist church |at Mansfield Depot, Henry Pollard visited his sons, Her- bert and Carlton Pollard, mantic, one day last week. Mr. and Mrs, Clifford Downs of Bos- ton are visiting at W, C. Sparne’s in North Coventry. The Ready Helpers met Thursday evening at the home of Wallace Mec- Knight in North Coventry. Miss Bertha Botham is spending a few days with relatives in Hartford. Mrs. John Lewis is suffering with a you're not responsible for the rain be-' severe cold. Mrs. Korner was a Willimantic vis- itor last Saturday. ‘Thompson spent last Thursday in Wil Brigham Barrows Coventry was the reeent guest of Mrs. Edward Dimock. Mrs. John ‘Brown of Rockville is at her old home in Merrow. M Merrow has been her daughter, Mrs. behind them. If | re sthashed flat; if | visiting West Bridgewater, Mass. John Lewis saw a handsome deer ng near his barn one day last e mighty soon in the ditch with | felloes brosen and axles bent into | irpins. 71he men and women Who | : A church meeting was held in the | Baptist church at Mansfield Depot, on are those who are quickest to learn | d t under, most do- | le | Willlam Corbit visited his daughter, dney Perkins, at Perkins’ Cor- one day last week. k Thompson of Monson, Mass., was the guest of his parents, Mr, and Mre. J, D. Thompson, recently. David Snow enter- tained Mr. and Mrs. James Palmer, Jr., e of | wers, who has been a pa- Joseph’s hospital, mantic, for a number of months, was tient at St. s returned to hi Mr, Bowers is great- house with the aid of Mancastrop visiting the Mrs., Eugene Tax Collector on WILLINGTON. Wooden Wedding—Literary Meetings Increase in Austin Gard- Reward of Overcom- st rrow’s topic Sunday eventh | E. Wheeler of North Stonington were in town on business Tuesday. t. John Bartlett, who g in the Bap- day evening place of Mrs. Alice y evening p founded on sters of the largely at- Lucien Holt is having z A 1 nlversary par- of the young ricultural Expe Wi king weath- ces Which Pre- vailed in 1869—Personal Items. | of the da | from five thou paragraphs from the report: | pestilent able port Proper c and Clark of New ties with the | the buyer than the chemical analy TURNERVILLE. | Creamery Plant Sold to New Haven Dairy Company—Local | the mix with feed imr‘w above reported has even this meas | er been thoroughly done. It has been apparently attempted only in cas the sucrene feeds. Quarters to d that the pre closed and a re- ed on the prope milk carried e employ of the New | ing charge of the g of the milk. Mr. ‘ts with the produc- the purchasers. the change will be will enter t COLUMBIA. - ' Masting. of Library Committee—Suc- cessful Operation for Appendicitis. library committee met at library des were | huilding Monday ev ng for the duughter of Mr. unday morning. and his_sistes, Sawyer, of Brooklyn, N. yver is in por health and comes Mrs. W. H. Kneeland and daughter, h are spending a week with “!iriends jn Westerly, Fa L Miss Mary Barnes of Norwich is vis- A.x.unntizmmwumun' meeting in Hartford last Wednesday. David recently traded his horse for an automobile. Miss Grace Russ i Visiting her sister in Merrow. song, of Clark's Ci day ai t A. M. Grant's. C. J. Grant of Storrs at_home. Mr. and Mrs. Henry White spent Friday in Gurleyville and Saturday in illimant! ie. MASHAPAUG. Mercury 10 Below. Arthur Bliss is driving a new horse. Mercury 10 degrees below zero last Tuesday morning. Alfred Siswich and Peter Thompson N made a business trip to Worcester last North | saturday Miss Lizzie Moore left last week for Passadena, Cal, where she will spend the winter. Louls Helm and friends report a very successful and satisfactory fishing out- ing while on their stay at Point Pleas- ant, Camp Conn. WASHINGTON COUNTY, R.L ARCADIA. William A. Lewis Home from Florida— Ice Stored. Mrs. Adelaide Reeves is ill Everett Woodmansee is working for Charles B. Bliven. William A. Lewis returned from Florida last week. Mrs. Lydia Nutting, who has been {ll for scveral weeks, is improving. Elmer Smith and George L. Dawley of Wyoming called on Benjamin Shel- don Sunday. E. M. Tillinghast cut and stored a fine quantity of ice the past week. Messrs, Corey & company moved their steam sawmill to Charles A. Pratt's woodlot Monday. HOPKINTGN. Rounds—Various Items. Mrs. Harry A. Spencer of Hope Val- ley called on friends in this village last week. Miss Zoe L. Kenyon visited in Hope Vallev over turday and Sunday. Mrs, John E, Wells and daughter, Deborah, were in Westerly recently. Charles P. W, Wheeler and Thomas Henry J. Wheeler, collector of taxes, and Daniel E. Blake, enumerator of | school census, were through here on officlal business Wednesday. Rev. E. P. Mathewson and family were in Westerly on business last week Fri . Mrs. Charles N, Kenyon is spending several days at the home of her fa- ther, George N, Crandall of North Hopkinton. Her mother recently fell on the ice and broke her wrist, POTTER HILL. About eighty-five people from Ash- way and Potter Hill attended the ch recital Tuesday evening . D Howard Thorp, son of William o »rp, will take a trip to North Caro- lina, for the benefit of his .health, starting today (Saturday), Janua 0. ry Arthur Clarke of this place is con- fined to his home by illness. A Dangerous Swindle. One who reads the Connecticut Ag- nent Station reports ily will soon come to the con- on that the practical utilization of have d ¢e. In one of the latest Sta- eds, Sew and quite a nur 1lletins, it is shown th: ber of the much advertised scientific stock and poultry foods are made up| larg of ds ngerous weed seeds that no food value, but that and make life a ase his troubles. The examinations feeds o show that some pound nd to eighty-six thou- nd weed steeds. Here are a few - a number of m which irable and onsider- e live and will, under nditions, promptly germinate w. Th2 weed seeds are not alw: | quickly detected by casual inspection, are variously mixed with and oat hulls, and are often mix- | ed with molasses. s are naturally not men- e statements of composi- . yet they are more important to A moderate food value may be grant- | ed to ground weed seeds, or to some of them, but it is very doubt- f small whole seeds are broken up | and digested by the animal. | und of each of these mix- ! ground.” Three warships have been | ident. Tn his annwal report President Ever, | tures b s to the farm from. five thoucand to eighty of which, in some cases a hundred, in others more than twénty-two thousand are alive. = six thousand seeds. Certain manufactyrers claim to de- roy the vitality of the weess which but in no one of re of protection to the purch: of All of these weeds are characteristic of grain screenings which are the ref- | use separated from grain, in order to make the latter marketable or fit for | milling.” Thus an analysis . | made here of wheat sqreenings showed | about 33 per cent. of fidx and cereal, 15 per cent. of foxtails cent. of bindweeds and pigweeds, 15 per cent. of weed Seeds and other spe- cies and 21 per cent. of dust, broken | seed and sand. Even such a mixture is much better than many others which often contain very little, if any, wheat or flax. An average price for screenings is! recently shrunken ton in Chicago or $16 in Connec- M M rials and charged with weéed seeds, Drawing a Distinction. Minority Legder Champ Clark and Speaker Joseph Cannon use the same words, but Mr. Clark uses them with | finer discrimination and not quite so | much profane emphasis.—The Com- moner. . One of Teddy’s Bricks. The discovery of what. scientists be- lieve to be a paleolithic stone in Ohio may be merely the dicvoery of a large brick thrown by Roosevelt at Foraker, —Louisville Courier-Journal products may be overdone. The descendants of the olden time who sanded his sugar aduteration into a science. T |inal schemer would be del - modern_inventor of disguised | exhibit of the sl for which the public pays a R e ST o i R'd Ynursa" fl and San Francisco. Pl:‘ua'::l: n?;v haz > an ab of water, which c-.nnof Siomach Trouble [Pome s e.cmes e, "ierety open to bombardment by an enemy, as p 7 Vg indeed is Portsmouth. The truth is that we have at present only four naval establishments which can be EAT ANY OF YOUR FAVORITE Sately relied upon in case of stress and FOOD WITHOUT DREAD. where the government can profitably increase its expenditures for mainte- , nance and lmpnaumon&—daogtan. gow York, Hampton Rouds an remerton, in the state of Washington. Our war- cqu THE INDIGESTIOII ships are rapidly increasing in' size, and the difficulty of keeping pace with > kigh Grade that Increase grows more formidable rts Charleston, New Orleans and Foplace the Weakened Digestive |San Francisco. We can well afford to ! multiply our equipment of docks and Diapepsin Will Stop Fermentation and [and more costly in respect of such Juices, Relieving You of Stomach 'ghops in the one case, nd notwith- standing the outlay that has been made in the others we shall be wise to abandon. them to the uses of the light draught crulsers, torpedo boatseetc., it | ALL THE LA TEST we do not relinquish them altogether. POPULAR MUSIC —Bridgeport Standard. Misery Forever, Why not start now—today and for- ever rid yourself of Stomach troun:e and Indigestion ? A dleted stomach S L gy gets the blues and grumbles. Give it PERSONS TALED ABOKUT. a onod eat, then take Pape's Diapep- - i sin to start the digestive juices work- | A. O. Calhoun of Victor, is Mis-| Wall Paper, Ln%.h_’rhere(}:'m be no dyspepsia or |sourl's honey king: He has’ 5,000 Ibs. elching of Gas or eructations of undi- |of honey from the summer flow, an . gested food; no feeling like a lump "ot |as much more will be collected this Window Shades, ead in the stomach or heartburn, sick | fall. o headache and Diaziness, and your food e — Linoleum. will not ferment and poison yopr| _One of the grievances of Mrs. Clara | jonoqy breath with nauscous odors. Black of Chicago, who sued for a di- A Pape's Diapepsin costs only 60 cents |verce, was that Ishe \msl (‘:mp;-]lefl 'or a large case at any drug store early every morning to curl her hus- here, and will relieve the most obstin- | band’s long, silky moustache. Speolal €ale of ate case of Indigestion and Upset| = . ————— Stomach in. five minutes. Rev. John Love, who was for 25| Brr@ass and lron Beds There is nothing else better to take ! years a chaplain of the City prison, ot Fo: the next en days we will con. Gas from Stomach and cleanse the |New York city, and one of the old r stomach and intestines, and besides, | Baptist ministers in this country, dled |duct a strictly cash sale in Brass and lrn.o (rlauglule will digest and prepare | recently of old age. | Iron Beds, or assimilation into the blood all your Ty BRASS food the same as a sound, healthy Mrs. George S. Ladd of Sturbridge, $50.00 Beds reduced BlsDS ch would do. Mass., was the only woman to speak stoma at the six-hour session of the com- | $40.00 Beds reduced to .. When Diapepsin works your stom ach rests—gets itself in order, cleans | mission for the betterment of country Beds reduced to $20.00 up—and then you feel like eating when | life, which was recently held in the Beda vétuoad 1o $16.00 you come to the table, and what you | court house in Boston. eat wilt do you good. —_— IRON BEDS Absolute ‘relief from all Stomach | Inheritance tax returns indicate | s0) 00 paae reduced to Misery is waiting for you as soon as |that Charles T. Barney, president of | % o you decide to beein taking Diapepsin. | the Knickerbocker Trust Co. of New $18.00 Beds reduced to Tell ist that you want|York, who killed himself during the|$15.00 Beds reduced to epsin, because you want to | panic of 1907, left property aggzregat- | 810,00 Beds reduced to ghly cured of indigestion. ing nearly $2,000,000 ‘wbove liabilities. | ¢°7'os poal Loayoca oo et e i S e e $ 5.00 Beds reduced to $ 4.00 Beds reduced to M. HOURIGAN, -4, 62-66 Main Street, ¢ Rev. Charles F. Dole, pastor of the WHAT THE PAPERS SAY. First Cengregational society, Jamaica gy A Plains, and president of Boston's Twentieth Century club, is off for a few weeks In Southern California and It is the gallant Judge Malone of [a visit to his son in Hawail The Gallant Judge. / Bristol who introduces a bill to amend — the constitution of the state by strik- | A. S. Johnson, who has just recelved ing out the word “male” in the section |a third decoration from Gustaf V is relating to the qualification of elec- | the head of a_ steamship fi ow tors.—Waterbury American. the oldést Swedish-American newsp e per (Hemlaudet) in the United and was a Chicago business man be ABBI"EHI And young Teddy, Jr, disappointed |fore his appointment as Swedish con- New Haveners the othe sht at.the | sul general at New York. sception to Governor Lilley by not — appearing again. It would be a good | In his new book “Daybreak in Tur- scheme to dock that fellow if he doesn’t | key.” Rev. Dr. James L, Barton speaks show ug t time the governu: s | of Sultan Ab-dul-Hamid as “the most il sittin n anv v staff is out in public—New | phenomena] person y Haven Union throne today.” Poet Watson was much e less civil than the reverend doctor; he —AND— A Sudden Conversion. | spoke of the sultan as” “Adbul the Congressman Boutell in the house Damned on hig infe the other day appeared as the adver- g tising agent of Jack Binn and pro- | The list of gtudents at the univer- claimed him a hero. Good. But not |Sity of Berimn 1 soon be published, so long ago a congressman named | 8ccording to the Berliner Tageblatt i owed 8 8 rage that|and, says that paper, at the head ‘of bl h(.,“‘uud”,.?",'fmi"%(;}’m}f" Bou. | the $.641 names will be that of Prince tell said unkind things' about that A‘}‘Y’%’“»‘t Wilhelm. It will appear mm:t SG. OF Batlitn e Y- ral and O “His Royal Highn Prince Augus ort of herpism—a very real and true I g oy brand, too. Why this sudden conver- | Wilhelm of Prus & lation?—Bristol Press.| ... woun princess of Sweden, who 5 |1t wint e rememperea 1s the daventer| IHE LEE & OSGOOD CO. of the Duke and Duchess of Con- pected soon to visit Ene- | are headquarters for ster of Princess Pa- | ced to the Count of | pepyy’s ADJUSTABLE FIBRE Duke of Abruzzi As to Connecticut Slums. Although unacquainted by actual in- | o “i% h what may be known as |jon of New Haven, the | telcin ear to the real | oot y can, we have |, reat favorite with| SPLINTS for fractures. a very extreme e m situation. It | King. | SURGEONS’ SILK, LIGATURES and bih® goum of | Bx-Gov. John C. Sheppard has been | NEEDLES. e o~ - | teling the Bar association of South ¢ or the other. Every con- | Cargina. that In opinion the ef- | +™AIN GAUZE and COTTON BAND- e - e e | fective, sagisfs administration of | A i i compare with oth- |y, 00" would be greatly promoted by | GES, varioua widthe, - | permitting trial to deal with PLASTER PARIS and WOVEN the facts as well as the law in their charges to the jurors, and by doing | ELASTIC BANDAGES. away with the requirement that & | pLAIN and MEDICATED ABSORS- jury’s verdict must be unanimous. ENT COTTON, Mrs Iker Fern is lecturing 1 . of the | his country for the biind. and incl- | SURGEONS' ADHESIVE PLASTER, all widths. dentally she is telling what shg knows that th but we in any Connecticut found in large ¢ Bridgeport Standard. Governor Lilley’s Criticisms Navy Approved. - the farmer. The resylt is| The farmer pays out good money | down his land to weeds and in- | tures sold | contain | S per ed with molasses and chaff or hulls, and in s2ore cases with really good feed materials, some of them seil | at prices which are nearly as high as those paid for first class feeds. ade in considerable part of {nferior mate they are dangerous cr. the farm.—Bris- | tol Press. Cone he reformin, ¢ the |about the good oueen of Roumania, now out the criticisms of | suffragist, and her opinions upon the| TERS. Gov wher of | suhject were quoted as follows: the nmittee of co: he | “Women’s rights! We have the right | SICK FEEDERS, MEDICINE found lax the | to suffer, to be pat to work, 10| GI ASSES and SPOONS. extravagance Y ey in the man- | help, to be virtuous, and to make men and stations. { s0. What more do we want?" | GRUEL TUBES, ICE BAGS, SYRIN- s | prodi agement of navy Mr. Lilley was this and of tk red ot | - Ambassador and Mrs, Davia 3. Hil,| GES, HOT WATER BOTTLES, » pre- | while they go Into soclety Hm'wwfl'v‘:l ANTISEPTIC SOLUTIONS, DIS- aid to have taken '.4" INFECTANTS, ETC. besid crookedness | in Berlin, are to punish Mr. Lilley for | position that, yns upon the pet pro- |tude should he one of reserve, and strangers, their atn- is animadve of some of the members of both houses as well as upon the local terests that grow up around navy yard everywhere. The N York Sun put this matter succinctly and strongly as follows: We have too many navy conseauently they will not undertake | to Introduge Amerfeans this vear at the conrt of the kai Mrs. Hill has : s . L o e Py vesiaenes "5¢ | Leave a prescription with as. | the Women's unfon of the American | ehureh, which is active In philantrople urds that | work. It will be compounded to your satisfaction. represent T in icular but | —— politic A these is the Kittery! After ten years of research and Point ent, known officially as | writing. L. A. Knight of Fowler. Ind., the Portsmouth station. Long ago, in | has published his historical drama, the days of wooden ships, Portsmouth . “Indlana,” a drama of progress. This was famous bost wood- | book from the pen of Mr, Knieht, is workers in the country and turned out | something new in the way of history, The Lee & OSgOOd Co, the very finest products. In this age of | and the author homes that it may be iron it is next door to worthless. Cer- | adonted over the state, recelve a pres. jan27daw tainly it is extravazantly expensive. | entation in all the schools, and in this i within easy | way Incrense the interest and knowl. There are no S anics and ar- | edee of Hooslers concerning the his- 1 they must be import- | tory of their state. Moreover, zhe‘ e O mistake will be made in selecting THIS school as the one to attend. | Hornaday stated that the rlans of the || THENEW LONDON" d overhauling after their long voy- | society, whose obiect is the pr : e. Let us hope they may enter and | vation of the huffalo in the TUnited Buslness @ue e\ FABrubeck, frm, Newlondon. depart in safety and that the work- | States, were progressing satisfactorily, Catuiogue for tie asking. approaches are narrow, President Roosevelt has been elect- lling currents, while thg | ed honorary president of the American ace for anchorage is limited in area | Bison society, and Earl Grey, governor A almost destitute of “holding | general of Canada, honorary vice npres- zned to Portsmouth for repi ass ar men and material assembled for them| . = @ ———0on— may not cost too much. Mrs. Charles J. Hughes, Jr., wife of Much to the same effect, if based I the newly elected United States sena- . Are You Opinionated ? “You ought to be. “.Especially about flour. ++Don't blame the Cook - ~ Buy . GOLD MEDAL

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