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Herwizh Zulletis and Goufied, 114 YEARS OLD. W Tntered at the Postoffice at Norwich. Conn. as second-class matter- Callss Bull i Office. 430, nfiui o ito: Fooms, 36-3. Bulletin Job Office, 35- Willimantic Office, Reom 2. Murray Bullding. Telephone, 210. Norwich, Friday, Jan. 21, 1910. ———— GUTTING OUT BEEF AND BUTTER The state of the market is leading the consumers to combine and to live wvithout meat or putter as a means of wroducing a better state of things in the markel Figures as® given by the national department of agriculture showing that the difference between the whole- sale and retall prices of beef varles between seventeen and sixty-eight per cent. Part of this is due to the num- er of small shops, delivery expenses end so forth. The same report states that the proportion in price between beef on the hoof and dressed beef has not increased and lays the blame a good deal on the high price of corn. There is no doubt that these extra- osdinary conditions are causing con- sumers without organization to lessen thelr demand for both. beef and but- 2 er. At Washington, D. C., an Anti-Food Trust league has peen formed, which threatens through combination and ®ranch leagues to carry the boycott egainst meat, eggs, butter, milk and all other execessively high-priced goods to all parts of the country. At Cleve- fand 6,000 citizens have joined hands for the prohibition of meat-eating for one month; eand 5,000 citizens of an- other jarge city have got together to boyeott the use of butier for the same length of time to see what effect it will have upon the market. Attention however, is deing called to the fact that the wvery articles of food that best take the place of meat, butter, milk, eggs, are those where the in- crease in gost is already most marked. ‘While there appears to be no direct way to remedy this evil, this food question is certainly worthy the sharp- est investigation by the government. If commerclal greed has its hand up- on the mecessities of life, it should be made to let go. To amass dividends at the expense of meedy people is a erime. MANHOLES AND SNOW. How citfgs may most economically and expeditiously dispose of the snow in the streets is still an wunsolved problem. It costs Boston $40,000 a year to get rid of its snow from the traffic streets, Now it i{s proposed to begin to remove the snow as fast as $t falls and to get rid of it thrpugh the agency of the sewers, The Boston Transcript says upon this question: “Any Bostonian who had stood on Beacon street, near Arlington, last Seturday, and had seen nine cart- loads of snow emptied down one man- hole in ten minutes—this being, it is sald, the ‘record’—must have wondered why all the snow in Boston could not be disposed of as expeditiously. ‘“The explanation can be given in few words: not all the sewers have efther the srade or capacity of the Beacon street sewer, which is five feet in diameter, whereas many of those along the ‘main arteries of travel’ are only about half as large and have a flatter grade and therefore a more sluggish flow. Though the tempera- ture of sewers is seldom lower than 650 degrees, heat cannot he relied upon to melt the snow sufficiently fast to aveoid the danger of clogging. Even in the Beacon street sewer, none but clean enow is permitted to enter, and only eity teams, each under the super- visilon of an official, are allowed to unload into the three manholes which it seems safe to use.” Censidering the manhole as 2 means to an end, The Transcript further says that “if the sewers constructed in the future are of adequate capacity and suitable ‘pitch’ we shall doubtless be able to minimize the expensive probléem of snow removal. At the present time it seems clear that they ean be relied upon for little aid.” SHIFTY MEN. Bhifty men are common in all the walks of life, but Washington is with- out doubt the shifty men's metropolis in this republic. The president and his official family and the congress- men have to meet more undesirable citizens, more promise-breakers and liars, than any other class of men. The politician of whom we speak so slightingly is usually a squirm- er. It has become a confirmed truth that men will misrepresent in politics who would not do so in any other re- lation, Politicians feel that squirming and twisting on their part is justifia- ble because their constituents are so exacting and because each faction of & constituency demands a different thing; and the seekers for office and for spectal favors or privileges think that anything to win is a very good motto. 1t is not strange that in such a com- munity a square man is fully appre- clated. It is averred that Taft likes 2 man who speaks the truth, and that nhis predecessors all liked such men. This is the reason Aldrich and Can- nen have stood well with the presi- dent. They are neither uquirmers.l dodgers mor liars, but reliable men. With such a stock of Ananiases on hand it is not strange Roosevelt form- ed a club of the eminent leaders among them. TO FIX RESPONSIBILITY. Absenteeism and dodging have be- come so common in the Massachu- setts legislature that steps have final- ly been taken to make an end of the device by which members could bal- ance effects by pairing. A new rule has been introduced to the legislature by Speaker Walker abolishing the cus- tom of pairing except under unusual conditions. This new rule places ev- ery member more squarely upon his own record concerning important is- sues, and his constituency can judge him better. Often he was made to seem to vote exactly contrary to hig convictions by sharp practice during his absence, Sometimes bills were ac- tually beaten solely by manipulation of the system. ‘This nmew rule will compel a larger and more regular attendance of the memdbers and will make them eftener show their standing on live and im- portant public issues, The press com- mends this businessllke provision or- iginated and made effective by the will and wit of the speaker. Happy thought for todey: Experi- enece shews no favors. We all pay tor what we thus gei RAILROADING AT THE SOUTH. If the papers of the south fairly the railroad service in that section, the rallroads are not grossly represented In being referred to as public inconveniences. The situation is well expressed in the following incident related in an artjele headed, “Some Reasons Why Railways Are Unpopular,” in a recent issue of The Ra'road Age-Gazette: “Qur traveler ~t on a through train which is se. uled to run be- tween two large ci’«. ‘2 twenty-eight hours. In sbout an hour it was set on a side track. Inquiry’ as to the cause brought the information that a small wreck ahead would probably make it necessary for the train to stand where it was all night. It did not begin to move again for eleven hours. When it did begin to move it also began to lose more time, and when it reached its destination it was sixteen hours late. The conductor was asked whether his train was often late. He replied that it was usually about five hours late, The same ques- tion was asked of the dining car con- ductor. He sald that the train was usually about seven hours late. Now, what legitimate object can a rallway bave in persistently printing sched- ules which experience has demon- strated its trains cannot make? Pas- sengers generally will not complain much about slow trains if slow sched- ules are printed for them, dut the printing of fast schedules for slow trains constantly eauses trouble. The passenger usually makes reservations on connecting trains, for business or social engagements, with the expecta- tion of reaching destination on sched- ule time. If the train is late, without mighty good reason, every passenger is apt to get off a critic and an enemy of the road.” ¢ ¢ The south has never yét ‘been favored with trains that are on time; and this is a point where it differs from most parts of the country. It is not surprising that the legislatures of those states think they can run the roads better than they are being run; that wouldn’t be much of a stunt. EDITORIAL NOTES. A future sign for aviators: clear of this house, thoroughly dynamited, Steer for the roof 1is ‘The heroes of Boston figure well in the Carnegie allotment of medals, awards and maintenances. The naval expenses for 1911 have been cut down ten millions, but they now remain nearly $127,000,000. Since Mayor Hibbard of Boston finds that the public is not on the level, life must seem all down hill to him. The light snowfalls this winter have ‘been in northern New England, there being but six inches there when we had a foot. ‘The Atlanta Constitution calls at- tention to the fact that the price of commodities is higher than the Tam- many tiger can jump. It costs New Jersey over eleven hundred dollars for every convict elec- trocuted. The high cost of dying attracting attention there. Mr. and Mrs. George Gould are to have an American son-in-law, and his character and prospects are than a noble title, so-cailed. Russia produced twenty-six million bushels more wheat last year than Uncle Sam did. ' In many things we do not hold the world record. ‘We have been able to help the na- tions out the past ten years by con- tributing ten billion dollars’ worth of produce to the world's living. Rockefeller classes the average New York newspaper reporter among the desperadoes his detectives must look after. Perhaps he is blameless. A Vermont farm auto car; man has invented a now if he will plan a way so that the farmers can earn the | cash to buy it, a fortune is him. red to The thirty-seven governors now at ‘Washington will be pleased to think that they have made one anothers acquaintance, That is worth some- thing. The relatives of Banker Spencer Trask ask for $200,000 for the loss of his life on the rail. Money never ade- quately represents life, but 1is is a high estimate, Talk about an American sewing ma- chine worth $25 being sold in Lon- don for §15; when the singer who gets $200 a night there comes over here and gets $1,000. The decrease of cows in the New England states has been 14,000 in the past year, and the Boston milk com- bination bhas decided that the price must be nine «cents all next summer. M A A el General Booth appears to conscien- tiously think that the world is so bad that the Lord cannot tolerate its ex- istence much longer. Finite judgment is a poor measure of God’'s tolerant spirit. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. Prompted by the Spirit. Mr. Editor: Will vou kindly give me a little space in your valuable pa- per to say just a few words as I think God wants me to say them? I noticed in your paper of the 17th inst, a let- ter written b Rev. . M. S. Kauf- man on the great power of the church, How quick God brought the church of 1900 years ago and the church of to- day to my mind. . The church Jesus established was the testifying church. Peter had just testified that Jesus was the Christ. Jesus told him that flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but my Father which is in Heav- en. Thou art Peter, and on this rock I will build my church. What do you think, Mr. Editor, if Jesus would step inside of one of our churches of to- day and see a choir of ungodly people singing for from $1,500 to $5,000 a year not for the glory of God, and then to hear a man preach who is sup- posed to have a message from God, but he has to hawe from $1.000 to $1.500 a year for delivering the message., 1 read in message to the men at Jesus called was to go without morey in <he purse and not even to take two coats. ‘What a difference between those men and the men of today with the high goll:rs, white vest, long coat and high at. Why, M. Editor, T don’t suppose these men would have known their name if they saw it in print. I don’t suppose they could have read a ser- mon if you gave them one, but when ihey were brought before the court just efter Pentecost and those great lawyers and judges saw they were ignvrant and unlearned, but they saw they had been with Jesus. But you know God hath chosen the feoiish things of the world to con- found the wise, and God hath chosen the weak things of the werld to con- is | better | The subjects of a great king re- ceived, each one, a garden from their generous ruler. Bach was to cultivate his own as he pleased, but he could not give it away or exchange it for la;ythlng else. He must keep it for e. Oneogarden was given to a man who g'd nhl 5;»:-‘“ ":.II ,:l.zr::' oW s lens e. ‘Some he saw were being carefully cul- tivated, some were wholly given up to rare plants, some to common easy- growing ones, some to_ brilliant, gaudy flowers, some to frail, sweet 3 One day he, in his neighbo! The 3 SHOWS DAILY 2.30, 7 and 5.45 AUDITORIU some to sturdy shrubs, and some were terribly neglected. “I won't any of these mistakes,” he boasted. “I will plant my garden with the things I like and keep it for my pleasure. I will not spend all my life working in it.” First, he set a hedge about it, one that required no trimming; a hedge of thorny shrubs which bore brilliant blossoms that were not fragrant, and showy fruit that was not good to eat; and if the passers-by essed agaln: it to touch the blossems or the fruit sharp thorns pricked them sorely. Within the hedge he made beds of hardy plants that looked well and re- quired little care; wherever he chose to walk he made paths, and in unyisit- -ed, out-of-the-way places, to which he made no paths, grass and weeds grew as they would. Sometimes he asked a friend into his garden, sometimes one wise in gar- den lore called there, and sometimes a seeker after wisdom or one just be- ginning to plent came to see his work. To each of them he would say: “My garden sui me end gives me no trouble. I am satisfied with what I find here and neither ask nor wish anything from another’s garden.” No one stayed long with him, and after a while no one seemed to care to visit his garden at all. Then the man began to be lonely. There was nothing more to be done since he had planned his garden and finished it and everything grew with- out any special care. In spite of him- self he would sometimes stand at the door of his garden: and watch his neighbors at their work. Not far away was a garden where people came and went continuously. The owner was alwyas at work and indeed there was much for him to do, for he sa ervone something to take away, he had to find places for the things people brought to him from their own gardens, so he was always cutting slips and flowers, pulling out useless found the things which are mighty, 1st Cor. §:27, Corinth was once ‘a place of educa- tion and fine art and today a shape- less mass; and while the church which Jesus founded was all right, today ed- ucation and fine art have got it down to a first class playhouse. Mr. Editor, there was a time when it cost something to preach the real Gospel; but today it costs something to hear the preacher tell about ancient ;flsmry and the things of the Holy Land. I noticed Mr. Kaufman said with re- gret that it didn’t measure up to the sublime p ibilities, $Well, if it don’t measure up to God's plan they are backsliders and Jesus plainly said, if | they took of the Lord’s Supper un- wothily they did it to their own dam- nation (may God open their blind eye and then he says that they don’t make so much noise as they used to. Ox minjster said, there was no power in noise: but see, it takes power to make a noise, if there is no noise in the church you will find plenty of it at one of their baked-bean suppers. You will find a big difference between the midweek prayer meeting and a baked-bean supper; one is all noise while at the other there is hardly a sound; and not only that, but you ean see the difference in the size of the audience, You will see very quick which draws the biggest crowd. Well, enough of this, but read the words of Jesus, “For the Son of M to seek and save that which w Now, it don't seem as if it took a great lot of education to see man’s lost con- dition, according to God’s word. He tells of an awful Hell waiting for the lost; and if there is not anything to be saved from, why, Christ came in vain. The great trouble, is the preachers of today dare not put out the truth as Jesus put it out—as Paul did. Follow Jesus through his short ministry, and it was Ricks for him until He died on Calvary’s cross, and then He did not have friends enough for a funeral— He only had two hearers. Paul did the most of his preaching with handcuffs on his wrists. He nev- er had a nice parsonage and a great steepled house; but there were men of prayer in those days. It didn’t take Paul and Silas long to pray the under- pinning out from under the old jail. Now, Mr. Editor, if your house was on fire and your loved ones were in there, the first thing you would do would be to sound an alarm and do vour best to save them. You couldn’t Zo to some college to learn how to get them out for the house would be burn- ed up and the dear ones lost before yon got back. Jesus says, “Be ready for in such an hour as ye think not the Son of Man comet! Be on the watch, for he says he will come as a thief in the night. The poor old world may be lost and go to Hell while men are off to college learning how to save it. Oh, I =ay, give us men baptized with the Holy Ghost and God will use them and pre- cious souls will be saved. I hope 1 have not written such a long letter it will take up too much room in your paper, and may the dear Lord bless you and use you for His ¥ e is an editorial from the Full Gospel and Rescue Journal, Rev. Seth C. Rees, editor, Dayton Ohio, Septem- ber 20, 1909: “In order to stimulate interest in the afternoon meeting for men, the Rev. Thomas W. Cook, rector of St. Andrew’s Episcopal church. has an- nounced that he will permit smoking during service, invitations have been sent hbroadcast asking the men to at- tend the meetings and bring their | smoking materials with them, either pipes or cigars. Rev. Mr. Cook's con- gregation is encouraging the move- ment. This is in keepine with manj other well-known facts in the religion of today, such as Bishop Potter’s ded- ication of a saloon “to Father, Son, and Holy Ghost.” Bishop Potter's beer, Bishop Potter’s play on the Am- erican stage. The fact that one of New Englan@ Methodism’s greatest supporters was a brewer and that southern Methodism's greatest reve- nue came from Bull Durham tobacco, Duke’s mixture, etc.’ The fact that out of thirty-three graduating preachers that old people st | flowers for little blossoms for sorrowful peop! free-flowering shrubs that poor loved to see, and many herbs u;fi were scattered among the flowers. Ail kinds of things for all kinds of peo- ple, rosemary for remembrance, and popples for forgetfulness, hearts'-ease and Job's tears sweet peas and vivid tiger lilies, and among them moved the owner of the en, giving and receiving, very busy and very happy. He came up to greet his nei or. “How does your garden thrive, friend?" he asked cordially. “It does not seem ! to be as full as yours is,” the other answers “Ah,” “said the neighbor, “that can be remedied if there is any- thing you care for.” / “I do mot want to take what you have planted ard tended.” o “Nothing is better for my garden, eaid the bor heartily; “the more I give the more my flowers grow.” But the other man went away empty handed. He stood in the midst of his lonely garden and for the first time it looked poor and commonplace to him. 3o ll’lm id aloud. ‘ln:ldkonll his garden,” he said al ki Y o' know to bring or where to plant it unless I mean to my garden all over again.” And then he fell to thinking of the contrast between the two gardens and how he could make his as bountiful and beautiful as his neighbor’s, until he re- solved to plant anew and immediate- 1y set his hand to the task.—Boston Fost. WHAT PEARY SAW. The Philosophic Anarchists of the North—Where the Poppies and But- tercups Bloom. Commander Robert E. Peary gives in the February number of Hampton’s Magazine his own solution to a riddle that has puzzled explorers and scien- titists for the past few centuries. That riddle is the origin of the Eskimos. ‘The commander in his second install- ment of his wonderfully interesting story of discovery of the North Pole, reveals the importance of well- trained Eskimos in polar travel, and he incidentally gives a remarkable sketch of the Greenland tribe that he himself employed. He says: “The members of this little tribe habiting the western coast of Green- land from Cape York to Etah are in many ways_ quite different from the Eskimos of Danish Greenland, or those of any other Arctic territory. There are now between ‘two hundred and twenty and two hundred and shirty in the tribe. They are savages, but they are not savage; they are without gov- ernment, but they are not lawless; they are utter:{ uneducated according to our standard, yet they exhibit a re- markable degree of intelligence. In temperament like children, with all a child’s delight in little things, they are nevertheless enduring as the most ma- tured of civilized men and women, and the best of them are faithful unto death. Without religion and having no idea of God, they will share their last meal with anyone who is hungry, while the aged and the helpless among them are taken care of as a matter of course. They are healthy and pure- blooded; they have no vices, no intoxi- cants, no bad habits—not even gam- bling. Altogether, they are a people unique upon the face of the earth. A friend of mine calls them philosophic anarchists of the north. “I have been studying the Eskimos for eighteen years, and no more effec- tive instrument for Arcticgwork could be imagined than these pl¥¥mp bronze- skinned, keen-eyed and black-maned children of nature. Their very limita- tions were their most valuable endow- ments for the purposes of my work. “There is a theory, first advanced by Sir Clements kham, president of the Roval geographical society of Lon- don, that the Eskimos are the rem- nants of an anclient Siberian tribe, the Onkilor; that the last members of this tribe were driven out on the Arctic Ocean by the fierce waves of Tartar invasion in the Middle Ages, and that they found their way to the New Si- berian Islamds, thence eastward over lands yet urndiscovered to Grinnell Land and Greenland. I am inclined to believe in the truth of this theory for the following reasons: “Some of the Eskimos are of a dis- tinct Mongolian type, and they dis- play many Oriental characteristic: such as a mimicry, ingenuity, and p: tience In mechanical duplication. There is a strong resemblance between their stone houses and the ruins of houses found in Siberia. The Eskimo girl brought home by Mrs. Peary. in 1894, was mistakea by Chinamen for one of their cwn people. It has been suggest- ed that their invocation of the spiri of their dead may be a survival of Asiatic ancestor worship.” Other parts of the narrative tell of the flora and fauna of the Arctic. “In some places,” says the com- mander, “in this coast in summer, the srass is thick and long as on a New England farm. Popples bloom here with dandelions, buttercups and saxi- frage: though to the best of my knowledge the flowers are all devoid of perfume. I have seen bumblebees even north of Whale Sound; there are flies and mosquitoes, .and even a few spiders. Among _the fauna of this country are the deer, the Greenland caribou, the fox—both blue and white— the Arctic hare, the polar bear, and perhaps once in a generation a stray wolt."” An Early Hero of 1910. ‘When the roll of American heroes of 1910 is made up truth and justice re- quire that a place near the top shall from a Philadelphia divinity school, 27 of them were habitual drunkards when they received the.bishop’s hand. Perilous times are upon us: Wicked men and seducers are waxing worse and worse. Men are deceiving and being deceived. The blind are leading- | the blind, and ten thousand abreast they are mardhing down the steps of eternal night. It is.neither by might nor by power, but by my Spirit, saith the Lord! Yours for the Lost, T. H. PEABODY. Norwich, Jan. 19, 1910 Cost of High Living. The case of Charles W, Morse is an- other illustration of the cost of high living.—N. ¥. Evening Post. Why Hesitate? The New York Press that it's “Cannon or Chaos.” All t. Why hesitate 7—Louisville Courler-Journal be awarded to the name of Frank G. Gentes of East Orange, N. J. The man himself is dead, but his name survives and deserves to be perpetuated as that of one who died hoping that his ex- perience might help to mitigate the sufferings of humanity. Mr. Gentes was a victim of cancer, and when told that hig case was hope- less he expressed his willingness that the authorities of the hospital where he was under treatment should make tests on his tissues to determine the curative powers of radium. He had no delusions concerning himself, but sub- mitted to the tests merely with the d sire that the treatment might disclo something to science that would soffen the agony and perhaps save the lives of others. He died without ng whether that desire was realized or defeated; but the manly sympathy which inlglemd it must have soothed his final ur with a sense of duty completed quite beyond the compre- hension of less heroic souls.—N. Y. THE FAMOUS BIG TIME ACT EDDIE DE-NOYER AND THE DANIE SISTERS In the Musical Comed During the Holidays and every day in the year, at mid-day or at mid-night, dawn or dusk, any- time and all the time, The Roud Instantancous Automatic Gas Water Hzater furnishes hot water in unlimited quantity in all parts of the house. Turn the Faueet, The Ruud Does the Rest. Call and see one in operation. Gas & Electrical Dep't., 321 Main Street, Alice Building. dec24d Carriage and Automobile Painting Trimming Ceorriage and Wagon Work of all kinde Anything on wheels built to orden PRICES AND WORK RIGHT, The Scott & Clark CORPORATION, 607-515 North Main Strest. aprisd Blank Books and Office Supplies in large variety at small prices. 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If you want a photo of your rea) self, or what your friends see to love and admire. eall on LAIGHTON, The Photegrapher, opposite auglsd Norwich Savings Soclety NEWMARKET HOTEL, 716 Boswell Ave. First-class wines, liquors and cige:a. Meals and Welch ngobn mflu order. Johm Tuckis Proo. Tel 42 & FOU WANL (0 PUL YOuUr busis ness before tne pu there is 5o mes $ium betier shan chrotigh the advertis ag columns 2f LTha B — KIDNAPPED, & THAYER, Presenting An Adamant Wema Comedy 8kit. REE THEATRE ARL! ] FEATURE PIOTURDs “The Smuggler's Game.” GREAT STORY OF OPIUM INDUSTRY MISS FLORENCE WOLCOTT IN SELECTED SONG PROGRAMME. Matines, Ladies and Children, L) Jan3a Music. NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teacher of Plano. ’ Room 48, Central Boti@ing. CAROLINE H. THOMPSON Teacher of Musla 46 Washington Street Lessons sflv.‘ the home of the used at Schaw 1in. F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect St, Tel. 511. Norwiok, ©t A. W. JARVIS is the Leading Tuner ia Eastern Connecticut. ‘Phone 518,5. 16 Clairmount Mwe. sept22a JAMFS F. DREW Piano Tuning and. Repariay Best Viork %~. CARDINAL FLOUR a Cardwell’s. It will please you. Ty it. Jjan7d |FRESH STOCK THIS WEEK Cod, Pollock, Haddock, HMalbut, Weakfish, Smelts, Salmon, Maskerel, Shell Fish of all kinds. Ladd’s Fish Markel, Tel. 523, 32 Water Stmot. ' novsd ——— Zero Weather Calls for Fur Robes and Blankets. We have a fine stock of Mumstana Robes, also Horse Blankets fag otveel and stable, and Sleigh Bells. Right quality at right pricea, The Shetucket Harmess Co 283 Main Streel. WM. C. PODE, Telephone 865-4. Janéd Delivered to Any Part of Norwich the Ale that is acknowledged %o be the best on the market HANLEY'S PEERLESS. A telephone ordey will receive prompt attention, S D. J. McCORMICK, 30 Frankin St. may29d Rose Bowling Alleys, LUCAS HALL, 49 Shetucket Street. .~ 3. J. C. GTON®, Pros WM. F. BAILEY octl3d (Syccessor to A. T. 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