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THE LARGEST llKEl AND RET UFHEI'SFII(ESHUESHITHEW “SUPERIOR TO OTHER MAKES. il M. 'ofll W, o o athar MiEh crads shece inety m'"w":::amm‘- W. €S, L S ahacind e AM:L W. L. &lfll‘ FOR nm BY THE GEO. W. KIES CO. h for th L. Dwusint e e “Well, how’s that kid of yours get- ting along?” asked the young man with the new pink tie as the young man with the sealskin cap sat down beside him in.the suburban train. “My kid's growing every—— “Great!” interrupted the proud father with the sealskin cap. ‘‘That's going to be a fine boy one of thes days, old ‘Why, he's getting so he knows everybody by sight. We changed maids the other day and he wouldn't let the new girl come near him. Had a fit when she tried—" “That's nothing” interrupted the young man with the pink tie. “Our kid orders the maid around! What do vou know about that? Only two and a half years old—well, two years and seven months it 4s, now. Why, this morning she——" “It’s funny what notions that boy of ours gets into his little noddle,” ll}- terjected the man yith the' sealskin cap, while the other man coughed ner- vously and swallowed his anecdote. “You know, my wife has a sort of a blue dressing gown that she wears around the house a good deal and the kid seems to have got stuck eon it. Honest fact! When——" The man with the pink tie suddenly raised his chin and sent a peal of laughter toward the ceiling. The man who was telling the story stopped in pained surprise and the old commuter in the seat behind them jammed his newspaper viciously and went on try- ing to read. “Talking about dressing gowns,” said the man with the pink tie, “reminds me of something our little Lillian did man! Might All Go to Jail. and other federal prisoners are con- fined. The warden reports that the cost of maintenance of each of his boarders is 10 1-2 cents a day. This certainly does not imply meat at threa meals daily, but for all that the pris- oners are sai@ to be well nourished. 4 people generally could have the At- lanta warden’s menus and were satis— fied to live on them the question of the high cost of living would be settled forthwith.—Lowell Courier-Citizen. Home Gomfort wd Good Health DEPEND UPON Sanitary Plumbing : Plumbing as it should be done is the kind we do. Open—every joint tight—sanitary, latest style plumbing—best of tubs-—latest. devices in water closets, sinks, and everything you ecan think of i the plumbing line. Let us tell you what any of the above will cost. Our prices are as Jow as is consistent with first-class ‘work. ANDREW J. WHOLEY, 12 Ferry Street. Telephone 209. jan298 Poor Digestion? : This is one of the first signs of stom= ach weakness. Distress after eating, sour eructations, sick headache, bil- fous conditions are all indicative + that it is the stomach that needs assistance. Help it toregain health and strength by taking BEECHAM'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 M Boxes with fall directions, 10c. and 25c. The high cost of living doesn’t seem %o trouble the keeper of the Atlanta where Charles W. Morse the other nigh: Her mother 'was get- ting her ready for bed and had just got her little nightie out and was tuck- ing her into it when she turns to me BRIGHT BABES produced matches, all of which were accepted without thanks. The inter- ruption threw them off their stride for a moment and they watched the snow- covered hndmpe until the man with the sealskin cap found his bearings again. “ ves.,” 'he suddenly exclaimed, with fresh enthusiasm. *“I was going to tell you about my kid and the food. It seems my wife got to talking to her mother and a lot of other old folks who had raised a pack of children and they advised her- “I don’t let my wife listen to such talk,” interrupted the young man in the pink tie, impatiently. “You ecan get all kinds of dope on raising chil- dren from a lot of old women, but I always say to my wife: ‘Now, look here,’ I say to her, ‘this here is the twentieth century and things have proogressed a little. Babies ain’t rajsed the same as they used to be’ T tell her, and that's——"" “Excuse me,” growled the old com- muter in the seat behind as he tipped the speaker’s derby hat over one eye with the edge of his newspaper. ‘The fond father glared over the back of the seat at him and the one with the sealskin cap made - haste to take advantage of the pause in the conver- sation. “I_haven't seen you before Sunday, have 1?” he asked. N I know I haven't. Well, then. I haven't told you this one about my kid, because it happened Sunday night when we were down to my mother’s. After sup- per my wife took him into the bed- room and laid him in the middle of the bed, thinking, of course, he’d sleep until we avere starting home. But what do you think. that little skeezicks did? Well, believe he had his since a consciousn ‘am to the uneducated, a post- “to the graduate; it is the memory of those. who know and the creation of memory in those who don’t. On sale wherever books are sold.—Exch: ‘graduate course ange. GLEANINGS AND GOSSIP. Rev. M. S. Stewart, who has spent ‘eight years on the northern coast of Labrador, says that up there it is oft- en a question of starvation or a diet of raw seal. He says that raw seal is an acquired taste, but on his trips to visit distant Hskimo settlements he has learned to like it. and says that it tastes like a combination of codfish and beefsteak, with a dash of rabbit thrown in, Miss Sophie Wright has been de- clared New Orleans’ best citizen and her bust 'has been ‘presented to the state of Louisiana by pil; She’ is the principal of the Home institute, which she founded and for many years conducted without assist- ance as a night school for poor chi dren. Tt was the first night school in New Orleans and is now one of tife | most flourishing institutions of kind in this country. “Have you noticed,” York theatrical manager the other day, “that the cheaprseats in the the- aters are not selling the way they used to? To dispose of their 50 and 75 cent seats, and even of the dollar seats, is the problem which all of the theaters are facing now. The ‘gallery gods’ of yesterday are getting fewer and fewer. The reason? The moving picture shows. - The men and women who used to fill the galleries of the theaters are going to the cheaper mav ing 7 ure shows for their evening’s diversion.” When the American numis ciety opens its exhibitions in New York in March said a New it found to have. assembled a great deal of beautiful work—at least this is as- will b her former pu- | its | e education. Toda; Vlr;lnlu ranks sev- -.M.'ut pec o la enteenth, and h’;r prosren upward ‘has not halted. buildings. = A century age Virginia's for an individualism that is gone. 1 is the count schoolhouse that dom- inates the landsape in Virginia today. That change Is the most, impressive sand hopeful fact in Virginia's life, for it 45 a visible demonstration of the faith of the people that the best edu- cation possible is the right of the child and the duty of the state. No horde of immigrants has come to this state. The people of Virginia in 1910 are still of the same speech and blood as the men of 1560 and 1776. Their ideals of citizenship have not been ob- | scured by the murk of. materialism. | And because the men of the present generation, under of impoverished peace, have the fortitude, the capacity, and self-sacrificing patriotism of their bears, the future of Virginia is as con- fidently great as her past is glorious and secure.—John Stewart Bryan, In 1 Collier's Weekly the bitter conditions shown the Uncle Sar's Great Payroll. Talk a®out the compli fons of *life —Uncle Sam has his troubles. In- teresting facts gleaned from the are f»lu(' book of 09, which has just been issued by the census department, The number of federal workers on the gov- ernment. payroll is now rapidly & 400,000, which cent. increase in proavhing 20 represents | per about two The treasury department leads an _enrollment’ of almost 7,000 pers with ms and Se stary MacVeagh has the la est payroll of any cabinet * om Oven. $31,000,000 are to 28,000 pe sons in W iveraging a Jit- tle over $1.000 each, This will be In- creaséd during the coming year fi 3,000 people to be added to the department, avhich ‘will soon evapc the additional appropriation of You may judge a clvmuuvn by its great edifieces weré the homes of the | planters, beautiful and stately shrines | Clean Soap To use a cake of soap reekiny with the dirt and it may be the disease germs from the hands ol many previous us . a relio of an unsanitary age. Decency demands that each uses shall have clean, sanitary-soap! This means the abolishment of l]'lc common fw()llp ('I!kl'. The Soapator is the modern soap dish. It furnishes each user an individual supply of hygieni cally clean soap. By simply turning a handle granules are shaved from a cylin der of solid soap, locked within These granules are more soluble and delightful to use than a wet, soggy cake SOAPATORS are being adopted eve and says, ‘See my -w'apper? ” herve right with him. He made her{Sured by French mumismatic experts. | 009,008, All other states and t BEis s e MY 2 “Got a match?” growled the old com. | stay there and Some of. the most prominent names { 165 taRe’s BHCk seat in the rear of the | economical. muter in the seat behind, thrusting his | “Chicago!” yelled the brakeman. | connected with this department of art | natlonal capitol wiien it comes to the | Simple, \iflh'lv and easily attached face between the two men. Both proud | “Don’t forget your pocketbooks and | Will flguré in the catalogue. = Mile j enfoyment of ~Unele Sam’s payroll, fathers glared at the intruder and both | umbrellas! —Chicago News. Genevieve Granger, any of whose | comparcd to the District of Columbla. | Write for “The Modern Way to Us.- medals dre in’' thé Tuxembourg and { Residents of this area receiye over Soa 3 P 1 _—nm | the Petit Palais- in Paris, will exhibit | $7,000,000 bf the budget; New York P and List of Prominent Users on this oeeasion for the Yirst ‘time in | America. - She'1& creditéd with rare origina and a wonderfully delicate execution, rollows with! a compensation for ernmeéntal’ Service aggregating a little over $3,000,000 is the most in the ' slate mit at 2.30 in the afternoon, having 2.c- fittle complished in six and a half hours what is usually estimated to require 13 hours for man. The presence of PROFITS ON CATTLE. Sold on 30 days’ trial Special Combination package- Meagre Returns of the “Poor” Farmers modest inly the farmers’ profit is no These figures are for a $55 esses upward of 650 pounds of meat fit for the block. There is probably not a packer in the United States who can show such a profit, unless it is in the subsequent handling of the stuff. If there was a profit of $5 in a steer, packing houses would spring up as if by magic. But why should the- busy packer make as mueh in a few days as the rmer makes in three or four years on the same steer? But does the farmer make $5 on 2 steer? We doubt A steer of ind has 't be kept and fed about The first year does not eat a great deal of ut say it takes a quarter of an acre to run him on, the next year he will eat the grass from about an acre of land in Jowa and the third year he will take an acre and @ half. We have here the equivalent of about three acres of grass going into that steer for his summer feeding. He has to be provided for during the winter months and there will be three winters and a half of feeding. It will take at least two acres more to keep him. We have therefore the produce of five acres to complete the steer. Those five acres are worth $100 in Jowa. At six per cent. there is $30 invested in that steer for grass and hay. But he needs grain to fatten him for the market. He must be fed from three to eight months; at three months he is just warmed over from grass., He will re- quire about 20 pounds of corn a day. For four months. that will mean 30 bushels of corn at 50 cents a bushel, $15 more, making $45 for feed. There should be added some grain feed for the first, second and third winters, which is profitably fed to young stock ] to keep them in condition. There is also the salt, the water and so on. The r at three and a half years will stand the farmer about 350, But there is also the labor of feeding the steer, looking after him and taking care of him when he is sick, and there is also possibilitv of him dying—Cedar Raplds Republican. CLIPPED FROM EXCHANGES. The inhabitants of southern Italy and Sicily are complaining over an in- vasion of ravens, and the birds are doing a great deal of damage. A strange part Of the affair is that there milar vasion by the birds at na just bLefore the great earth- Pure iron is only a laboratory prepa- ration. Cast iron, the most generally useful variety, contains about 5 per cent. of impurities, and the curious thing is that it owes its special value to the presence of these. Pure iron can be shaved with a knife; impure iron can be made almost as hard as steel. In answer to a deputation from Bos- nia, which came to present their re- D s, the Austrian ‘emperor merely Justice Baldwin. ief Justice Baldwin bha his public_service as a judicial officer, much to the regret of the whole te. He has reached the age when the constitution of the state says a judge must retire from the bench, but he has not reached the age limit of useful- ness. On the contrary, he is in the full vigor of rare legal knowledge and in- tellectual strength. This fact, together with his ability and fairness as a judge, and his ex- perience in handling cases of more than usual importance, tend to make his retirement all the more regrettable and the loss to the state, in the partic- ular capacity in which he has served, all the more emphatic and unfortu- nate. The constitution of the United States imposes no such age-limit restrictions and it is unfortunate, in this case at least, there are such provisions in the constitution of this state. Justice Baldwin is a rare man in character ard ability, e ought to have been a member of the highest court in the land—the supreme court of the Unjted States, and had that honor been conferred upon him the na- tion would have honored itself _iby honoring him.-—New Haven Journal- Courier. finished The World Aimanac. The Sentinel is in receipt 1910 issue of The World Alman: of the most books on shelves, and a asual perusal of its make-up quickly reveals that is even better than the numbers which have preceded it—not that it is more complete than ever, but because the world has lived another year and things have progressed and happened in the light of another year’s added knowl- edge and experience. ‘The history of the year just passed is brought down to the last tick of the clock; 265 days of the world's history, in combination with something about almost every- thing you .should know. When you buy The World Almanac you buy cer- tainly, convenience and knowledge ——— State of Ohlo, City of Toledo, ss. Lucas County. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that *he 1s senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co.. doing Lusiness In the City of Toledo, County and State aforesald, and that smd firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarri that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to befors me and subscribed In my pres- ence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1886. A. W. GLEASON, (Seal) Notary Pbulle. Hall's Caturh Curs is taken intemally. aod acta directly on the blood and mucous surfaces the mutem. Send for testimonials free F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. of the ¢, one our 75¢. Sold by aul Dmntsu Take Hall' for const; Family Pill A Safeguard to Children. “Our two children of six and eight years have been since infancy. subject to colds and croup. About three years for children; Mrs. lisle, Pa,, to a home (or aged women opk, for Tennessee C w. York, 31,000,000 to the cause of woman suf- frage; Miss Helen Frick gave play-~ ground in Pittsburg: fiss Edith Rockefeller MeCormick gave $200,000 to beautify orest, 11, and Miss Caroline Phelps-Stokes ‘gave $300,000 for pmegro schools d tenement houses. Stand around a big Broadway t ter about.10 o'clock at night and you will see a man get out of a hansom cab, garrying a satchel, closely fol- lowed by another, whose right hand is in a suspiciously bulging pocket. ¥ man goes into the box office, runs over several sheets of pape stily, stuffs pac bag and is escorted These are the collector of theaters and his med The whole receipts of the are gathered in on his round ages of bank notes into the the back to cab. and de- posited in a steel vault. Settlement of the compar 8 is made by check.—) Y » Today. set farming is only one phasé of Virginia’s campaign for education. For the rest that movement is directed by men \\ho with intelligence and vigor ly striving to make pub- School Instruction an effective wos pon in the battle against worance and poverty. How mu[ fight is going on may be seen from the fact that four years ago Virginia 4anked - thirty fourth among the states in point of rsons employe are engaged in and personal attend ar- the president of the Unitec | States’ and the executive departme of the “zreatest mation on earth,” | Barnum would say it.—National Mag- | azine, Cutting Up a Fallen Bridge. contract has been let for the re moval of the fallen portion of the Que bec bridge which now lies in a tangled mass upon the south shore of the river. According to press reports the steel is to be severed for removal by means of |a mechanical cutter; but we do not | place much credence in the state it |for the reason that the obviously | | A method would be to use the oxy-hy- or oxy-acetylenc flame, whose s i8 80 portable as to render It ing up in the many diffi- which would be neces Scientific American | The Cunarders serve broken | butter-scotch candy along afternoon tea aboard ship, CASTORIA : For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the 4 Mfl Signature of bits with of the | every city and offers exclusive territory und and Beef Men. 2 : TR raia 1 d to the money odpalor il some tourists at the top insured this Elizabeth F. Noble of Mansfield Ctive - ahere The Des Moines Capital fgures out | fact being properly attested, and Mont | Mass.. left $500,000,t0 humane and an- | receive and box of assorted soaps sent anywhere the profits of the packers as $5 a ster | Blanc, as the dog is now called, is quite $i-Tiisection, sa\db]tn * last year: Mis |'ment of the government does not stand | <O 08¢ prepaid, for $5.00. x - gkors i i o Stra orris, widow o 16 Chica, A ; st . .%x;]d the farmers’ profit about the same. | 2 hero in the village.—The Strand. beer packer: Jeft Mo“ 000 o a hospital | high on the payroll or in regard to the | at may be about the packers’ profit, T number d; ly 4 LOCAL AGENTS WANTED s Company requires high-grade represe ves in a very gttractive sales plan which guarantees agents a con- inuous income. Correspondence invited hose interested. GRANULATOR Soap CoMPANY West 297H Streer, New Yorx from E. H. WARNFER, General Agent. H. C LONG, Special Agent. Jun24s HARTFORD, CONM. CHANGE IN ADDRESS, DR. N.. GILBERT GRAY, formerly at Hodge's Stable, 1s now 1o cated In rear b2 No. § Franklin square Tel. 574 mayldd THERI 15 50 advertising medium In stern Connécticut ual to The Bul letin for business results Buns Rolls Muffins Biscuits Waffles Pop-Overs Coffee Br ASHBURN-Cl} GOL ead ROSBY'S D MEDAL THE BREAKFAST QuEsTION ago I started to use Foley’s Honey and Tar, and it has never failed to prevent and cure these troubles. It is the only medicine I can get the children to take without a row. The above from W. C. Ornstein, Green Bay, Wis., dupli- cates the experience of thousands of other users of Foley’s Honey and Tar. It cures coughs, colds and croup, and prevents bronchitis and pneumonia. Lee & Osgood. said, gogom” (good day). A firm of publishers in Sarayevo had previ- ¥ ived orders from the deputa- to issue the expected discourse the emperor on vellum in rich nd now insists that the con- 1 be carried out. FLOUR Makes Breakfast a Success i ! Rev. M. Stewart, who has spent eight years on the northern coast of Labrador, says that up there it is often a question of starvation or a diet of raw seal. He says that raw seal is an acquired taste, but on his trips to visit distant mo settlements he has learned to lke it, and says that it tastes like a combjnation of codfish and beefsteak, with a dash of rabbit thrown in. Mendelssohn bank diffees from all similar institutions in Germany in the nature of the relations existing be- tween it and its employes. Its attitude toward iarchal, and it has the reputation of never having dis missed one. One or two have I‘P(ired but the rest have grown or are grow- Zray in the service with a view to retirement on pensfion. The paid are exceptionally high, and no employe in a place of trust gets lessg than $1,000 a year. No Christmas presents are given, but all employes share in the prosperity of the bank as refle Testimonial - “I hed been & great sufferer for years before lsarning of Viourn-O-Gin. ‘I Rad musplacernent, faintimg spells, constans headache, and other female troubles, which made me fesl very weal. I tried different dnctors, but none gave me relief, se 1 took Viburn-O-Gin and it »elleved me so much that I want you to spread the news of what it has done for me. It certainly will do as much for other sick women.” Ladies Everywhere are glad to know of the wonderfu! benefit thes Viburn-O-Gia bas always been to sufferers of their sex. Thousands of ladles spread the md nm emong tbob neighbors 2nd friends. - Others write letters for publication, that suffering sisters, unknown to them, may learn about jt In the newspapers. Bo ths good work goes on. Viburn-O-Gin 1s a purely vegetable compound, ocontaining no harmful properties, is astiveiy speoific In its t;unuv- action on the womazlly organs and functions. - To youmg and old it is highly recemmended for the ment ef all forine of femalo troubles ““A characteristic common to most presents given to the blind is per- fumery,” said an asylum worker. “They fairly reek with it. The inmates of the home I visit received holiday pres- ents by the wholesale. They were of every description and came from di- erse quarters. Some had been made by the givers, some had been bought, but all smelled of the sachet bag. Peo- ple who would shrink from a scent bag attached to a present for anybody else Mterally pour perfume on gifts to the sightless. Their _intention is most xindly, too, Somehow they fancy that what the eye lacks the nose must make up for, and on goes the perfume.”— ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT $1.25 & bottle with full directions. FRANCO-GERMAN CHEMICAL CO., 106 West i29th Street, Mew Yorls treat- O“‘*#‘I’!’&'&’QM#Q# J. Y. Sun - . — Y A dog living at Los Praz, near b4 4 ©> ¢ - -. @ Chamotax, in the summer of 1908, dis- r . - - tinguished itself by climbing Mont [} - g Blane. Iis master, a worl , was N 5 employed on repairs to the observa- tory on the summit. One morning, aft- er havir bheen seen by its owner's . It must have rapidly tracked its mas- ter by scent, for it arrived al Las Sdmas