Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
¥ of mail matter are hauled free that| g. Telephone, 210. ich, Suesday, Sept. 7, 1908. eesnanssassssssssentrnseny Circulation of Bulletin. | The Bulletin has the largest cir- 3 culatfon of any paper in Bastern Connecticut, and from three to four times larger than that of any In Norwich. It is delivered to over 2,000 of the 4,053 houses i Nor- wich, and read by ninety-thres per cent. of the people. In Windham it s delivered to over 900 hou! in Putnam and Danlelson to over 1,100, ara in sl of these places it {s considered the locel daiy. Hastern Connecticut has forty- nine towns, one hundred and sixt; five post office dlstricts and forty- one rural free delivery routes. The Bulletin is sold In every | | | routes in Eastern Connecticut. . CIRCULATION 1901, average . 1906, average. | ILLUSTRATED THE BULLETIN'S BOOK. It is nof surprising that a great deal of Interest is felt jn the pictures which are to be a feature of the 250th an- niversary Jubilee book—what they !are to be and whit they are to repre- ' sent. Portraits of the officers and chairmen of committees and the guests | of the city will number a score or two and then there will be photographs of the decorated streets, the parade, the performances and objects of spe- cal interest, it is expected, will make | mbout 50 pages. Where there are large assemblages of people the pictures will be made large enough to make the Qdentification of citizens possible. Where are quite a number of these photographs which will be given a full pace. 1t is the purpose.of The Rulietin # o make this book so attractive that ft will be in prompt demand when it sppears in December for delivery. The Bulletin has had submitted to it for examination about 200 photo- graphs already, and expects to have others submitted. The letterpress and the illustrations will represent the best part of the an- nivérsary celebration, and the book will be prized for its accuracy and value by Norwich peopls everywhere. Order books on the coupon to be found in The Bulletin's advertising columne. . THE POSTOFFICE DEFICIT. The postal deficit of $20,000,000 last year shows that there is a rare chance to improve this great .public servic by cutting out unbusinesslike methods and doing business with a view of making accounts balance. There are oo many people who think it is legit- dmate to bleed' the postoffice depart. ‘ment to death. It would be interest ing to know how many thousand tons the railroads have to be pald for. A shortage of $50,000 a day, Sundays not | ‘excepted, is too much, and it is not surprising that President Taft does mot like it, or that Postmaster General Hitchcock Is resolved to exert all his | husiness ability to stop the leak. The | registration of letters below actual costs s said to be accountable for $3,000,000 of the loss, and it s hinted that the money order service is re- sponsible for some of it. Franked mat- ter is responsible for much more. It s a difficult task to inaugurate econ- omies here that will accomplish the purpose, but the people hope Mr. Hitchcock will succeed in his en- deavor. HOW WOMAN 1S SPREADING HERSELF. Most of us are not aware of how woman has broadened her sphere in the past half century. The home and the school house are far from being sufficient to meet the requirements of her genius. In this day she dares wenture anywhere man does. At & meeting of universal suffragists in New York, recently, a lecturer stat- ed that: The plumbing trade is followed by 426 women in the United States. The dental profession is gra 786 others. b s More than 1,000 are architee buliders. i ’lr‘:" than 3,300 are in the pulpit. e law profession is foll i 1,010. il Five hundred and forty-five are car. ters. ~ EBighty-four " meers. | One hundred and sixty-seven are masons. One hundred and ninety-three do - Dblacksmithing for a livelihood. More than 1,200 work in mipes. Undertaking is performed by 323 men, . They. are running farms and fac- tories and mines and bakeshops and ipiloting ships in all parts of the globe. “The women who are merely ornamen- are stationary engi- | tham complain that they have not the town and on all of the R. F. D.s( | for another. | satisfied. | are growing less in number every he world needs workers more it needs ornaments. 1ad 1§ to be found who is glad school Is about to be opened, . glad parent ls everywhere in chief t has been a summer which has been referred to as being singuler. It has not been just like any other summer in the memory of zm There has ot been’ a dryer r hereabouts forty-three years, and we certainly hope that there will be no duplicate of it for forty-three years more. tember is acting in a way which in- dicates an early black frost; but the black frost will. be the end of the Zardens, likely, and the beginning of weven weeks of the kind of bright and growing westher which we should have had in July and August. The summer resorts are all closing and the schools and colleges opening, and the ways of business are becom- ing normal, and with the line storm about the 20th the astronomers and almanac makers will declare the sea- son at an end. It will make no dif- ference how much like June October is, or how mild the weather remains until mid-November—the summer has made its record and left us in rather regrettable condition for winter sub- sistence, THE ONLOOKERS. The people who should be married, but are mot, are invited by a Phila- delphia paper to tell why they are not for a series of prizes offered, and is hearing dally from a large number of them. There is one thing patent— they all cherish a hope. The bar to matrimony seems to be conditions over which fhey have no control. Few of nciting passion—most of them aver that they have not the ability to enter upon a matrimonial venture. There are quite as many ifs and ands mixed up in these replies as reasons why. Some, of course, find such pleasure in their occupatioris that they do not care to seek it elsewhere; and some are conscious of having and enjoying homes better than they can provide There seems to be a general opinion that love cannot stand slone—that it needs a lot of coin to stand on. These onlookers would do better if they would forget mathemat- Cold calculations Mat- fes and dive in. never yet promoted matrimony. rimony that looks like foolhary at the start has sometimes worn a halo in the end. The peculiar fact is that those married would be sorely tried were they compelled to give a good reason how they came to do it. EDITORIAL NOTES. September insists upon a cool intro- duction, anyhow. The frost was on the pumpkin in eastern Connecticut on Sunday night. Happy thought for today: What we haven't got we do not have to be thankful for. The real Brenner cent is now worth eight cents e Condemnation pays good dividends. Having learned the w Dr. Cook may let himself as an aeroplane pilot in the near future. The Galveston 8 page edition on Septemiber Ist. other sign of genuine prosperity. When Dr. Cook decided to do things in the winter, he won the game. The old error has been clearly shown up. 1t is now believed the antics of the joy riders result from a mistaken no- tion that they are running fiying ma- chines instead of automobiles. The automobile manufacturers can- not get all the skilled labor they need. There is opportunity for good work- men everywhere. The man who sues because of the allenated affections of his wife would not know of their value if he did not have a rich enemy. - The little red school house has got to come up to date. It must teach more than the “three R's” ig future, as that doesn't fill the bill. Wellman's dash is 8o fresh in the minds of the people that he does not are to express an opinlon upon the dash of Dr. Cook. m The traveling American school teacher is a source of revenue and hope to the steamship lines in sum- mer. England does not join in the wel- come to Dr. Cook. It will have to when there is no more room for doubt. If Mr. Rockefeller could make Heave en as sure for himself as he has Stan- dard he would have reason to be If the discovery of the North pole is of such little. importance, what have men been sacrificing time, money and lives for in a search for it cover- ing four centuries? Here is the no-breakfast fad old enough to wear whiskers and excite the medical fraternity of New Zeal- and, and it is referred to in Philadel- phia as a new thing! Thirty thousand square miles of territory on top of the world does not amount to much, says the state de- partment. That depends upon how much radium there is in it! An Ohio bachelér ventures to write a book upon the proper training of | children. singing of the midnight lullaby and the various uses of paregoric he should remain silent. Much Cooler in Peking. Ex-Vice President Fairbanks has got Until_he understands the | 30 to Peking on his journey around the world.—Boston Globe, Must Be Money in It. Some people play golf, but John D, Rockefeller seems to make a business ittsburg Gaszette-Times. dy. Jeft Davis of Arkansas must be a vietim of foul play. He hasn't been making any foolish noises recemtly.— Chicago Record-Herald. f: g The Missing Ones, The Roosevelt trophies to be housed in Washington do not include a Jot of scalps that he collected before going abroad.—~Philadelphia Ledger. Encouraging Precedent. _Mr Harriman should not despair. No man ever had a worse stomach than John D. Rockefeller, and look at him now.—Los Angeles Times. New Signs Needed, It begins to look as if it might be necessary in these days of aeroplanes u;“ ehmg.o t;l:e’l'm. of "l:n parks to ep Tees."—| w PuMican. Just as ably, 80, by extremely ber when his eyes Therefore, his case was vere. He grabbed the young man just com. ing out of the door of the summer ho- tel and %flw ed, such was his emotion, *“ ,” he got out, “who is ‘onderful girl just get- Be can ‘Whitcomb,” said “She lives “Well, she can have me,” said Ted- as he watched her approach the That was the acme of praise from him. He straightened his tie nervous- ly as she passed him., There was a good deal of excuse for his exciteme Marjorfe Whitcomb had cyrly, butter- gold hair, brown eyes with evenly pen- ciled brows and a complexion that de- fied tan and sunburn. Moreover, she walked like a young goddess and, as a goddess, was used to adoration. Fifteen minutes later Teddy was bowing before her and ten minutes af- ‘ter that was paddling her down the lake in her own canoe. “He is certainly the swift boy!" commented the astonished young man who had been shanghaled into per- forming the introduction. In the three days of that week which Teddy passed at the lake he kept up the same speed, much to the disgust of other young men who admired Mar- jorle. He danced, swam, rowed and walked with her and did them all equally well. When he left everybody said that it looked like an awful attack of the real thing on both sides. Here- tofore Marjorie had always distributed her favors, but she had seemed quite content to be with Tedd Then the next week-eénd Teddy and his brother Bert came down tagether. To the amazement of the rocking chair brigade, which had picked out the lit- tle Summers girl to pair off with Bert, the brothers both shadowed Marjorie for one day and then Teddy retired to the background and the little Summers girl, while his brother Bert duplicated Teday’s record. Bert had cut out Ted- dy, who had submitted more or_less gracefully. Moreover, the little Sum- mers girl was quite pretty enough pro- vided one ceased looking at Marjorfe. The slight edge on his temper from ch Teddy suffered as a result of b rie’s cruel treatment of him aid- ed him in sternly forgetting her. In the three days in which he escorted tha Summers girl about he learned to look at Marjorie, now smiling beguilingly into Bert's eves, with an utterly cold and impersonal gaze. All the way back to Chicago Teddy listened grimly to Bert's rhapsody on Marjorie. When they both returned for the next week-end, accompanied by their mutual friend Joe, who was ‘was | two v six ug‘:.u l“ Jovial manner, w! eried, dock. “She she’d meet He indicated her to Joe with all the repressed pride of one on the < mumm-m-nm e and flufty and Joe was ly “Gee ':'onlmuh: t last, when he A a rtially recovered. “Say, shes a 2% ‘ win) “Iil jntroduce you,” promised Bert, kindly. Thai evening at the hop in the hotel Joe danced with jorie six times, walked the veranda with her half an hotr _ abd otherwise obliterated Bert "W the landscape. ‘ou will bring over your good look- friends with you, will you?” in- quired the highly tified Teddy of his disgruntled brother. Time had aided him in getting over his own violent attack and betrayal and the little Summers girl was looking extremely pretty that evenin, ‘Aw, cut it out!" was the sharp re- ply. Bert's wound was fresh .and he was strongly irritated. He was at the point where rage and jealousy and sur- prise were warring violently with no odds. “Joe's doing it on purpose.” “And Marjorie i letting him," re- minded Teddy. Revenge sometimes is sweet. “T pelleve,” sald Bert with an effort, “I'll ask Daisy Summeérs for the next danee.” “I believe you won't” sald Teddy, Armly. “There’s a perfectly good 100k- ing bunch of girls sitting over in that corner and you go pick one out and leave my girl alone.” Luck favored the abandoned young man and as Bert, with a dream of a Gibson girl on his arm, waltzed by Joe and the treacherous Marjorie he held his head high. Marjorie’s house guest's brother from the east arrived the following day and naturally as hostess she had to trams- fer her attention to him. The joit was a hard one for Joe, who fancied that he had much such headway the evening before. “Marjorie,” explained Bert to him, seriously, “is mighty pretty, but she's a heartless, reckless litte fiirt. If you'd been sensible, like Ted and 1z, and picked out the steady sort of irl, you'd have someone to go around with up here” He departed with & great show of haste to where the Gibson gir] ngly awaited him. Teddy grinned after him. Then he turned the grin on the forlorn Joe. “Cheer up!” he said. “You'll feel petter next time you come. Why, just look at Bert and me. Excuse me, I'm going walking with Daisy Summers.”— Chicago New 7PERiSBNS TALKED ABOUT Danjel T. Ames, who had won na- tional prominence as a handwriting expert, and who has been retained in many celebrated cases, both in the east and in California, died at his home in that state recently. Miss Evelyn Mitchell, one of _the youngest women scientists in the Uni- ted States, who is now doing import- ant work for the government at the Smithsonian institution, is preparing to write a book on gnat: Col. John B. Rodman, retired, son of Gen, Rodman, inventor of the Rod- man gun, died in San Francisco of a wound received at Santiago while serving as captain of the Twelfth Uni- ted States regiment. Sir Edward Hobart Seymour. ad- iral of the fleet, G. O. B, O. M, G. C. Q. 0., K. C, B, will be sent to this country by King Edward in com- mand of the British squadron that will take part 4n the Hudson-Fulton celebration. Miss Bertha Shaefer is the manager of a theater in Dusseldorf, and has recently translated “The Merry Wid- ow Remarried,” originally written in German. She has been visiting' in this country and is very successful in the theater business. Not for Building Purposes. Conerete democt ¢ Mr. Bryan and Eenator Bailey.—Charleston News and Couris Man for the Job. W, J. Bryan has so far not had the nominatien for manager of the Wash- ing baseball club thrust upon him— Washington Post. Has Plenty of Company. Mr. Weliman will be home about in time to merge his excuses with those of the managers of the losing baseball teams. Tiliman's Mistake. Taft is the “tool of a great machine. Looks Mke the motor at this distance.—Atlanta Con- stitution. Feels Better Now. Uncle Joe's unpardonable sin was in depriving Fowler of a chairmansihp. Fowler found rellef. but little satisfac- tion, in words.—Nashville American. The ‘Special Need. Throughout the country there is a clamor for more laws. Some people seem to think that when an evil ap- pears all that is to.be dome is to “make a law.” It isn't more law that is needed. It is more of the law-abid- ing spirit in the people that make the laws for themselves.—Boston Herald. —————— Cured Hay ver and Summer Cold. STATE OF OHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO, Lugas Count A 'y makes oath th each and every case of Catarrh t cannot be cured .by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before subscribed in my presence, thi day of De- cember. A. D. (Seal) Hall's Catarrh Cure Is d a tly on for testimonials_fre: CHENEY & CO. Toledo, O. Sold by all Druswi o ail Drugg!s c. Take Hall's F‘::qu Pl pation. for censti- A Narrow Escape. tnsonville, Del., years ago 1 was thin and sick, and coughed all the time, and if I did not have consumption, it was near to it. I commenced using Foley’s Honey and Tar, and it stopped my cough, and I :m n'ow entirely well, and have gained wenty- po 2 th Quick! of Buckle: nig e i lie She Ty PIMPLES And Blackheads Prevented and Cured by Cuticura. mg:nuytmu eh‘t with Gufima. ment, Cure. Ly ¥ Soap for bathing the face as often ss agresable. Cuticura Soap Oint- ment are the world's wfil:lurpbr; serving, 3 ying mfi‘.‘flf‘ , and for all 3 a5 for the mm% nursery. o Individuality Is What Counts Tn Photography. Bringing out the real pmmg, the fine points In cheracter, the little traits that make us what we are. Toned down by the natural spirit of an artist Into perfect accord. Not a thing of paper and pasteboard with a ready-made look. Ir you want a photo of your real 1f, or what your friends see to love and admire, call on LAIGHTON, | The Photographer, opposite Norwieh Savings Soclety. auglsd Carriage and Automobile Painting Trimming Carriage and Wagen Work of all kinds Anything on wheels built to erden PRICES AND WORK RIGHT, The Scott & Clark CORPORATION, 4 531-5!5 North Main Straet. Orders taken for all kinds of Hair Goods. Your own Combings made up. Hair Ornaments, Toilet Requisites, Chiropody, ' Manicuring, Shampooing, - Face and Scalp Massage. Fannie M. Gibson m:mm Tel. 505 The Thames National Bank REMOVED TO 4 Broadway, Ceniral Building Plumbing Repairs Don’t think because we are a firm having a “large shop” that we charge more for small jobs. In fact, the opposite is true. Our expense is less in proportion than some of the “little fel- lows” and we buy in greater quantitics, so you receive the benifit of lower prices. Try us for the next work, whether large or small. OUR WORK IS GUARANTEED. ROBERT BROWN ESTATE, 56, 57, 59 West Maia Stroast. Telephone 133. - What and Where to Buy In Norwich ATTENTION! SPECIAL! | WELL, WHY Not TRY SUNNY MONDAY SOAP? Wa carry in stock a complete line 4 of Cushion Soled and Arch Suppoert |, Makes washing easy, Fairy for ot Cushion Soled and Arch Support| totier use. Pummo for the shop. Gly- cerine for shampooing Rubber Heels. Everything necessary | “giour ig g little cheaper. It it will for the relief of troubled feet. It will 1o to vour advantage te investigate our | St&Y 80 it will please all concerned. m. Give us a call and be convinced we tell the truth. THAMESVILLE STORE. Joseph F. Smith, FLORIST 200 Main Street, Norwich. Iyia 52 Central Avs. Better than Oats UBIKO HORSE and STOCK FEED SOLD BY A. R. MANNING, Telephone. Yantic, Conn. augloa | HEADQUARTERS for anything in the Mill Remnant line. Woolens, Flannels, Dress Goods, Cot- tons and Silks. Prices very low and a large stock to choose from. Call and see me at the MILL REMANANT STORE, 201 West Main St. John Bloom, Prop. Particular People Patronize Rogers’ Domestic Laundry. There's a good reason for it. Tel. 903-2. Rear 37 Frankiin 8t All roads lead 6th, 7th and 8th, where the Fiity-fiith Annual Fair will be held. As has been our custom for a great many years, we shall have an exhibit in the Exhibition Hall, advertising our various lines, and we shall be pleased to meet all our customers and their friends at this time. Bear in mind " BARSTOW & C0.'S store is the local home of the RICHMOND RANGE where at all times will be found a complete line of these ranges. Do not fail te examine the RICHMONDS we shall have at the Fair, and a demonstartion will be given all who are interested. Remember the name— RICHMOND Do It Now Have that old-fashioned, unsanitary plumbing replaced by new and mod- ern open plumbing. It will repay you in the incpease of health and saving of doctor's bills. Overbauling and re- fitting thoroughly dome. Let me give you a figure for replacing all the old Dlumbing with the modern kind that will keep out the sewer gas. The work will be first-class and the price reasonable. J. E. TOMPKINS, 67 West Main Stre DONT WORRY; It Makes Wrinkles. Warry over ill-health does your health no good, and merely causes mfifllfl. that make you look older you are. sick, den't but el i to make yearself wall. o ‘we repeat the words of thouaands auglsd Fresh Variety Fish prices. Everything in Sea Food In its season. WM. H. ROBINSON, 2 Porgi Cod, Blue- ‘Blackfish, at low lum 1n e Bul- Elsctricity_for Power CHANGE IN PRICE The price to be ch: nd porations for al rent electricity for power changed by the unders| "lld to effect on September 1st, 150§, that i II( all bills rendered as of Septe: r 1st, 1509, for aiternating current elec- ugus . to nnv-nb:en :l' sinc ll.= i lowing schedul 1 to 500 Kilowatt Hours, §c per kilo- ‘watt Hour. Over 500 Kilowatt Hours, 5¢ for first :00 and 2¢ for each additional kilowatt e last previous ing to the fol- EXAMPLE, Number of K. W. H. used. 1000 .$25.00 . 10.00 Norwich, July 26, 1909. JUHN McWILLIAMS, GILBERT 8. RAYMO EDWIN A. TRACY, Board of Gas and Electrical Commis- sioners. Jys0d CLOSING OUT SALE OF SURPLUS STOCK means money saved for persons - de- siring to furnish or sefurnish their homes. Don't fall to visit our store during the next few days and take ad- vantage of the many extraordinary values in Home Furnishings * Shea & Burke 37-41 Main Street. suglsd E \ of Rubber We Mave It* GO TO THE Rubber Store FOR YOUR UT0 TIRES Better equipped than ever be- fore to handle your trade. All new goods — fully guaranteed. We carry all sizes in stock all the time to meet your needs. Manuafcturers’. agents for Goed- rich, Diamond, Fisk, G. & J. d Michelin Tires. Dealers In all other makes. Buy now while the prices are Low. Alling Rubber Co., 74-76 Main 8¢. Norwich. 162 State St. New Londom. Opecating 15 Stores. Purchasing ’ MARSHALL'S Ascney. 164 Main Sireet. Here you can buy ALL KINDS of Dress Goods, Silks and Coat Linings, Ete, at“prices 1lc to 31c per yard LCWER than any “Big"” Store prices. A guaranteed saving of from 10 10130 per cent. Agency for LeWandols Best French Dyers and Cléansers. With Norwich Cir. Library. Paris Fashions For Fall Season 1909-10 Received You are invited to call and see the Fall Parisian and New York Fashlons, and also prepare yourself with a suit for the Fall. Reasonable prices for early callers. S. LmTI;dles' Tallor \ 278 Main St, Room 1 May Building. aughd PAINTING BY CONTRACT See that you get what you pay for. We do work by contract and by the day and guarantee money value. The Fanning Studios, 31 Willow St. auglsd No Building in Norwich will ever be too large for us to bulid. All we ask is an opportunity te bid for the job. Competition ls keen and compels close figuring, but years of experience has taught us the way te fgure close and do frst-class work. C. M. WILLIAMS, General Contractor and Builder, 218 MAIN STREET- "Rbane 318 Ll L. - J Tuesday, Sepl. 7th, at 8.15 p.m. “CHARCOTT,” the Greatest Hypnotist EVELYN LBE—The American Singer WILLIAMS & WESI'—Sixty Laughs & Minute, HARRY GRAY = Vaudeville's Hest Irishman, HOGAN & DELMORB—America's Fose mler Dancers. MELVIN—The Master Musician. R BOUT"—The most realistio exhibition of boxing ever iwe- sented on any stage. PRICES:. e, e, SOc, T6e, $1.00 Seats on_sale at the usual places on Saturday, Sept. 4th, at 9 o'clock Cars to all polnts after the perfosm- septéd Wednesday, Sept. 8, at 8.15 p.m. Engagement of Edward C. White's Special Production of Charles Dickens' immertal story. David Copperfield with appropriate scenic setting. Ez- e o ‘Jl i o' at th and Co.’s on Monday, Sept. 6th, at § o' Cars to all polats g ftor ‘performance. vapid The Roderick Theatre WILL OPEN TODAY with High Class Melion Pictures and Hlustrated Songs. Changes of pictures Monday, Wed- nesday and JFridayis, Dlustrated songs by Charles F. Taylor, baritone. Matinees at 2.30. Evenings at 7.0 Admission; Matinees ¢, Evenings 10c. WM, H. HUTBAU, Managen ‘Phone. septsd BREED’S THEATRE Charles MeNuity, Lessea. ' Devoied to -class Moving Pictures and Ilustrated Songs. ture Pleture, THE PRINCE AND THE PAUPES, . by Mark Twain, ~ —AND- Yol Many Othe Master Hafry Noonan, Phenomenal Boy Soprano, in High Class Songs. Matinees, Ladies and Childres, Evenings, 10¢. BREED HALL. Washington Square JAMES F. DREW Fiano Tuning and Repairing Best Vork Only. “Phone 432-3. 18 Perkins Ave sept2ld EXPERT TUNING he piaea AD teed. improves ! work guaran A. W. JARVIS, Ne. 15 Clatremont Aves Norwieh, Conn. Niles Bryaat Schoel of Plane a - wradpa Tunl Battle Creek, Mich Drop a postal and I'll call ¢ decisa ‘Phone § « F. C. GEER 2 < TUNER 122 Prospect St g Tol 880-5 Norwish, OWi 6. E HODGE Hack, Livery, Boarding: - and Feed STABLES Up-to-date Equipment and Guaranteed Satisfactory Service. 14 (o 20 BATH STREET, (Tormerly Chapman'a) ~ Televbone 10. DR C. R. CHAMBERLALN, Denta/ Surgean. In charge ot Dr. 8. L. Geer' Quriog bis last iliness. 161 Main Street, Norwich, NOTICE Dr. Louise Franklin Miner is now located in her new office, Breed Hally Room 1 Office hours, 1 te 4 p. m. Telephone 66C l\l._llfl_ NEWMARKET HOTEL, 715 Boswell Ave. First-class wines, liquors and elgars. Meals and Weich rareb order.Johm Tuckle. Pl Tel 4 i no advertsing im“ onnecticut equal to { aorld e . latia far