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that. a z%‘é:sé T . An Early Magnate. Ct By the strength of my haad I #one it, and by my wisdom; for prudent.' And I bave removed the bonds of the people and have robbed 5§ Sheir treasures, and I have put down | ¢joneq Th the inhabitants like a vallant mam. And my hand hath found as a mest | coup) the riches of the people, snd as one gathered eggs that are left, have I gathered all the earth, and there was nome that moved the wing, or opened the mouth or peeped.—Sennacherib. A Trifle Uncertain. Little Jean's parents were enthusias- tic bridge-players, and Jean was more or less familiar with the sight of you! brought suit for escape the search hnnu:d.; The latter has agalnst his r-in-law alienating his wife's Useful Work of Blacksnake. There are many farmers in- this country who are in love with the blacksnakes which they have on their ections. ‘eceremony. On Common Sense ani 3 Common gense confuses the fact of experi i % f st : Ul £ i eards.. At Sunday school one day the | places ‘and believe the reptiles are teacher had been glving 2 talk on | better than any cats or dogs in ve- |Dess, on the other hand, cannot per- be well. Davill. Finally she held up-4 little col- | moving the rats and mice from the ceive any distinction between what is i i Lee & ored print of David dressed in royal | premises. It is a well kndwnfact that | and what it imagines—it confuses: then, what on earth is the use of go- Everything Originates * yobes, and asked: “What child can tell | the snakes destroy hundreds of pests dreams with reality.—Henri Frederic ing?" y s Paliorsd e who this i8?” Out of the silence | in a season, and for this reason they | Amiel ' . . sentiment against the A Speedy Substitute, piped little Jean’s voice: “I think it's | are liked by the farmers. There are - 3 Instructive. oll history, for it knows that “1 would love, l!. only once, to have » king, but it may be a jack!” some men Who would cause all sorts Do a Thing and Don't Talk. . | 108 besides. Women develop great | “Your friend is a literary suthor | yrg not ultimates, but that & state of | & swell luncheon.” “Why not try one of trouble to 8 man who would harm | Just do a thipg, and don’t talk about left without a men. T | ity is he? Has he ever dome construc- ,i,q {5 the ancestor of everything.— of dried apples and water™—DBalth 8 pr 5 ' American. How a War Set a Fabhion. a reptile of this kind.—Toccos (Ga.) ft. This is the great secret of suc- | f8ct, all the widows we know are tive . work?' "Nn; destructive. He's | myorgon. more The calabash pipe is one of the aft. | Becord- cess in all enterprises. Talk meafis | Betting along a great deal better than | a book reviewer.”—Qutlook. ; er results of the South African war. discussion; discussion means lrrits- | the married women.—Atchison Globe. Really a Waste of Time. Dolng Their Best. o supply the demand to which popu- Beliefs of Gamblers, tlon; irritation means opposition, and \ His Genus. “One of the reasoms why it's silly “Those Comeups are determined » Jar taste has given rise quite an in- | Many people, especially among those opposition means hindrance always, - Coffins Made of Paper. “T'd be ashamed to hang around 8 | to cry over spilt milk,” says the Phil- _-th & noise in the world of soglety. dustry has grown up in South Africa, | Who gamble, bave a, profound bellef | Whether you are right or wrong— | Some undertakers, whose customers | woman as Harry does about his 8- of Folly, “is that it has prob- | ‘AT® they? Well, ther're loud where the farmers are regularly plant- | in lucky and unlucky numbers. An (Sarah Grand. are poor people, are using coffins | ancee. Why, he's just a tame cat” | gply been watered sufficlently by the enough.’ ing calabash specially for pipes, while | 0ld Italian woman at Nice was an in- A ‘of paper. The coffins are made | “No; he is her pet dear.” milkman’ already.” planting is already being varried out | Veterate player at the “loto” stakes, | ™ Here’s Candor. in styles of pressed paper pulp, - But Net the End. fn the south of France and evem in | Which are decided by numbers. She | 1 like to be complimented once jn | Just the same as the common paper Always Plain to Others. T g “Folled again,” sald the chocolate Australia. % bad no system ‘properly so-talled, but | a while and I erfioy being fattered,” | buckets. ' When they are varnished It never takes other people long to Amity Needed to Bind. @rop, as he was enveloped in his sl \ . %i. | wherever she went she kept her eyes | sayg the editor of the Howard Cour- | and stained they regemble polished | find out when a man is fooling him- Shakespeare: The amity that wis- | yop wrapping—Harvard Lampoos Our Friends. Women are more loyal friends, es- pecially to men of genius, than are men to each other. That is one rea- son, perbaps, why the man of genius usually surrounds himself with petti- coats, tather than with admirers of the stermer sex. He wishes to be opén for numbers, and whether it was on & tramway car or 4 steamer, & sack of coals or a matchbox, she used to regard the numbers she collected in this haphazard way as good for her “petits billets.” The Old Man and Death. ant, “but there’s onme old girl around here making me mighty tired by claiming me as one of her old beaus.” ~—Atlanta Constitution. A Correct Diagnoajs. The Doctor—"“Ab, yes! Very nerv- ous, irregular pulse, palpitation of the wood, and in point of durability it is claimed they are much bettér than ‘wooden opes, Adoption of Metric System. The first European nation to adopt the metric system of weights and | measures was France. This was in self. Chinese First Breadmakers. It is stated that the first bread was made by a Chinese. Germany’s Great Advantage, German soil feeds nine-tenths of her dom knits not, folly may easily untle. Business OF EASTERN CONNECTICUT AND WESTERLY, R. L Directory praised when living 8s well as when | An old man that had traveled & Iong | heart and feverish. Letme ses your ' 1790, and was followed by Holland in | pegple. 7 dead.—London Sketch. way with a great bundle of fagots | tongue?” ‘“There's the mat- | 1816, by Belgium in 1820, and by Swe- | - pe—— NORWICH FIRM3 MEATS AND PROVISIONS . found himself so weary that he flung | ter with me, sir. I just came to ask | den in 1889. - How's This? - it down, and called upon death to ge- for your daughter’s band!™ We ofter One Hundred Dollars Re- AUTOMORBILE STATION, By Jovel W im ex- ard £ f Catarrh it - J. Coit, 6 Otis Street. Automol . *“] must make more friends, don't :::r -~ ]:m’.laxh:::::!:tfill:ehnb: at Boycott Put on Islands. not b-agur.?dygufi:.u'- Cmrrll:‘ (‘:m?:l :'ad Blzy'Eln MWM Genaral & 1 British cocoa firms have decided | E. J. CH 'Y & CO., Toledo, Oo. chine work. Johbing. 'Phone. you know,” said the Englishman. “You see what I mean? Heb? Ihave & pretty poor bunch of friends, upon my ward I have. Among the lot of them, when all s said and doue, there fsn’t one that I ean borrow more than his call and asked him what he want. ed. “Pray, good sir,” said the -old man. “just do me the favor to help me up with my bundle of fagots.”— Asgop. Oak, Granite and Irenl Privations, sacrifice, incessant tofl by day and intense study by night . . . often fashion great Americans out of rough hearts of oak encased In frames not to use any more cocoa from the Portuguese islands of Sao Thome and Principe because of the fll treatment of the natives laboring on the planta- tions. We, the undersigned, have known ¥. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, believe him perfectly honorable business transactions and fnancially and in all | Peck, BUILDING MATERIAL. Mc Wil Co., 47-65 West jtroet. able to carry out any obligations made | Lime, Portland Cemant, Pariod Roofing. bt wiirs S doadrs.orsiniac 1k dehmmaeimoend, by Ris firm. WALDIN3, KINNAN & MARVIN, BOTTLER EEAE Geo, J der, Ros= §_ 4§ o way, PR0T taveres Fker, Nowey o analitg=ind PAINTING. $25 from. There lsm't. Upon my o ve —_— T holeesle Druggists, Toleds, O. | I Juckel con Mavke: dnd Wates O | Spring _te % A d HI T . Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internal- | A complete line of the Lest Ales, your house. & word! L A DY ** Influence of Womien. Iy, doting directly upon the bloog and | and Wines epecially Rottled for fam° | per cent, pure: rman foun co £ - use. Delivery. - orislhas o Life Should Not Be AIl Work. The hand that wears the glove | monials sent free. mf,.' 5o :’., M‘;'J’.‘ &"%‘-p M.‘,,:-m.‘. o by a gendarme lying unconscious in FOR SALE. Re-Soled In Fifty-Five Seconds. Life is a spectacle and has & lot | ought to be as powerful as the hand | Sold by all Drugsists. A now Kind of boot is about to be | 3 "teble ut St Suipice, 1 the CBOn | o fun in the changes of scenes If you | that rocks the cradle, especially when | fose Hall's Famlly Pills for constl-| giaps 5100 3 load. Norwich Wood WILLIMANTIC FIRMS ut on the market, the sole aund heel | °f Neuchatel, Switzerland The &% | watch out. Do not take your work | reinforced: by the foot that wears the e Teot. THRBEICUR i, Bveakiin B STIMPSON'S STABLES, of which, when worn out, can be us- | °F TR R P PROT 8 wled to | 100 serfously. Do it the best you | hosiery—Louisville Courier-Journal. A Night Rider’s Raid. Ta. S 2 L T Matg street. Then screwed and new leather put fn thetr | JEES FOU Pl ¥ took out | ¥RO% how, then shut the desk and m'l;:; Y:lmur" o:."gfi: ".E “’“fi}i CONTRACTOR AND JOBBING 'nuek‘-c and '-m pe~ place. The inventor claims that ) agon 0 off snd make merry. our, bed o, thb. you ef # gy ; s his pocket knife, and amputated two As to Advice. e yo rest. . B. Beckwith, 30 West n Street. pelr of boots can soled and heeled X . e ——— 4 ¢+ sorte fu » gaid | With Dr. King’s Life Pills. They nev- ntractor end Builder. Jobbing work 4n 65 seconds, se 26 per cent. on of his toes. Then he fainted, and is m 5 dat acter T i ‘er distress or inconvenience, but al- | of =il kinds promptly aitended to. WESTERLY FIRMS Soi e ut ord ook rasated mow in hospital. Postman Has Walked Far. Uncle “Is dat after I gits & lot | yays cleanse the system, g Colds, — 2 Thomas Craness, a postman of At- | of advice I's got fo go around an’ git | Headache, Constipation, Malaria, 25¢ at “THE FOUR-MINUTE RECORD,”. m Consolation. Hleborough, Norfolk, England, has re- | & lot mo’ advice 'bout which advice The Lee & Osgood Co. Come In and hear it. It's something A W, p Parted In the Middle. “Bery,” sald Farmer Hay, “I see - ihat since ye have come back from col- Jege yo wear yer hair spiiced right petter to have sold at costthan s never to have sold at all. ceived the imperial service medal and pension. During 36 years he walked 212,000 miles. I's g'ineter take.” And in Moderation. Language !s a wonderful and often Foley’s Honey and Tar not c that weaken the stops chronic constitution and develop into consump- tion, but heals and stre: s the only great. Geo. P. Yeomans, 233 Lafayette St. Redl Batate and Insuranoe. Potter Bullding. ‘Phons connections SODA WATER. i thing, and should be |lungs. It affords comfort and relief in . Now, hyur's all I Irish Proverb. Senator Eikins of . West Virginia :.:“‘,n gc : change, | the worst cases of chronic bronchitis Ladies' Tailor, Murray'’s Pure Freit Syrups. Letpe Buccess often leads to insolence. boasts .tha the can read Gmlk"’ud o W dllcr:tlln:lx B uth;-, hay te:ver and lung trouble. l:::vm g | assortment of Candy. Fruit, etc, at § Latin in the original. X - Lee&O'twOCo. ' Rallroad Ave. P. A. De Rocoo. Irish Industry Growing. Bacon curing factories are increas. jng in number in Ireland. The Ros- erea factory is worked on the ‘co-0p- erative basis and has 3,800 share Why Physicia ASTORIA has met with pronounced favor on the part of physicians, pharmaceutical societies and medical authorities. It is used by physi- cians with results most gratifying. The extended use of Castoria is unquestionably the result of three facts: First—The indisputable evidence that it is harmless: Second—That it not only allays stomach pains and quiets the nerves, but assimilates the food: Third—It is an agreeable and perfect substitute for Castor Oil. It is absolutely safe. It does not con- tain any Opium, Morphine, or other narcotic and does not stupefy. Itis s Recommend Castoria unlike Soothing Syrups, Bateman’s Drops, Godfrey’s Cordial,etc. Thisisa good deal for a Medical Journal to say. Our duty, however, is to expose! danger and record the means of advancing health. The day for poisoning innocent children through greed or ignorance ought to end. To our knewl- edge, Castoria is a remedy which produces composure and health, by regulating the system—not by stupefying it—and our readers are entitled to the information.—Hall's Journal of Health. po oy~ iy - E._‘:"T_;":"::..;‘:.‘E : : Letters from Prominent Physicians Addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher. ¥, av The Kind You Have Dr. W. L. Leister, of Rogers, Dr. W.F. Wallacs, of Bradford, Dr. B. Halstead Scot#, of Chica- _ Dr. L. O, Morgan, of So. Amboy, Ark,, says : “ As a practicing phy- sician I use Castoria and like it very much.” Dr. W. T. Seeley, of Amity, N. Y., says: ‘1 have used your Cas- toria for several years in my practice and have found it a safe and reliable remedy.” Dr. Raymond M. Evarts, of Santa Ynez, Cal,, says: “After using . your Qastoria for children for years it annoys me greatly to have-an ignorant druggist substitute some- thing else, especially to the pa- tient’s disadvantage, as in this case. N. H.,says: “Iuse your Castoria in my practice, and in my family.” Dr. Wm. J. McCrann, of Omaha, Neb., says : *‘ As the father of thir- teen children I ocertainly know something about your great medi- cine and aside from myown family experience, I have, in my years of practice, found Castoria & popular and efficient remedy in almost every home.” * Dr. Howard James, of New York, City, says : “It is with great pleas- ure that I desire to testify to the g0, IlL, says : “I have prescribed your Castoria often for infants during my practice and find it very satisfactory.” Dr. William Belmont, of Cleve- land, Ohio, says : * Your Castoris stands first in its class. In my thirty years of practice I can say I never have found anything thatso filled the place.” v Dr. R. J. Hamlen, of Detroit, Mich., says : I prescribe your Cas- toria extensively as I have never found anything to equal it for chil- dren's troubles. I am aware that N. J. says: ““I prescribe your Casto- ria every day for children who are suffering from constipation, with better effect than I receive from suy other combination of drugs."” Always Bought and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the sigfia;' ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, . and has been made under his personal supervision since its infancy. Allt;w ‘no one to" deceive you in Check Put on Amateurs, The government of-the British Hast Africa protectorate has prohibited any person experimenting with wire- less telegraphy without a license from ¢ the governor. Look on the Bright.®ide. & Reflect upon your present blessings, i i i : I enclose herewith the wrapper of edicinal virtue of your Castoria. ¢here are imitations in the field, but of which every man has many; not z . . £ . ko st telottitase ot whith il this. All Couqter&its, Imi- the imitation. ;“g: “"‘m '.'l"‘"'w m“*"w"""- 1 always see that my patients get g » Fletchers. men have some.—Dickens. »i > Best In Philosophy. There is humerein: all. things, and that is the truest philosophy which teaches us how to find and‘enjoy it— W. 8. Gilbert. ‘Dr. R. M. Ward, of Kansas City, Mo., says : “‘ Physicians generally do not prescribe proprietary prepa- rations, but in the case of Castoria my experience, like that of many other physicians, has taught me to . make an exception. I.prescribe your Castoria in my practice be- cause I have found it to-be a thor- oughly reliable remedy for chil- - dren's compiaints. Any physician ‘who bas raised a family, as I have, will join me in heartiest recom- mendation of Castoria.” and have obtained excellent results from its administration to other children in my practice.” Dr. J. R. Clausen, of Philadel- phia, Pa., says : *“The name that your Castoria has made for itself tations and “ Just-as-good” are but Experiments that triffe with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experi(\}\ce against Experiment.’ Dr. Channing H. Oook, of Saint Louis, Mo., says: “I have used your Castoria for several years past in my own family and have always found it thoroughly efficient and never objected to by children, ‘which is a great consideratien in view of the fact that most medi- - cines of this character are obnox- ious and therefore difficult of ad- ministration. As a laxative I consider it the peer of anything that I ever prescribed.” The One True Fact of Lie. 1 know of no more fact than the unquestionable ability of a L4 man to elevate his life by.consclous endeavor.—Th 5 bt iR heartily endorse it and believe it an excellent remedy.” “One Use far the Reot of Bvi. Lyndon: ey may net be able GENUINE . Bears the Signature of ; L