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114 YEARS OLD. _ price. 12¢ & weeks S0c & oty 500 % Fear Entered a: the Postoffice at Norwich, Conn., as secend-class matter. ‘Telephone jetin Business Ofdce. 480, Bolistin Entner 200, W Bulletin Job Office, 35-6. Willimantic Otfice, Reom 3. Murray Builaing. Telepbone. 210. - Nor wioh, Wednesday, Feb. 16, 1910. The Circulation of The Bulletin. Arme Bulletin has the largest cir- culation of any paper In Easters times larger than that It is delivered to over it is delivered te over 500 houscs, in Putnam and Danielson to over and in all of thesme places it ome rural free delivery routes. The Bulletin is sold in every town and om all of the R. F. D. routes in Eastera Comnecticut. CIRCULATION average - 4413 -5.920 ....‘.7,533' e ——— b ity SHOULD NOT BE DILATORY. The corporations should be prompt to observe the new tax law if they would save themselves trouble. Our Washington correspondent writes that ~as the time for making returns un- der the corporation law is drawing near, manufacturers and corporations of Connecticut ere appealing strenu- ously to the Connecticut members to do something to relieve them of the hardships of the tax. Primarily those Interested want the tax repealed, but failing to get this they would like to have the time for making Teturns postponed. 14 “There is not much sympathy with either proposition in congress, and the chances are that the law will re- main in force, unless the supreme court declares it unconstitutional. Con- gress does not care to open up the subject again. If an amendment Wre to be reported to either house to post- pone the time for making returns, oth- er_amendments would be sure to be osed, and the entire subject open- f?".:"n. chances would be that the amendments could not be settled untll after March 1st, the date the returns must be in. “The manuacturers claim that they have not had sufficient time to get up their returns, but to this the an- swer is down here that they have known since last August that this tax should be enforced, and they should have been prepared for it. The prin- cipal objection to the tax seems to be the publicity, and yet corporations are assured that the facts and figures giv- en to the government will not be dis- closed to anyome, and cannot become public property. “Those who are liable to the tax had better get their returns ready and avoid all complications.” 1901, 1905, average ..... February 12. UNNATURALIZED CONVICTS. There is no good reason why the prisons of this country should be sup- porting convicts who have no claim to citizenship whatever, and it is cred- itable to the republicans of New York that they are moving for the passage of a law by congress for the purpose of deporting such prisoners immediate- Iy upon their release from prison. In support of such a measure it is shown that the three state prisons of New York harbor 1,100 foreign- born convicts who have never taken out naturalization papers, are confined. In the Connecticut penal colony at Wethersfield about 225 allen prisoners mey be found. The prisons of Massa- chusetts, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and various other states house multi- tudes of unnaturalized immigrants. The burden which these alien convicts put on the states is as heavy as it is unjust. Their support costs scores of thousands of dollars. They force a material enlargement of the penal or- ganization, and constitute a serious problem in prison administration. The increase of these convicts has been all out of proportion to a natur- al increase in the past ten years and in some of the prisons one-third of the convicts are unnaturalized aliens. Action by the government and co-op- eration by the states are regarded as the easiest and surest way Of solving the problem and lessening the bur- den. WALL STREET CAN SQUIRM. Taft, in his Lincoln day New York address, just gave Wall street to un- derstand that if the honest policy of the government made it squirm, it could continue to squirm. Wall street does not represent the spinal cord or the honor of the nation, and it has not the influence to stay needed and wholesome legislation. This is what President Taft is reported to have satd No one has a motive as strong as the administration in power to culti- vate and strengthen business confi- dence and business prosperity. But it does rest with the national govern- ment to enforce the law, and if the enforcement of the law Is not con- sistent with the present method of car- rying on business, then it does not speak well for the present methods of conducting business, and they must be chang=d to conform to the law, “There was mo promise on the part of the republican party to change the anti-trust law except to stremgthen it. or to authorize monopoly and a suppression of competition and the control of prices, and those who look forward to such a change cannot now visit the responsibility for their mis- take on innocent persons, “Of course, the government at Washington can be counted on to en- force the law in the way best cal- culated to prevent a destruction of public confidence in business, but that | it must enforce the law goes without saying.” ‘This is well said, and the president will have the support of every rational gives notice to that effect. It appears to be difficult for the rogues and mmmat the country to u : Deople are of more accoun TRYING TO REFORM. : Rutland, Vt., is one of the New Eng- land cities that is trying to reform, and it is meeting with the opposition which characterizes a movement for improved conditions. The endeavor to eliminate inefficient teachers from the corps in the public schools, who have held their positions as a political fa- vor rather than any personal fitness, has led to the hounding of the capa- ble educator who has been selected to visit the schools and make recommen- dations, as “a, spotter,” and the hold- ing of her in derision by a large class ; of citizens, The Rutland News, de- “The News protests against the application of the uncomplimentary term ‘spotter’ to an experienced and capable teacher employed to go from grade to grade throughout the Rutland schools to observe, criticise or com- mend, and report on the efficiency of the various teachers. This teacher was really engaged to help the super- intendent do work that, if entirely competent, he could do, and should have done, himself. Let us call this special teacher ald to the superintend- ent, instead of spotter and we shall be nearer the mark.” ‘What the reformers are trying to do is to pay better salaries to those who earn them; and to have the best schools in Vermont. There is a ques- tion whether or not they can get the support of a mafority of the voters. In this sort of spirit the Rutlanders are not alone. The road to reform is a hard road to travel LIFE ON THE OCEAN WAVE. ‘Those unaccustomed to ocean life have no idea of life on the Atlantic in midwinter, and it will surprise most readers to learn that “the Red D liner Philadelphia, crossing the Atlantic last week, ran into heavy winter weather just as she struck the Gulf stream. ‘There was a difference of 42 degrees between the temperatures of sea and air. As the liner was cov- ered with heavy ice, the men were put at washing it off with the warm sea water. The wind would freeze unpro- tected ears in five minutes, but over- side there was good bathing. A steam- er from Bermuda traveled from a thunder storm to a blizzard. ~The passengers who had gone below to escape a tropical deluge came up later to have a snowball fight. Thirteen men on the bark Calcium struggled for three days and nights against leaks in the hold and a fire amidships. A tank steamer lowered a lifeboat and rescucd the thirteen, though the sea was running high, and the gale was all but a rigid wall of fury. Few of us realize that the most mod- ern ocean leviathans have elevators, palm gardens, hothouses for growing garden truck, and little daily papers or bulletins, with wireless telegrams and soclal paragraphs. Life on the ocean wave at its best in the dawn of the twentieth century has never been equalled since ocean navigation and travel were inaugurated. EDITORIAL NOTES. Since brooms have doubled in price they will have to be used with more care. Happy thought for today: When money talks there is often peril in listening. It is a fact that cold-storage plants are not to blame for the stale eggs found in their midst! . Peary is now getting back a little of the vituperation which he passed out so freely against Dr. Cook. It was twelve~ years - Tuesday since the Malne was blown up in Ha- vana harbor, and she is still there. President Taft doesn’t make his speeches as scorching as were Roose- velt’s, but their tensile strength is the same. Those who Intend to aviate next summer are a little ahead of those who - anticipate making automobile tours, Now 25,000 bad eggs have been found in Pittsburg. They ought to be able to find a use for every one of them there. Mayor Gaynor is teaching the po- lice of New York that they are pro- tectors of the people, not assailers of them. Harry Whitney’s stcries about hunt- ing big game in the Arctics leave no doubt that a man must be game to enjoy it. Even Massachusetts men who are aspiring for congressional nominations | and the spike kept him there, dangling have to give out that they are anti- Cannon. There were twice as many immi-" grants entered the country in 1909 as in 1908, and they heroically face the high prices. The woman whose face is her for- tune eventually discovers that it Is not quite equal to an inexhaustible bank account. The British Columbia Indian is a good farmer, and the housekeeping of his squaw in a six-room house is said to be creditable. With a percentage on deposits, would not every postmaster of the country be a hustler to bring deposits to postal savings banks? It would seem so. Sclentists say that there isn't gas enough in the tail of the comet to disturb a beetle, and yet grown folks are feeling alarmed about the possi- bilities of it. Recent wireless rescues have brought out that S. O. S. has been sabstituted for C. D. Q., and the exper- imenting amateurs will soon again be fooling with serious things. American money has brushed up a great many old estates abroad, and now the Drexel millions are booked to put a few old English castles in re- pal Of Interest to Connecticut. The Springfield Board of Trade has voted to start a_concerted action for the passage of the Weeks bill estao- lishing & White mountain forest resar- vation. ~ Gonnecticut, too, should iet inte line and work for this end. New England s entitled to this much of co! cration from Uncle Samuel, and it is & matter which concerns many of ustries “state, its climia’ ‘holiday pastimes of some o —Ansonia Sentinel . There is a great rosebush at Frel- rmany, which is said to hav “See that man over there?” repeated the passenger on the suburban train. i 's Unlucky Johnson. t least that Is what he calls himself. He hap- pens to live out falling from the roof of a tall build- ing. He was at work on shin- gles when the support gave way and he began to slide toward the Odyle. “Beneath the spot where he would have fallen was a pile of jagged rocks, loft there by the workmen when they built the foundation. “While Johnson was slipping toward the rocks and certain death the other workmen on the building held their Lreaths, unable to go to his rescue. Johnson still held in his hand the hatchet with which he had been driv- ing nails, and as he slid down the roof he picked up a spike that had been dropped. “Johnson made a mighty effort to save his life just as he was going over the edge of the roof. Holding the spike in his left band he aimed a quick blow at It with the hatchet and drove it into the roof. He held to it with the blow over the edge of the roof. The other workmen rescued him, but Johnson contended he was unlucky because the nail huart his hand. If he'd been given time to put on a pair of gloves, he said, it would not have been so bad. “Another time Johnson was visiting @ friepds in the country and a cyclone came along. It lifted ‘the house and carried it into the next county, where it was distributed impartially over the landscape. Johnson was not _even slightly injured, but he complained bit- terly about it because he had to walk three miles to the railroad station. “That same summer he was LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. Just Why. Mr. Editor—I learn through your valued paper that there is a plan afoot to confer upon “Commander” Peary the exalted naval rank of rear admi- ral. Why? To my understanding Mr. Peary of the North pole, to give his one ‘consistent title (you know the origin?)—is simply an employe of the government in the civil engineering or some other land lubber department, and his title has precisely the value of the governor's staff colonel. He has been upon the roster of his depart- ment approximately thirty years, in- clusive of fully ten years served (sic) “on leave.” In the line of spectacular—ever spectacular—achievement he has per- formed or prepetrated a series of dashes for the pole, always with per- fect equipment, and has endured the hardships accepted by sportsmen as mere incidents of Arctic hunting. He has —ipse dixit—nalled the flag to the pole!—(whather with fingernails, toenails or the nails of commerce is still a matter of credence, the Copen- hagen tribunal not having as yet passed upon-the claim.) He has inspired an epigram heard round the world. He inaugurated a perennial course ©f recitals anent the nailing, etc. at $1,000 per nail—beg pardon, recital. He has donated a $10,000 check from interested if not interesting friends as the nucleus of a fund for his pur- posed dash for the south pole (God forbid). Comes now, in the midst of his glory (and grist?) the order of an unfeeling navy department to report for duty— {command of a first class unarmored draughting board (?). 2 Cruel!—cruel! and then some. But admiring—or s it maudlin— friends will intervene and secure his retirement with the rank of rear ad- miral and an annual stipend of $6,000 per. But why? The only replies I have elicited to date are concentrated in an emphatic—not to say suplphuric—! Can it be that the government, re: izing that it has gained more notoriety than fame in the outcome, would be rid of him at any cost? Even so, sure- ly some way can be found without be. littling the honor, to the winning of which good men and true devote the best part of their lives—an honor sup- dog hydrophobia and was_ dabout to ,ai. of his children when a neighbor shot and killed the animal. Johnson mourned over the dog Hearly a week and contemplated a suit against the neighbor. He wanted to make the neighbor prove that the dog had hy- drophobia. “An uncle of Johnson's died several years #go. and left him a fortune. Everybody in the neighborhood said that now he would admit that he had been luci for once, but of course we said nothing about it to Johnson. “However, Johnson brought \If the lu’Msct himself the next time saw him,*declaring that he was the unluck. jest man that ever lived. If his umcle had left him said, instead of dividing the rest among other relatives, he would have been able to live in Burcpe half Chicago News. !t‘lh prlo\‘po:&d hlala?-lng of Mr. Peary- of-the-: -pole. % the-North-pol " : Norwich, Feb, 15, 1910. WINTER BIRDS AT WINDOW. How to Feed the Birds and to Observe. Their Habits. A good deal of amusement may b had at home by f and gaining the confidence of the winter birds. Bven the English sparrow is a help, as a flock of them feeding near our win- dows gives confidence to other kinds of dirds to come and feed, too. For a number of years I have fed the birds at my sitting room window. I have a piece of suet tied to a rose bush against the house and near the win- dow, 80 I can see the birds that come to eat. There is a shelf tacked to the sill outside to hold pieces of bread, cake or any food I feel like putting out. There are nails driven in the board to press the bread om to keep the wind from blowing it off. First in the morning comes _the chickadees, happy little mites. They will stand ,there and eat and sing chickadee dee dee dee dee, in the most cheerful manner possible. Then the nuthatches come walking, head downwards, on the window frame and take a hit of suet, or come down they fiy off some crevice and back they come for more. Sometimes I put out corn from the hens' pail. They take a kernel to a branch and wedge it in and come back for more. The chickadees will dq_the same. The juncos visit my shelf at times, but they love to feed from the ground best. The suet 1s also visited by the downy woodpecker. The other birds leave when the woodpeckers come. © After a snow storm it is nice to watch the tree sparrows flutter around. They seem to enjoy wallowing in the snow, as though they were taking a sand bath. They like the grain and crumbs I throw out on the ground. They come in large flocks—as many as twenty or more. I have seen them in the yard eating after a long storm; all the birds are hungry then and there will be English, tres and song spar- rows, juncos and bluejays, only the other birds fly away as soon as the bluejay appears. Omne day a crow came to_help out the number. Hairy woodpeckers and flickers come on the apple tree near the house. 1 €8 Epk A | i s i g gphe E;EE!? 5 tH twice as much money, he | most petent to supervise lighthouses, and the naval talled to the service are surely most skilled men that ‘can be found for keeping the service in proper di: cipiine, md‘nma :’lry--nd-nixm alds to na ‘The most’ interested in light- houses. day aids to navigation ar masters of ships and the owners of vessels, as well as their insurers. All =3 to say in discussin, (e some g the g Ky T L TS posed existing sys- tem, which is believed to be eficient, to & new one, the success of which is problema ew Orleans Pica- yune. b GLEANINGS AND GOSSIP. The Young Turks have executed a muck raker. They have evidently de- cided to do things in the government way in stye. ¥rom the way trouble i out in Barcelona it begins they should mave it east and Balkans. the capital of the m 400 of mines. had officers de- the ‘breakd: look as make it Alabama 'Is planning to her convicts at work In Some people didn’t know sl Cmough.ta maks room Tor Now they say that the light which {lluminates the t:é‘l of Halle to make a semsation. A pair of good fat turkeys would have made a much larger one. 3 The American people spend $1.200,- 000,000 a year for electricity, and yet not one them can tell what it is, where it comes from or where it goes YOU WANT SEE OUR WINDOW. 3 CAKES IN A BOX. Lee & Company, 131-133 MAIN STREET febl2daw HEADLINE THE SEVEN RUSSELLS COMPLETE MWINSTRIBL SHOW. FEATURE. R e A, THE MWMUSICAL FORRESTS, High Class Instrumentalists. AR Motion Picturcs, W ADMISSION—10c. IF IT IS Claaw und EVENING! HERRE The Mam M ON_THE BILL. ilus trated So: Remerv ed Seata—30c. Courtship of Miles Standil BRILLIANT HISTORICAL ROMANG, Matinee, Jan3a SOAP MISS FLORENCE WOLCOTY IN SELECTED SONG PROGRAMME. Ladies and Children, Bo Room 48, MUSIC. NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teacher of Plano, Central Bullding. . CAROLINE H. THOMPSON Teacher of Music 46 VWashington Street. a Box GhH 0sgood sept22d ‘Phome 422-8. t238 15“-.;“: ok Prano. Lesson: fvan &t Y reud o ven at my realdence or & the Howme, of the DUpll. Bame method as used at Schawenka Conservatory, Her- 1in. oot11d k! F. C. GEER " TUNER 122 'Prospect St Tel. 511, Norwich, Ct A. W. JARVIS is the Leading Tuner in Eastern Connecticut. 'Phone 518-5, 45 Clairmount Ave. JAMES F. DREW Piano Tuning and fepairing Best Work Only. 18 Perkine Ave Ty l posedly reserved for real naval officers saw a Tuby-crowned knight light on ‘when they get through using it. who by meritorious promotion through minor grades have attained to a cap- taincy. Mr, Editor, tactless though it may appear—I wish to present, hypotheti- cally—another picture—with a point of view at least different to that gen- erally taken. Given a man of high professional standing, of lucrative practice, devoted family, and, in sHort, with 'all that makes for a happy and contented life. the wistarfa near the window one morning this winter. It is amusing to watch the bluejays est.~ They crowd as many kernels of corn down thelr neecks as they can hold and then fly to some tree and dis— gorge, only to come back again and repeat the performance as long as the corn lasts. I have counted seventeen kernels of sweet corn takem at one time. I wonder if the other birds and squirrels do not get a share He becomes obsessed with a desire for achievement in the fleld of discovery where many have tried and none has succeeded. In time he completes what he con- ceives to be an Infallible scheme to this end. He fits out an expedition and proceeds—to wreckage in transit —total loss. Undaunted, he collects his sadly diminished resources and essays another feat oft tried but never accomplished. His dismayed confreres turn back, But he presses on, on to the black night where he faces sit- uation and temptation that may well have shattered the moral sense of— who not? On one side, failure, money, credit and reputation gome, and his family . On the other side, an easily faked success with little fear of disproval and all it means. With his return to the normal, his moral lapse preys upon his mind, and he resolves to rehabilitdte himself by a rtal achievement. Improbable? Why ? He was a gentleman. The North pole quest—redolent (?) of dashes and continued in our nexts —had been his original objective, and he will make one more do or die at- tempt. No spectacular departure is his, he slips away quietly in a friend's vacht to the safe cruising limit, where he announces his purpose and hope: The friend generously aids him, to the extent of his power, and wishes him Godspeed. Comes the time when his equip- ment, pitifullv inadequate at the start, has diminished to the limit for safe return. But he presses on, on franti- cally, desperately, striving against hopeiess odds. Months later, staggers into a native camp, the shadow of a man, a physi- cal and mental—yes, mental wreck. In his tortured brain is the fixed be- liet that he “reached the pole.” He reaches civilization to be at once loaded with honors which few men could live up to, and incidentally commits himself to the submission of his claims to the world’s highest tribunal—a test which is yet to be successfully passed. His return home is signalized by a persecution so vindictive that he is forced into hiding even from his fam- ifly. Under such inspiring (?) condi- G s Beef Trust Prices. The beef trust has issued a state- ment to the effect that prices are as low as they possibly can be under ex- isting conditions. This statement is followed by the explanation that the beef supply doe not equal the demand and that price: are high because it is necessary to pay a higher rate than ever before for live animals fit for slaughter. During the height of the present agitation concerning high rates, beef was selling in New York and London as follows. London. New York. Loins .o Round steak Chuck steak ee.e 12-16 Why is it that the beef trust sell at lower prices in London tha: can in the United States? That ques- ‘tion has never yet been answered. For the year ending Oct. 2, 1909, Swift & Co. showed a net sarning of 13.6 per cent. on the capitalization of sixty millions, which capitalization has been increased forty miliions within the last ten years. - ‘The statement made by Armour & Co. last year revealed net earnings of 35.6 per cent. on a capitalizauon of twenty millions. Tt doesn’t look as il +the beef trust had been treating peopie of the United States fairly. If the indications do not correspond with the facts, the beef trust should see to it that {heir side of the case Is more fully and accurately presentad than it yet has been.—New Haven Times-Leade: can n it ‘The deadly cigarette gets a joit “*>m an unexpected source. A committee of the New Haven Master Plumbers' 2s- sociation recommends that appreacices be prohibited from smoking cigacet:zes during work hours. If that raie is adopted and enforced it will be o g™d thing for the pl ., @ better ore for the customers, and best of all for the boys. It would be a bl thing for the youth of America if it couid te The Chicago Record-Herald says, with some show of truth, that many a man who would hunt ey, in vain for the family Bible could puf his hand on the family corkscrew in the dark. ‘The west is far more strenuous than the east, and there is no use in try- ing to get around it. San Francisco has a woman instructor at one of her pubMc playgrounds who es the boys how to play football. ‘William Waldorf Astor has left Rome e back to help his son in his would have on the chances of a politi- cal candidate in this country. A man out in Washington tried to count 1,000,000 grains of wheat recent- ly. They've got him now where a lot more people are busy on equally im- portant tasks, and are never disturbed in their work by the keepers. ‘The oldest active sailing vessel In the world is thought to be the Constanz. which salls the Baltic and North seas. She is used as a freighter, and_can carry & two-ton cargo. She was built in 1722, and has never had any exten- sive repairs made on her. Her owner says that she is good for her third century unless she is shipwrecked. ‘The Unlvs of Pennsylvania was the first academic Institution in Amer- fca to have a professor of German. Even from the earliest days of the col- lege the institution had a ‘essor of modern I ‘whic! included el the Univers of Pen: e establishing the Ger- man institute. The announcement that the Royal society of Copenhagen Is fitting out an expedition to explore “the “countries around the Persian gulf” will surprise many who imag- ine that there is little of the earth outside of the s which now needs exploring. As a matter of fact, the interior of the great Arabian peninsula is stiil walting to be dis- coversd, and not even the poles offer such almost Insurmountable obstacles to those who seek them as the un- known_land 1 around the Persian gulf. Somse are, doubtless, as void of huméan @as the frozen apexes of the earth, and will probably always remain so. for the heat experi- enced there is fatal to almost all life. the to tions he complies his report for the supreme test. Was he mentally sound? Well!—the conditions cited, the em- plovment of two self-confessed knaves in the arrangement of his records, the delusion that enemies sought to steal his report, the weird precautions tak- en in its transmission, the incoherence cited by the eminent examiners of the Treport, and his own erratic behaviour then and thercafter—should settle that question. His claim was rejected and he be- came a pariah among his kind, ever moving on to avold recognition and contumely. Blatant fakirs have won and risen— he went down to defeat and ————. Now if he witheut sin But pshaw! What I would like to. know is from what sade reasoning ently separated from Lhe cigar- ette. Such a separation woild 1aake for manliness, and result in mcreised health, energy and ambition. The master plumbers know this and they will score in popular estimation if they succeed in keeping and cigarettes apart—Bristol Press. To Succeed Sperry. The oil can was used to advantage at. the republican conference in New Haven Saturday so that so far as 4Ir. ‘Tilson is concerned -Andrew F. shcg- or 1t ‘the e nd -d —Westminster Gazette. Alaska contains the only first class bituminous and anthracite coal on the Pacific coast; from the Bering river aistrict railroads can be bullt to the sea, not more than 110 miles long, over a perfectly level country: and, medording to a published statement by fred H. Brooks, head of the gov- survey work in Alas| " six billion tons of it in both fields—more than 1 1-2 ‘'times all the coal that has been ever taken out of Pennsylvania, Two- thirds of this has been filed upon by claimants—tbat 1s, as much coal as has so far come from the mines of Mr. Brooks estimates to _worth $1 a ton as it lies: that is. estimates the coal in the two fields six biliton dollers.—McClure's, 3 ARE It so WHEN v ness before the pu! Take a Look at the window full of Novel Bath Room Fixtures in Chase Co.’s Store. febl2d by young men and women who wish and build career. THENEW LONDON Business ("glle,;e get prices for same. at reasonable prices. General Contractor and Builder, '"Phone 370, artist thing of If you opposite auglsd Bringing out the real the fine joints in character, the litt] traits that make Toned down by the natura . Individuality Is What Couats In Phoiography. personalit; us what we are. spirit of into ‘perfect accord. Not & Iy DAper. and. pasteboard wit a ready-made lool want a photo of your real self, or what your friends see to love and admire, call on LAIGHTON, The Photographer, Norwich Savings Soclety, WM. F. BAILEY {Bueccessor to A. T. Gerdner) window of Eaton increase their earning power for a successful Slu; All Commercial Branches, Catalogue for the asking. Hack, Livery and Boarding Stable 12-14 Bath Street. B invite gn investizaiion HORSE CLIPPING A SPECIALTY. of the advantages offered Telephone 843, apr2id our school, particularly 5P Health Demands that the bowels be kept lar. Neglect means sickness, ggish bowels are quickly regulated by - Beecham’s regu- Pills Sold Everywhere. In boxes 10, and 2Se. Building ASTHAMTIC RED AFTER IFFERING 3 YEARS. YOU THINKING OF DOING | 1 y yowel, Methisen, Mass., writes: “My som THIS. wiis_¢ured of ASTHMA witi WESPIRO REMEDIVE you should consult with me and {1 1892 This was & very. severe case. Wa used the Excellent work | three REMEDIES an divected. and from fhie first he | tmproved,"was soon perectly well and has | an. wizack siuoe.*” Emerson ' (Apothecary), . Lawrence, 3 ever hud Fran Rend for (free) somple. C. M. WILLIAMS, 218 MAIN STREET. seak Jankia wn put _your busi ther 5t ou want better than &l"fi 'ud ingecolumns o0& CHANGE IN ADDRISS. at Hodge’ . 18 rear of el e