Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 16, 1910, Page 7

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1Y Here Are Complete New Lines of Spring Derbies Stuart’s Dyspep~ sia Tablets will dissolve it at once. Grand Commandery of Knights Tem- | charse. 1 g grand the s ers of plar held in Waterbury on Tuesday the | 7200 oficers, the speakers of ‘e following officers were elected: Thomas of ~ Ivanhoe comman: of | Eminent grand commander—Eugene guest of the i’ A. Hall, Meriden. evening. A5 Vice eminent deputy grand com- “The Grand Encampment of the 3 Y 35 mander—Wesley P. Pearne of Middle- | United States” was~the sub; -,4'“, town. brief address by Sir Knight X Thayer of Waterville, Me., V. E. Enjoyevery meai. F tn'.nd encamp- Eai urfood ¥ Jminent grand eaptain general— | ment. Mr. Thayer briefly escribed the tyo ‘ . WIth Avthur Chafree, Wfl‘:lmu.m.lq work of the national organization aft- zest. Don’t kill Eminent grand senior warden—F. M. | er conveying tq the state command- Scott, Danbury. ery the greefings 'of the supreme offi- our stomach. minent grand junior warden—Geo, jcers. GG Tl D . Johnson, Bridgeport. he ev. Fredericl . Bu . D. eep it alive and Fminent grand prelate—-Albert W.| . pastor of Trinity church, New properly working. Mattoon, New Haven. London, one of the most prminent Ma- ' % Grand treasurer—Costello Lippitt, | sonic orators in the state, eloquently i Norwich. the toast “Practicai C.{ Knighthood.” The last speaker of the evening was c. oyd Thomas of New York, wh spoke on “The Brotherhood. ' The business meeting was opened on | Tucsday morning at 9 o'clock. Grand Recorder Birdsey reported that there | were 181 Masons knjghted during tho; year, 78 had died and at the present | time there is a total of 3,707 Knights Eminent grand recorder — EIi Birdsey, Meriden. Grand standard bearer—Arthur Wheeler, Norwolk. Send for the free trial package. F. A.StuartCo., 150 Stuart Bldg.,Mars shall, Mich. Eminent grand = sword bearer— William W, Frayer, Hartford. Eminent grand warder — Carey Congdon, New London. Eminent grand captain of guard— Benjamin L. Coe, Waterbury. The Porteous & Mitchell Noticeable elegance of style is a eharacteristic peculiar to our entire line this season. Superb. qualities and absolutely fast eolors distinguish the previous efforts. SILK HATS HATS in the new blocks. line from all and SILK OPERA Handsome EASTER NECKWEAR. STREET GLOVES in proper shades end a new line of Perfect Fitting SHIRTS at McPHERSON’S, The Hatter, 101 Main Street SPECIAL! This Week Only elezaire’s French eriume ETE———— T —— Assoried odors 1 oz. bottles See window display. The Lee & Osgood Co. 131-133 Main Street. NORWICH, CONN. Who Is Lookin For the : Following Vehicles? Democrats, Top and Open Business Wagens, Top If values received -is considered, get THE L. L. CHAPMAN ©0.. 18 to 20 Bath Strget. NOTICE! lel, redye and chean ery réasonable price, ¥ will repaie r pour.fur® at = mné 2l my work is guaranteed ® postal and I will cail for work. Tefapbone 254-3. i e Wurrier. 5 Frasklis 9. i | v Morgan, Hartford. Sold by Jeteibitats everys at the Hotel Elton on Monday evening. where. 50 cts. full sized pkg. the banquet given to the grand com- mandery of Connecticut by commandery, No. 4, T., of that city, Among the guests were the special representative of the grand encamp- ment of the United States, almost all the officers of the state commandery and the majority Knights Templar. At the conclusion of the grand com- You Bet He Won't! Young Roosevelt says he will not be married until his father gets back— Philadelphia Inquirer. g el Mexico is arranging to celebrate the centennial of her independence; the location of the buildings and the ob- jective point will be at Puebla, a few hours’ raflroad ride out of Mexico City. A national committee has been formed with Jose Casarin as secretary. whose office Is in Mexico City. A great deal of enthusiasm has been shown. The exposition will Dbe held during the months of September, October, Novem- ber ana December. Knight Charles A/ Colley, who in be- half of the knights of Clark command- 'y presented Mr. Woodford with a handsome ld badge of a past right eminent grand commander. The charm was of pretty design and from the sec- ond bar was suspended the state seal in Roman gold. The medal was in the form of a Maltese cross, in the center of which was a circle of white with a Ted cros: On this was the motto of the order: “In Hoc Signo Vince: The elaborate banquet was served in the big American dining room. From the speakers’ table, which stretched across the room, were ar- ranged four long tables at right an- gles. At each plate were carnations and a menu card which contained the list of officers of Clark commandery, Forty million years have been cut from the age of the earth by Prof. Willlam Morris Davis of Harvard. He estimates that instead of the usually accepted 100,000,000 vears, the earth is only 60,000,000 years old. Fle bases his figures on an examination of the cliffs in Arizona and Utah, where the time to deposit the strata can be eas- ily computed. - 0n|"E nrm?ll(.::;ess Cure effected or money refunded. Guarantee in each box. Can be iven secretly. Orrine costs only $1" box.. Got Booklet free from N. D. SEVIN & SON, 118 Main St. Snobbery Among Women. Gratifying evidence of the progress of at least one of our women’s colleges | towara masculine ideals of culture is | furnished by the problem of the aboli- tion of fraternities—or, perhaps, we should say sororities—which has come at Wellesley. At that seat of the higher female education, it seems, ‘“snobbishness” has developed in the gtudent societies to such a degree that “girls who have worked for their class and college go unhonored while the fashionable but- terfly reaps the honors.” Whether so- cial influence count in the choice of members of the basket ball team or of the crews on Lake Waban we are not informed, but it is apparent that at Wellesley undergraduate interests are beginning to show a faithful reflection of those approved at Harvard, Yale and | Princeton as the fine flower of a col- lege education. What they will do at Wellesley to re- form conditions which at the men’'s icolleges still present embarrasing ques- tions of discipline is not so material as MURPHY & McGARRY, 207 Main St. We advertise exactly a The Coat Shirt Easy to get Intd and easy o €°t|(he testimony of their existence at a out of. woman’s college gives to its evolution A great Shirt favorite with a great|along masculine lines. Wellesley has iy anan . begun to realize the inadequacy of scholarship or even of athletics as a goal of culture compared with fraterni- ty life, and with this awakening has come its progress to a parity with the older institutions of masculine learn- ing. Can Vassar, Bryn Mawr and Bar- nard boast an equal advance away from o?tgrown accademic ideals.—N. Y. Her- ald. - We have a splendid line of these Shirts—attached or detached cuffs. Try a Coat Shirt. We have the reg- ular Shirts, too, if you prefer them. COLLARS 29 styles — most of them in 1-4 sizes for 25c. “Belmont” and new ARA-NOTCH Boy to Fill Them. Speaking of the army of -unemploy- ed, isn’t it remarkable how many peo- ple there are who have nothing to do but find Jobs That Will Fit Theodore? —Denver Republican, | Strong Talk. Somebody in Mexico is claiming that El Paso is on Mexican territory. Mex- “Chester” Collars. are Try the one. Mty iary mari6d DON'T WASTE TIME Texas, and it has nver been able to do that so far.—Houston Pos Running a Big Risk. ‘The kaiser has recovered from his cold _enough to give an audience to ex-Vice President Fairbanks. Here's hoping he @idn't catch another one.— Boston Globe. No Noise for Him. Mr. Taft's administration is quiet,” . Storer, former am sador to Since the “Dear Bellamy” let- orer has found quiet wel- Y. World. Spring in Vermont. The trickle of maple sap is the real harbinger. of spring In Vermont, and farmers in some districts began thei larvesting of it @ day or two ago.— Rutland Herald. . They Foot the Bills. There are the “Taft bills” and the “Aldrich bills.” Don’t the people own anything at ali?—Atlanta Constitution. Needs Coaching. Very few senators ecer have been guilty of such coarse work as Jeff Davis of Arkansas.—Chi 0 News. vou might can_emplo: profitably. our business, and w doing the work thorc quickly, too, and deliver your home, charging but little for the work. Lang’s Dye Works, Telephone. 157 Frankiin SI. marl5d Piraeus, the port of Athens, in | counted only a hut: in 1870 the popu tion numbered 11,000: it is now 80,00 1f coffee tamp:rs with y.our heart or nerves, suppose you break away for 10 days and see how chhwbetter you feel. You ,can mak: the job easy The Ladies are cordially invited to attend the Spring Opening Wednesday and Thursday, March 16th and 17th, at MISS BUCKLEY’S, 308 Main Street. maridd gt and pleasant if you take on Postum in placz of coffee. Be surz to have it well boiled, atcording to directions on package, to bring out the rich flavour and full food value. Read “The Road to Well- ville” in pkgs. “There’s a Reason” Eminent grand inspector—Thomas ‘The meting opened with a banquet Almost 200 sir knights assembled at Clark mander’s address he introduced Sir Iminent generalissimo— | C. Charles L. Hubbard, Norwich. grand warden of t in_Connecticut. The local attendants included, in ad- dition to those mentioned Tuesday, E. A, Bidwell, past commander of Co- lumbian commandery. The next conclave of the grand com- mandery will be held in Meriden, Grand. Commander Hall. A. Hall, is a director of the Meriden Savings bank and a prominent resi- dent of that city. He was raised in Meriden lodge. No. 77, F. and A. M. on April 28, 1890, and was worshipful master in 1895, Since 1896 he has been the treasurer of the lodge. and in 1905 was deputy for the Fourth Ma- the state. chapter, No. 27, R. A. M., March 24, 1891, became high priest in 1896, and grand senior warden of the chapter in 1902. He is now grand high priest, On April 28, 1881, he was received and greeted in Hamil- ton council, No. 22, R. and S. M., and was thrice illustrious master from 1898 to 1900 inclusive. In St. Elmo com- ‘mandery he was knighted in 1501, and appointed eminent grand bearer. He is a 32d degree Mason, be- longing to the Scottish Rite bodies in the Mystic shrine, also of that city. ’ ‘Intellectual Dishonesty.” against “intbllectual dishonesty,” and in furtherance of this movement, ac- cording to recent reports, they have forbidden the time-honoreag custom of holding . debates among the students unless every debating contestant firmly believes in the side of the question to which he is assigned. The time is plait, e or the “negative” side of a topic, regard- less of their personal predilections, The reform business has so run its course that it has reached the point where it is becoming more or less ri- diculous. It has invaded every nook and corner of our ethics, our business, our social life and our inorals, and hawk-eyed reformers are casting about for something else 4o lift upon the wing of the awakening. While there can be no reasonable objection to a student believing with-all his heart in any side of a matter brought up for public de- bate and argument, it cannot be con— sidered less than stultifying if he is not allowed a reasonable latitude of per- sonal exploration. Who can be con- vinced of the truth who will not ap- proach a subject with open mind and wi%hout prejudice >—Kansas City Jour- nal. GLEANINGS AND GOSSIP. The postoffice departmrent seems a bit peevish because some people In Guatemala have been stealing our mail bags .t6 make clothes of. It really had to come, and the Buf- alo Express is the guilty party. It says that the operagoer in New York really had to be Elektracuted. Fletcher says that in ten years there wiil be no people gating meat. Doubt- less he means that they will be still chewing the meat they are eating now. John D. now appears to be taking a ico will get El Paso when it can lick | pile of interest in a scheme to drain Holland. Doubtless thinks he has fmined this country pretty thorough- y. A woman died In Arizona recently who was 116 years old and who always claimed that she had smoked cigarettes from the time she was six. Cigarettes are very injurious affairs, January in Colorado Springs showed an average ©Of 60 per ceént. of sun- shine. . There were 15 tlear days, 13 partly cloudy and only three cloudy. Theé témperature for the month was slight]y above the normal. . The ministers in one of the counties in Ohio have voted to drop the title of reverend. They say that the title does not occur in the Bible, and that they can see no good reason awhy they should use it. : A man at Camden, N. J., has been fined $25 for loaning his hunting M- cemse to a friend. e would not have been caught had not the friend frozen to death while hunting and the license been discovered in his-pocket. A temple of the sun has just been discovered on the upper Nile, accord- ing to reports. But it may be & false report. Perhaps it is just a mistake made by someone who has taken the smile now coming up out of darkest Af; for the sun. Ed Howe's office boy, who is trying to do the humor of the Atchison Globe while the editor is seeing Europe again, says that vou Wwill succeed in |1.e 1 you resst doing .things. you kpow you shouldn't do. It seems as if someone had said this before. Queen Lil appears to be loyal o Ha- waii in spite of the hard blow it gave her. She has left her entire fortune of $500,000 to the térritorial government to establish an um for elril. dren of Haw: blood, a W. O. Smith, the leader of the movement that . deprived her of her throne, has been named as trustee. The Canadian camp and co-operating 8] 's clubs are planning a din- ner for Robert E. Peary t6 be held at |the Astor hotel in New York on March 5. A large of prominent men will be secured as speakers and the chief topie of the evening will be “Big Game “4Within ithe- Arctic Circle.” A systematic (hposmon to sociallism ‘has been set on foot in England in the form - of the anti-soclalism union, Among its members are 400 young men who have been trained as spellbinders to oppose the soclalist party. More than $25,000 has been rafsed carTy on the work and it is hoped to raise a fund of $250,000 which can be devoted to the cause. Business and churchmen of Colorado Springs have united in making prepa- 3 s for the convention of the lay- men’s missionary movement to be held there March 1-3. This convention will draw from southern and western Col- orado and arrangements are being made to scat hetween 800 and 1,000 men at the opening banquet. Twen speakers of international reputatien will ®e on the programme, The new grand commander, Eugene somic district.for the grand lodge of ‘Heé was exalted in Keystone grand deputy at Willimantic in March 17, 1903, was standard lBrldgeport. and Pyramid temple of The authorities. of the University of Missour! haye inaugurated a crusade The new Spanish ministry King Alfonso ready to accept the re- forms inevitable in Spain, Senor Ca- neljas, the new prime minister, stands for the nomic and fiscal reform in Spain. Great estates escape taxation. of the they have their uses, withdraws both capital and labor from the ordinary channels of industry, ports all recognized churches in Spain and this needs adjustment to modern gonditions. ment needs to be cleared of needless functionaries. are sapping the proits of trade. Per- sonal ®rivileges call for retrenchment This has been delayed in Spain as in no other European country. Bar- celona and the Madrid riots show that In Gas Lights: And Mantles. - No matches, no trouble, convenient PR as electricity. See demonstration of Perfectgd Mantle Co.'s wonderful ventisn of Seif-Lighting Gas Mant! Guaranteed for 60 Days. Don’t fail to attend this unusual sale and procure one of these wonderful 2 Mantles, together with a handsome REGULAR PRICE $1.25 69c COMPLETE Lamp for less than the price of the Lamp alone. Simply Turn On the Gas. Demonstration price will only last for a few days. OPENING DAYS These are Opening Days in our Carpet Department — a complete showing for Spring of all the best kinds of Floor Coverings—Car- pets, Ru Oil Cloths, Linoleums, Mattings, Etc. 1t will*pay you to visit our Third Floor this week, as during Open- ing Days we make many special price concessions — reductions_from our own low selling prices, thus giving an additional inducement te buy HERE — and NOW. Notions and Small Wares All this week our Semi-Annual Sale of Notions and Small will continue. In this Sale we are offering hundreds of every-day needfuls at very special prices. Included are Threa Need | Pins, Hooks and Eyes, Tapes, $hoe Laces, Corset Laces, Buttons, Hose Su~~orters, Eto. Sale will continue all this week. Every housekeeper should a stock before the Sale e The Porteous & Mitchell Co. Wares lay in The Spanish Advance. either reform or revolution must come The lHberals have beenp conservative on all these i . The party has b last chang: those allled wit! shows 20 years ago, and Hartington left, ish liberal party is radical .—Philadelphia ¥ increasing demand for eco- The property institutions, while monastic Not Taking Any Chances. Peary his proofs. enetrated even hiladelphia North American. Forgot About the Parrot. Senator “Jefr” The state sup- Central and local govern- Taxes on occupations phia North American, Realize? That despondency in women is a mental condition often traceable to some distinctly female ill! Women who are well do not have the blues, neither are they irritable and restless. Derangement of the female o ism breeds all kinds of miserable feelings such as back- acl;fiz,n headache, and bearing-down feelings. Try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable There is no doubt that it has made many remarkable cures of female ills after all other means had failed. There is hardly a day that some woman does ndt write us that this simple old medicine, made only of roots and herbs, has cured her of a severe illness. Here are two such letters — read them — they are ‘When 1 wrote to you first I wes and was so wvous least noise, it woul to take Lydia E.Pink~ D I don’t have any more I sleep sound and my ca is eT, M‘:Ir-dvlee. I will recommend all_sufferers.’ ** —Mrs. Mary Platea, Pa., Box 98, Whalgott, N. Dakota—*“I had inflammation 'which nunl.'clnl in my sides, and my back e. I was 8o blue that I felt How poorly you ompoimd, Bisod OmM PO 10 feel better looked bdttle of modlohl’.f"'—-uu. the the , as the English Nberals when Chamberiain The new Span- So s its refuses to let congress have What! hag its reputation the Polar reglons?— Davis may now see the truth that silence s golden even to a silver-tongued orator.—Philadel-

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