Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
“PLUMBING AND GASFITTING. The Vaughn Foundry Co. IRON EASTINGS ‘urnished promptly. Large patterns, No. 11 to 25 Ferry ll.ml ianzzd Ly BURNS, Heating and Plumbing, “92 Franklin Strest. S. F. GIBSON Tin and Sheet Metal Worker. Agent for Richard=on and Boynton Furnaces. 66 West main Street. Norwich, Conn. decia Sideboards A dining room without a Sideboard is much like a window without hang- ings — unfinished and unsatisfactory. 1t lacks the touch that gives the room the home atmospiiere. Our collection of Sideboard and Buffets is one of the largest in East- ern Connectuct, and our prices posi- tively the lowest. Special all Dining Room Furniture this week. Shea & Burke 37-41 Main Streel. oct7d SUPERFLUOUS BAIR Permanently removed by the Elec- tric Needle Process. Leaves no scar and tisfaction guaranteed. Moles and Warts permanently destroyed. E. FRANCES BAKER, Speciaist, Suite 26, Central Bldg., "Phone 504 —WITH— Fannie 1. Gibso Chiropody, Manicuring, Toilet sites, Hair Goods, etc. prices on oct21d Tabourettes, Plant Stands, Mission Tables and Chairs. A new prices. The Fanning Studios, 31 Wiliow St. Wall Paper, Furniture, Lace Curtair and Home Furnishings, High Grade Pianos Shades made {o order assortment at reasonable [laftings azd —AT— YERRINGTON'S TAXIDERMIST AGENCY. oct27d -« LEON - - LADIES' TAILOR 218 h’afli}'ree!' May Building We Warrant Entire Satisfaction. Ielephone 71 oct14d | Foral Designs and Cutflowers. For All Occasions. GEDULDIG’S, Telaphone 868. 77 Cedar Street. y26a - QUALITY in work should always be considereqd, especially when It costs no more than the inferior kind. Skilled mén are employed by us. Our prices tell the whole stor;. STETSON & YOUNG. may2id AHERN BROS., General Contractors 63 BROADWAY ‘Phone 710. Brown & Rogers Wish to announce to the public that they are all ready for the Fall Paint- ing and Paperhanging, in all of its branches at living prices, with Com- junsa petent Men to do (he work at short oct2d SES BIE No other form of property insur- ence is sure of being a icss. GET YOUR HORSE.INSURED be- i fromwl lUN‘TfiQKE. i all Papers Nature, Wherein they Di (Written Specially for The Bulletin.) For watering a part of my stock I have a common pitcher spout pump in the farm lane. It stands open to the | weather, and in winter time the water has to be let out of the cylinder to prevent its freezing. Twice in the last three years I have had to buy new pumps because some neighbor, wanting a drink of water, has pumped himself some and then left the cylinder full to freeze and burst. The other day my sheep didw't come down at nightfall, as usual. Previous experiences suggested the probable and I “made a break” for the y into the woods. As I expected it was open. Some hunter had let the bars down and left them so. The sheep, who have pretty well nibbled off the browse in the pastures, had taken advantage of the chance to get a little more brush and leav: Some years ago a fisherman, fishing and. the nails rusty. He broke down the top board; then deliberately kick- ed the next one off the posts and walked out. I was near the house, in plain sight of him, but he never at- tempted to replace the boards ner to notify me of the damage he had done and ask for a hammer and nails to re- ing up a little earlier than usual one October morning, 1 noticed a curl | WaYS fastens, at night, with a couple| jeslie Dawley was the guest of An- of smoke rising out of a big chestnut |°f Short loops of rope. Why he does | grew Moore Sunday. tree on the hill fifty rods from- the ;;- 'lw(\lr;vrx lokn(:_\;':dn:\'e-r askndt; “lfnflll_\; R s house. Vil 2 ccurred to me as being an T of my business. Theyre his ' bars, HOPKINTON hollow 0! g C e. | ‘€ading upon his premises, in his fence. ‘*‘l""abl\'rltnhe"st:y::l'ufu :‘.E:"g;m;.’.uyrl;ol H] has (‘)u; right to ‘fix‘nwm as hs Bank Being Made Burnl-r Proof. | whicl B keds atiial e o | pleasas. have.no right to even toue £ chimney, and when I arriveg was com- | ture wi perm!t me rh'\z right, 1:,;; my | d’a“\!“ 8 visit at Mystic, Conn., Mon- | t o s aho wenty | OWn convenience or [ '1~urt the leas Ly Wil autse. Tt LabE A WO hotise ] M ‘he left. them, My nelghBor at th Wells is being improved by the pres- | to stop up the draft at the “bottom, |NOTth always fastens his barn; ““liun—;-)o“m.r' J‘.’h"f E Yeolle. h pour salt into the hole at the top and | 3at¢ With a twisted loop of wire, in{ The BUVVAE Of & Amall hernon 42 | finally conquer the fire. It left the |3ddition to the k. When arm of Zebulon Brown, just over the great handsome (ros s miere shoh. atd|use thatizate I twist the { line in North Stonington. Conn.. lit it will hardly stand the .08 - | & round It - Nong e ter. Part of the top 2y off, a | D€ uses it; but v ng, The fire was discovered about I ey inigoit. sk Ahe arotind « | busi 16 see thatf I e 5.30 and was probably incendiary. Ten D hinar s o ey hatitos y A8 T 0nd them:, For f, Fve one | tons of hay were consumed. Five men timber from my woods, asked to k par-way the second bar of which has | came from Hope Valley in an auto- a couple of boxes to feed his 7 cut in it, so as to drop into | mobile, thinking the fire was i this | es. 1 hunted them up for him. n the post,'and a peg is pushed | village. A l'asking him to return them when he |Inte @ hole just above that bar. I've} .~ Sy s 2 g e S | Wag done using them. Next day I dis. | D24 to do this, ebe y canny old | Sprague, having broken out of his pen, i e T R O T L oaw had disove by rubbing | led several people a lively chase on | o fod e e e it | against that bar she could drop It and | Tuesday afternoon . before: he = was | Sosdh gotting his last Toad. As T |fhus open a wa intc my cabbage | caught. . % R g oad. & i1 | vard. As I've fixed it neither she nor| Hon. E. R. Allen was'in Hope Val- he wanted me to bring In the boxes. | 21Y, human can lower the without | ley Monday, attending a méeting of S don't care. whether Syou bring. e, | first pulling out the peg. That is aithe directors of the First National In/or Jeave ‘em alone was his aoswer | trick ‘she fen't ‘up to, and yet. twice | bank of Hopkinton. The work of re- “G'tiip, there~ and oft he drove. < |this season. I've had to hunt that peg | pairing the damages ceaused by bur- e ; g in sthe grass over the fence because | glars last August is approaching com- somebody had pulied it out to open the | pletion at the bank building and it will Now these are just a few leaves | bars and hadn't taken the trouble to| be fitted with up to date burglar- | from my own personal experience. I|[replace it. proof appliances, could add a good many Hke happenings to them. Not a farmer who reads this but could duplicate and triplicate the list. “Thoughtlessness” is the accept- ed_explanation for this sort of De- havior, It's no_such thing. Tt's just plain, straight, contemptible meanness. There isn't one of these creatures who is thoughtless., He is thinking all the time. The trouble is he is think- ing wrong. He is thinking about his own plans and his own pleasure and his own comfort and his own way, and never by any chance ahout the rights of others. He thinks sixteen hours day about his pleasures and not twr minutes about his duties. He persistently about his opportun 2t all about his r r t's exa what hogs do. call “human nature” please: 1 t belleve it's e sort. It's hog nature. And the is about the last animal whose ition is a desirable graft on the human_ stock That it isn't really “human nature” vd. by the fact that 12 act in exactly the s think of others as as thems they consider what ought to do as well as what they 0: .they use other . when, thew use it favor-and \\Hh conside on for t&: owners. Three veople out of five al- | ways do that. when they are face to | face .with the other fellow, and know that he sees and weighs their conduct perha two or threa out of ten do when they are out of his sizat, and he doesn’t know what they are doing. 1t is these last who ure” as dist osed to heast ni eal “humar nd both The l;eodlmneu of Trespassers—Meanness Not Thought- lessness at the Bottom of It—Hog Nature and Human of Con ;uct—Wher: Reform is Needed. in one of my low meadows, near the house, started to climb over a board fence. The boards were getting old ffer— Jne Instructive Course |, inzneia a in the spring. 'A'h ‘will h‘w by their many friends. Next Sunday at 7.15 p. m members of the Bi . Mrs. Matthew Keefe and son were called to Windsor Locks last week by the illness and death of a.relative. All hogs are alike; every hog wants to get to the trough first, gobble down the biggest share of its contents, and crowd the other hogs out if he's big enough. If a part of the herd ate so- berly and semsibly, with their fore feet on the floor and not in the trough, we | might be in doubt which was the real hog nature. arity might lead us to assume that the decenter beasts had the first claim. But hogs differ from cach other very little in greed. And we are compelied to assume that greediness and seifishness are their nature. Very well; if all men acted in like mann we should likewise be compelled to admit that human nature was composed of t thirds greed, three-fifths selfishness, one-half mean ness and the rest something worse But the men we all like best and look up to most do not act that wa And I for one solemnly declare my inten- tion to regard the variety of nature RICHMOND Local Jottings of the Week. The missionary society connected with the Baptist church at Shannock held their regular meeting Wednes- day afternoon with the president, Mrs. W. N. Reynolds, at the parsonage. The ladies’ aid_society of the Bap- tist church mel Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. W, N. Reynolds. Miss Florence Milner is attending school in Boston. Mrs. Albert Hoyle and daughter, Miss Florence Milner and Miss Mabel shown by this class of men as “real Klrb) spent Monday evening with human nature. Miss Carrie Kingsley. Migs Milner : e he soloist of the evening, Mr. There's one rule—or perhaps T should | } ingsley accompanying her on his say, ome course of conduct, which, | banjo. The music was much en- seems to me, ought to be instinci with every man. That is, when he as- sumes or borrows the right to use anything whatever belonging to some- one else to use it as the owner would, and leave it as he found it. For il- lustration: My neighbor at the south has one “pair of bars” which he als Ve | joyed the guests present. Mr. and Mrs. E. K. James and Fred Eaton of Richmond, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bliss and George James of Matunuck, and Mrs. Nathaniel Hen- drick and Miss Louise Harvey were | the guests of William and | family Sunday. y Dawley William V. Avery is employed at the team sawmill of the Girard brothers I've heard lots of townspeopie talk about farmers as “stingy old hunks.” | near Woodvi and make fu of their ankinesses. = Yet, if the average farmer should treat | ESCOHEAG the average hunter and fisherman and G T, nutter and “varb-gatherer” with one-| jones Family Moves to Preston City, | half the meanness those classes often ot Ll show towards him, he would—well, he! M Brayman, formerly of Green- would be even less popular than he| .ood R. 1. has rented Mrs. Amy Bar- ber's farm. <SP ¢ William Sweet is to move. A dear old friend once said to me | Jegse Gardmer s very ill. Oh, vou expect too much: vour idea| Charles Jones, who!sold his farming of human nature is your ideal of hu- | (5ols at auction. has moved his house- i | man nature.” Tve treasured that say-|jlg goods to Preston City, where he . becanse of ‘its fe-{ pag’ hurchased a place. alzo because the| “Npg (. E. Coxe has gone to Provi- an nature is just exact- | gence for a few da. of it vl;. h”l ulzv;]t‘ ::‘ Henry l‘»allnu is ||\ all of us pu g A5 hoid—for ourselves as well as for oth- Music AND DRAMA ers. We often hear it said that penole are| Phoebe Davies is to be the leading “hard” and “censorious” 1 think on!woman in Know Thyself, the play in the other hand. Tany of us are too! which Arnold Daly is to star. sy and yielding. Forgiveness is a beautiful thing. but It has its place in| William Winter's new hook, The Art the order of circumstances, and that' and Life of Richard Mansfield, is to be is after repentance and reform. | published next month Forgiveness as a clo k for continuing e — and intentional sin is simply we Sarah Bernhardt has completed a moral 1 Of course, new drama which has ferty characters elways pleasanter to have your own K and is planning to produce it in Paris ¢ ossed over by others; it's al- | at an early daie. most a ‘vays more ingratiating to e nore the crrors of others. But, Hedwig Reicher, the German actress, all, politeness, st complaisance | who was well received in On the Eve. are not the only d . 5 ‘is to have the leading role in the mew indeed. do_they rank quite Klein play, Next of Kin. justice, fairplay. honor. e e or the ecity, but w d 3 Another all-star ' gambol of some- ¥ rudescence of the manlier | thing like 2,500 miles is being planned an education towards the un- | for next April or May by the Lambs of mutnal rights and re-, to increase the fund for building an- ; a_stern repression of other and bigger clubhouse. the growing tendency towards preda- — toriness and license: a new preaching | Mr. and Mrs. David Mannes will re- of the gcspel of unselfishness, w sum ree breed of | and s know, of Tuesday. Dec, 14, any of the thai the man.” and not th For their new con- will choose again from un- familiar sonatas. sut know dare nd knowing, | 2 at Jordan hall. certs ‘they THE FARMER. LETTERS FROM TOLLAND COUNTY. SOUTH COVENTRY Grange Entertainment—Deaths, George | Emma Haling and Mrs. Hammond. Capron | Igumbang 4 ent and s A 11 on itertainment farnishe icultural Colle cil Smith, reader, supper was served The entertain- v dancing and child at Thompson N are visiting neneeter Burial of George Haling. body of ( Haling e from Baltic IPriday after in Nathan Hale ceme Haling formerly lived ini South Coventry 1 was well known €. ‘His death occurred in Baltic on | vmber 9 from heart disease. He was 44 years old, and leaves a widow, | who was Miss Ruth Kingsbury « South Coventry, -also three sems.” Mr. number of years Haling was for tion master at Daltic. but at the time | of his death was paym:ster at the Bal- tic mills Mrs. Emma C. Hammond. attended | of ! Relatives from this place the funeral in Hartford on Friday Mrs. Emma Capron Hammond, a na- tive of ‘South Coventry and sister of Mrs. John M. Wood and Mrs. William F. od of this place. The death oc- while Mrs. Hammond was vis- iting in Maine, from an atiack of acute Brights dise: To Exchange Pulpits. of Mr. Stafford Spri g GecuR t at the Congre church Sunday morning and z\nun in exchange with Rev, Nesior 41‘4 Barred After Thorough Test. We understand that * ssum will not s am hreakfast fands 3t the White house this winten, —~Fittaburg Gazette Times, | SPRING HILL Stephen Phillips’ poetic tragedy. Her- { 0d, at the Providence opera house for Water Carried in Barrels—Surprise on | five. performances, beginning with the Tenth Wedding Anniversary. {T"a“ Lo e AR i Mrs. Emma Gardiner invited the|, Freida ‘FHempel of the Royal opera Migsion khand to her home Sature ol B N - P % 4aY. | has heen eng for the Metropolitan | she furnishing dinner and supper. The| Opera company. Miss Hempel - has procecds of the day go towards mis- | sung for the last threé years in Berlin sion work. {and has_also appeared in opera at Mrs. Gigiers' daughter Dorothy of | Covent Garden and in Bayreuth. College Point. N. Y. returned home | e — Monday afterneon i 8. Z Poli of New Haven is to be- It i« not an unusual sight to sec|come a member of a new theatrical barrels of waier being carried to dif-| syndicate known as the United Theater homes. Wells are dry that|Securities company of New York. with were before. 1$2.000.000 capital. Articles of incor- Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gardiner were | poration have been filed with the state igreeably surp about forty of | department Dover, Del. and the their friends Monday evening. that b charter for the company will probably {ing their tenth annivers: Their { pe issued at once. Mr. Poli will bring friends presented them with a fine din- | 14 playhouses into the syndicate. ner set —_— nesday a week ago with her parents|lish than e and scemingly in very fter an operation for adendids. Her|good voice, returned from abroad in health is much better. the very best of temper and ready to Miss May Storrs is having work done | open the Metropolitan- opera season. {on her house in Coventry This year he is to sing but one new Mrs. Dan Flaherty is' away from | part, the tenor role in Germania, but Sam Collins, the excruciatingly fun- ny German comedian of the Joe Weber company, which is presenting rry Widow and the Devil on returns each summer to the home stors in Germany. William Faversham will -appear TWO STATES. in T ona Palmer returned home Wed- Enrico Carus . speaking more Eng- home, taking care of the sick. ELLINGTON Frigndship Sunday School Class Enjoys Banquet—Personals, he will be heard in many cf the other roles with which his name is closely identified in the recent history of New York opera Nitrogen fodine i% So sensitive that the touch of a fly's foot would ex- plode it. Miss Carrie Peck has gone to Hfln~’ tord for week. i Last Friday evening the Friendship Suhday school class held their banquet. About fifty were present. This includ- ed friends of the members of the class, as each one was entitled to invite a friend. Cannot harm healthy human bodies. We cannot have heaithy bodies unless we have pure biood, —the kind of biocod that Hood Sarsaparilla makes, Local Mention. Mrs. Horace Kibbe of' Meriden is vie- iting Mrs. James Talcott Krnest limburger has moved k This great medicine 'has sn - femily to the Tuttle far which he has | equalled, dnapproached record for purie ed. ‘g and euriching the blood. Tuttle his moved into m.—l Iv cures scrofuld, eccequn, eraptions, \A..m\eil;l |,r\hr|nv.x;l on Iu-:m ~|.|e-1 CAtaFL rhe\munfln . ABSILIE, Nervous- s. Albe ey s i Courtlan N WD hier Detienterc M lj:"‘ | ness, that tired feelin, xdylpe_pfil losa Several sales of the 1909 tobaceo | OF Sppetite, genera] di "M’.aldbmld- have been mvl' recen up the "h'llP ByStem. - moved into them nture heme, \ *4 be a rally and Bible day concert by the y ible school Served Her with Tea. Hutchinson is happy over this little neident which the Hutchinson News relates ux having occurred there the othe An mtorb‘\lmg incident of the to this city of Mrs. Ruth Bryan L« it developed when Miss Leona Taft. third cousin to President Taft, Waited on Mrs. Lel\ill at the Bisonte hotel recognized the known until the ¥ b ft that she 1 | served the « of her relative defeated opponent. Mrs, Leavitt parted from the city unaware of t strange ident. Miss Taft is | city temporarily vigiting friends, her mother visiting in Emporia and is in Chicago. She has done cler cal work at the Bizonte hotel. She was in the lunch room lasi night when Mrs. Leavitt entered. not \\dl|l to any chances of slighting the becom- | | ing guest. Accordingly she asked Mizs Taft. who was standing by, to get the 'aft, who is an did not he behind the counter. “What was it for you Mrs. Leavitt ordered g cup « and some fruit. Miss Taft turne the order and her duties were done. Miss Taft will 1 the cit on Saturday and will go with her mother to Sacramento, ( the old home. She had been in Emporia with her munu‘r -ml decided to call on friends i 'FAAH.'.\ father is Summner [ Taft, United States inspector of In- dian goods. His duties require tha! he shall travel over the country and . He part ¢ moth his check out supplies for the Inc will be in Uklahoma a greate the time. Miss Taft, with her er, came east when Mr. Taft made last trip to Oklahoma Sumner B. Taft is a second cousin to Willlam Howard Taft. His ave corresponds with that of the presiden and Miss Taft's age corresponds ./ith that of the president's daughter, Helen Taft. Miss Taft says that the dent has recently written a letter to her father asking for complete mation concerning his family for in a biographical book A School Ta:cher to Be Admired. John D. Rgan would like everybody to believe that he plays fair. But he doesn’'t. He has a very falsifying ar- ticle in his paper this week in which he complaips that a certain school I “has gone so far that he has actually compelled certain pupils to go out into the sidawalk and road and pick up dirty papers. It was al ways the child of some poor man she sent, leaving her own pets free from such unpleasant work. It is about time that this ptinc 1 took a big tumble to herself and is made to un- derstand that she mustn’'t pjay favor- ites.” ~Mr. Ryan should be ashamed of himself for making”so outrageous a statement. There is only one school principal who has asked her children to take an active part in the cleaning up of their section of the city. She has compelled none to do it. But because she has a fine av- preciation of how to teach boys arid girls how to love their city and how to make it beautiful and lovable, every boy in the upper grades has been ask- ed to co-operate and with pointed sticks go around and pick up the fly- ing papers in the square where her school is located. In this group of boys is a boy from one of the w jest families in the city and the O cle has seen him out with his basket and piked stickgathering up papers. An- other little fellow who m the rounc captain of one group Is the son of one of the leading sur in this part of the state. Another Iittle chap who heips is the son of a former 3 the city physic is son of a large property With thes: boys. side by side, go little fellows just Fole Kidney Remedy will cure any case of kidney or bladder troubl cach that is not beyvond the of me cine. Cures backache and ties that if neglected might result in Bright's disease qr diabete: For sale by Lec good Co Digestion? This is one of the first signs of stom- ach weakness. Distress after eating, sour eructations, sick headache, bil- jous conditions are all indicative that it is the stomach that needs assistance. Helpit to regain health and strength by taking BEEGHAM'S PILLS for they are a stomach remedy that never disappoints. They act quick- ly and gently upon the digestive organs, sweeten the contents of the stomach, carry off the disturbing elements, and establish healthy con- ditions of the liver and bile. : The wonderful tonic and strength. ening effects from Beecham’s Pills, make them a safe remedy—they Help Weak Stomachs & Bexes with full directions, 10c. and 5e, \for- | alth- | irregulari- | are . sons of | for admission of pupils to the schools seript, that the age limit | as nice and just fathers and moth o will do the ) has been raised in the school board's best they cam for their children, but | new rules. * The ruling is as follows. who cannot give them wealth to start “No ¢hiMd who is_ wix years of with. There never s a finer exam- | age on the day school opens in Sep- | pie of democracy and civic pride than | tember shall: be admitted to the first these bright faced lads making their | grade, unless he or she is promoted |rounds. Come, Mr. Ryan, own up.|from the kindergarten, or has permis- | Take off your hat to the principal | sion from the superintendent.” { whose splendid spirit s creating so e | fine a de ey in her schoolroom. Better Than “Tag Day.” ! You've made an unfoftunate mistake. The recent movement in Beston w. . |Stand by sour vaunted chivalry of | contagious. A six daye' campaign forever after silent.—Holyoke | now on in Springfield to raise uomm | Transcript for a boys' club bullding, and the big | — — dlal Indicator is also employed to de- { Schocl Age. note progress. How much. better thig | . Meriden blic achool principals | is than a’ “tag day.—Boston Tran« i | BELL'S SEASONING 40 Years the ori mal for delicatel flavorngress ings for Turkey (hicken,Game, Fish,Lamb,(roquettes Ous- ter Patties. Escallops,etc A NICE TURKEY DRESSING. Toast 7 or 8 slices of white bread l'l:nu in a deep dish, adding butter the size of an egg Cover with hot water to melt butter and make bread right consistency. Add 1 even tablespoon of BelPs Seasoning, and 1 even teaspoon salt. When well mixed, stir in 1 or 2 raw eggs. For goose or duck add 1 raw ounion chopped fine. (From Bell's Receipts. Ask your Grocer.) Remember, a 10c. can of Bell’s Seasoning is sufficient to flavor the dressing for 100 1bs. of meat or poultry, and the 25¢. can 300 1bs. For Delicious Sausages, Flavor with Bell's Sausage Seasoning, 25¢.and 500.Cans; 6,12 and 25 Ib. Boxes; 50,75and 1001b. Drums. Too tired to work It you get ‘up in the morn- ing tired—if you weary vllh little exertion—if vim &n R are lacking—your liver is t Take Schemck’s Mandrake Pills and feel better at once. 70 yun’T.- cific for billousness, liver com sick headache, dyspej glddiness, | jaundice. Wholly vchHbmluto- 1y harmless—eold everywhere, 2c. Our free book will teach you how to prescribe for yaurul Dr. J. H. Pgmcx & SON, 4 I RED TAG 4 h t | Fourth Anniversary I SALE We will celebrate the end of the fourth and begin- ning of our fifth year by special prices for the week beginning Monday, November 15th and end- ing Saturday, November 20th. LOOK FOR THE RED TAGS. Below are a few of the special offerings: $1.25, worth Family Scales, 1 oz: 24 1bs.,. worth $1.50, now $1.24. Rayo Lamps, Galvanized Hode 35¢, now 24c. Alarm Clocks, worth $1.00, now . 84c. | Nickel Plated Copper Tea Ket- | tles, 94c. Table Oil Cloth, per yard, worth ! 5¢c, now 18e¢. All Copper. Boiler, No. 8, worth % $3.00, now $2.64. Rat Traps, worth 60c, now 38e, All Copper Boiler, No. 9, warth Set of K. K. Bits, worth $6.00, 25, now $2.84. now $4.44. Double Roasters, 34c. K. K. Axes, warranted, worth Large size, worth 7sc, nbw 64e. $1.00, now 84e. Galvanized Wash Tub, worth 50c, | K- K. Carving Seéts at reduced now 38c. prices. Wash Bbards, worth 2ic, now | Broad Axes, special, 84c. * 19¢. g K. K. Safety Razors, worth $3.50, Boards, * worth 3ic, now now $3.04. Stillson Wrench Set Sad Irons, worth $1.25, now | genoie sl oih & Stillson— 98c. 6-inch 64c. Universal Food Choppers, worth 8-inch 74c. $1.25, now 98c. 10-inel . 84c, Universal Food Choppers, worth Armstrong Stocks sud Dies $1.50, now $1.34. | Armstrong Fipe Vises. | Five dozen Clothes Pins, 4e. Armstrong Pipe Cutters. Boilers, worth §1 now | E See our special window display { of Keen-Kutter Tools and Hard- Boilers, worth $1.50, now ware at special prices for the week. LOOK FOR THE RED TAGS. Wash $ | s The Hou-ehold i BULLEIIN BUILDING, L HMNKI.IN STREET Special Prices for One WIIb. Only.