Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 11, 1910, Page 13

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With an eager look in his face llitle | the boy’s eyes as he turned and walked trade of some men—they like -it. Jean stood gazing at his shadows. | 810Wly towards home. The next morn- of Some i WYers. evénig the ohi ing he came again to the house. Heo Sal Potter says she would not know \ ng the child slfpped away | poticed now & how. of White ribbon on Sttt diae gl e 7/ ) from home to come to the large white | the door knol jome one said the lady ok, O ~ » . house with the beautiful lawn in front | had lost her little boy, and the child the truth when she says it. A g and the many bright flowers, Hut the | Wondered if he had gone on a journoy chlef thing that interested “Jean was |the same as hisx mamma. Temptation is the whole stock in Old junk should never get to be a " . » p = 3 3 3 K the upper window, for with th A few months afterward Mrs. Ware Lig asset on the farm. Husbanded use- 4 3 . 3 proach of twillght 4 gt would hppear | told Jean one morning that they were lessness gives no returns. 8 SsEa - 7 i th-r;.' and éhen a lady would draw the lout“akc ! llnn.f. r!l: g;h- chs'a naid 3 g : v > B curtains. She was very beautiful, he | nothing, bul ought maybe they Cy Cymbal says if you'll let him see < knew, as once or twice she had looked | Were going to find his mamma, 5o ho where and how your mowing ma- k ? . out casually and he had seen her face, | Was ver; uflyy while she wis getting chine is in May, he'll tell you what Then after few moments the it him ru‘y e wondered a little wihy are. = 2 chap outside could see two shadows (the woman's eyes were so red and why JERE of A SN THREE PRIZES MONTHLY: $250 to first: $1.50 to second; §$1.00 to |00 the curtain.” One was a big shadow | she kept murmuring, “I've dome (ho Gus Patten 1s of the opinion that the| {hird, Awara made the last Sat s srapni e d and the other was a little shadow—the | best I could—Iit can't be helped.’ men who are shouting loudest back > ot o blg one was. of course the mamme ".ub:; Anteed L2 Jong ride and the 1it- e of r was her little hoy. ere ve m L4 to the farm in the city are those who EVERY WOMAN'S OPPORTUNITY. an ache In. the ohild's heart when. | heard the noise and bustle of the big are getting commissions on the old Bulleti > ever the large shadow took the tiny | ¢tty. But he tried to be brave, for wis farmi ‘sold. fut le"“ u“a in wants home letters, good business letters: good hel one in her lap—that was as he thought | he not to find his dear mamma? His gl o e e Y ogEest. They should be in hand by | ot it—for he was sure that she was |couage falled him, however, when The man who loves to sit on a mossy 'y of each wet te on but one side of the paper. telling bedtime stories or singing him | they entered a large buildin; and boulder and listen to the warbler's call Address, SOCIAL CORNER EDITOR, Bulletin Office, Norwich, Conn. |a lullaby. How he wished his own | when the woman aiter a conversation is usually deaf to the call of the pitch- [ ; mamma had not gone away. It was | With a stern looking man kissed him fork. Doggedness as Defined by Webster and as It Really is— It is Not a Bad Quality, Eut Winning Grit— i he Dif- ference Between Slivers and Bowser—Doggednes Described and Applied—Ir War and in Agriculture it Has Its Merits. two years now since he had seen her, | #nd sald she would come to wee him 1T IS A YOUNG FOLKS’ CORNER, TOO! #n, it seemed longer than that to him. | often, he clung to her piteously and o o 3 i ho The Social Corner is interesting & i remembered vaguely how he | begged her not to go—he was %o afraid «Written Specially for The Bulletin.) | when he quietly remarked that he was | Pill Bangs says that the man w! & & great many people; and we are Bolng o BEMt It out on that line if it | finds jov in work is not going to pic-{ Dleased to note the increase of letter-writers and the variety of interesting 232,“,{:“‘.,,,,‘“‘}’0““’,_“" e 1 A el g ‘2,,";‘_’3“‘;“'“3} It's dogged as letters which come in from week to week. This corner is like the old omni- |and sick. And then she had bidden | the room. Not a tear fell now—h bus, there is always room for one more in it. The kickers may get in oc- :lm 1001’ nblthz and told him to always czu'ld I;ms7 ri\‘. T).ln ulnla; hlmu;t l,:rm- casionally, but th, e & good boy. The next day when he | #d 10 be broken. Instinctively he knew iz 4 w—il:l, ik t eldoer:hu: welcome all Lh_e time. We hope the young | .4 gsked for her some oné told him | that this was to be his home. overlook the fact that it is their corner, too, for gossipy little | she had gone on 2 long journay. A | In the days that followed he moved letters.—EDITOR SOCIAL CORNER. kind neighbor took the child home and | silently about with the rest of the chil- for the last two years he had been in | dren but there was a wounded loo her care. But she was a widow and | In his brown eyes that made the does You may S have heard the phraseEnglish, I in- ml;gfl;:smisfer-or;e';w‘":;? l:e're;‘? ‘:3‘{ nics more than three days in a week. o ot e 5 - “‘;,, 5’;‘,3;',;‘1;:; e ahe | day after day. While Lee was defend- | The man who kills himself drinking ing his northern approaches, that left |jce water in summer is not so much svord “dogged” comes from “dog” and vee 2 very unpleasant definition of | flalk suddenly pricked him from the |y iier than he who is @ victim of rot- = Smoaniuge: & e on 0% | east. Hurrying there to meet and re- e pel the attack, hardly had the last {sut in winter. 5 Jsed in the Englisn saying quoted | jhell exploded than the imperturbable| A crop figured on paper is more Tt Jocem't mean Just that 1 oancY)|Grant was repeating his order, “For- i that our old friend Noah Webster [ SO0 by the left flank” and next | comforting than the crop that is usu- Helpful Hints. for friends or summer boarders. Thou- | had a large family of her own and the | matron, who was a very kind-hearted didn’t like dogs. So he naturally found | "O Y, 05 cault was renewed from |ally hauled out of the field. Editor Social Corner: I would like | S8nds of children doomed to epend the | small sum of money Jean's mother | Woman, fi very sorry for him. And to give a few hints which I hope other | Summer in large cities are deprived of | had left had not gone far towards his | for two months or so the child was wn ugly meaning in 4> But Sou and 1 like them—in their places. | the southeast. So it went on, day after | g, . grivers have always learned | housokcepers wha ive ronders b cener day, till at last the weak spot was There e I s, Dt | found, the weary defenders driven |good horses bad tricks. columns will fry and prove true. t . from their intrenchments and started . For the cleaning of flatirons make m\;!.:‘_mflr r:n:u-;.“:: l’:ntk‘hl.:yeglne); on the wild race which ended at Ap- | A musty feed box Is old-fashioned.|a bag four inches square of bed tick- Intelligent stock prefers to be baited | ing or any strong material and part the chief joys of childhood, and none | support. It had been gone now for | listless and paid no attention to any are so happy as the cihldren who will| some time and Jean's future Jooked |thing. Then one day a beautiful lady spend the summer at “grandpa’s” on|dark. There seemed no other place for | dressed in black came to the home the farm. him but the orphans’ home; still the | wWith the view of adopting a little boy In many instances the summer's| woman dreaded to take him there and | The woman was difficult to please ttox eharacteristic of dogs. Loyalty, faith- | Pomattox. A1l with > outin; 1L ed health, N W not until she Jean's SOrrow R T upon a clean floor. with bayberries; then close the g W mean restored ealth, | kept putting it off from time to time, | And not un she saw Jean's ¥ alness, unsparing devotion to duty as| |, .. ugogged as done it,” you'll ob- AN A opening. When taking your iron from | friendships formed and mutual bene- [ Of late Jean had made beliove that | ful face with its wondrous dark eve hey see it—these are also traits of | . " o RS0 5 1 put ' sheer dog- When an Englishman tells you he|stove run over the bag, then on a |ftS arising from contact with country | the large shadow on the curtain was {@nd the mass of falr corls dld she friends Sometimes we remember | his own mamma and the little one |evince any interest whateve doss. Also, in many dogs there is a oo : r r 2 | gedness of purpose and determination | suspects that you are telling s Joe|Plece of paper. I tried many things gicadiness and fixity of purpose, a de- | TIUWSS 00 REROt A00 o s Shive | alitchell, vou know he thinks yowre | Pefore this, but never anything that them with gratitude and affection all| himself. He was thinking of that now must_have that child,” she wald our lives, so helpful have they bLeen|and a pleased smile lit up his fac 3 “Come here dear. Fermination to do thelr task no matter . starvi hat . equals this. ~ Those who iron, bow long ¢ takes nor how much_ it Horsle wiater at Valley Torse. when | elisible to an Anantas club. e Do e e e T gach (o ihe other. Some of our City | What protty storles she read To hi sound of the sweet voice Jean S nor " jes® = vi irons stick to starched pleces. riends lescribe “enchanting views,’ and how sweet her voice was when |looked up and for the first tiw in #n the doing of it. It is these quaii- | the Dlood from the sentries’ unshod| To keep animals from having bad| ™™g, ., @ BEIUL BCER o o | “gorgeons sunsets,” and pity the resi- | she sang the evening songs. Just now | weeks a smile {llumined his face dents who “are utterly incapable of ad- | ghe W telling him the story of Alad- “J's my shadow lady,” he cried, and + sol feet stained the snow on thelr beats? |jay Ries which I underatand to be included | feet stained the snow on thelr beats? |nabits, a man must himself cultivate | ribbons through the beadings on our admittedly wonderful. He springs to battle as a fox to a chicken-coop. His | When it comes to poultrykeeping the " i Of course, thare are doge and dege- | ., ce 1s a whirlwind; a tornado, furi- a2 5] dom dread it it you try my way. When t once had one who was as rattle- | 2 orEC o & T G, B e " over, | 1ice down is one sure way of building | removing the ribbons from the soiled rained and flippety-—floppety a scala- iec: When Napoleon's Old Guard charged |the hens up. pieces fasten a piece of twine to one po] B! end of the ribbonm, pull through, leave miring the beauties of natur There | din's Lamp. How nice it was to sit | then froin sheer happiness he put i are such people in the country, but are | in his mamma’s lap again and listen [arms tight about her neck and sobb they in the majority? Do all who stay nderful things, and the best | 0 his heart's cantent. When he wu among us fully appreciate the beauty to cuddle close to her and | calmer he told her all about his on every hand? feel her arms about him and then he— udows. Spending a short time at the sea-| put here the unpleasant thought that Jean's A4 ufn Ky e w good habits. He won't need a whip. underwear and children's dresses aft- Ao the character described as “dogged.” er the ironing is dome. You will sel- 1 w no bounds when to live v the =mag as ever wore fur—or pantaloons. 17 he saw 2 woodchuck forty rods away | the “thin red line” at Waterloo it Was | A respectable chicken does not like| the twine in n hey carry . 5. Wi ) ¥ g % st R the beadings while the | Shore, they carry many treasures from | it was growing late and that Mrs. Ware | he Jearned e atart A e ;‘,f:f‘"“fv:;‘l;‘:,’;f;e.B‘:l’.‘h";"!fo‘}fg‘d.’,‘::.s the same bill of fare{every day In the | pleces are belne laundercd. | By fas. | the beach and recall the roar of the | would wonder where he was came (o [lady in the big house with bemutiful of velps and a filnging about of logs 4 { tening the ribbon on the twine again | Waves as they dashed at their feet: | nis mind and he knew that it was only lfluun in (,m..lu and Hm, many br ]n' wers, for he knew she would take but can they love the sea as do the | make-believe after all. uninspiring Britons didn’t break out | week. £ 1 that called on the universe to sit up spiring it is_easily pulled back in place. | people who dwell along the shore, who One night when Jean went to the big | him In her lap and sing to him and tell wnd take notice what @ kill he was|into any bombast about dving DBuUt| o0 i arece for turkey: - - o 3 5 s fo ys or for| A brick makes a fine flatiron stand 23 el e Beltom oras ?fiéni'gflffi'r.i?"iflféfi'fiiiri‘:‘él’é‘ rfit’.fi.”f bees have the best luck with them.|as it holds heat a long time. The irons | 89end the day upon or by it and are| white house the upper window was him bedtime “stories and thut ) ole when Slivers mrrived, and Mr. |ed away with their slow old muskets | They fancy old clothes more than :\l;i;x n‘f—&ffi-h?t :E(‘l; !onflar than when o'; fi. ;?a:if;:") at night by the sound d-;k, and m:“"'r’-h:‘f» v;:x:»:lnl)‘,,x;g'lf:‘c: y\:":.\;r«n t have to make believe an up had his run for his pains. Next |as fast as they could, and died—most |hey do new. o T T o e g Many may return home strengthen- %:!n: PP e Jower part of the house.| And so Jean's shadows are to him day he would do the same thing on [of them—without thinking it wasany- 3 it Ane: Gather the e ey | ed in body and soul, better able to| here were tears of disappointment in | shadows no longer.—Boston Post Em same provoeation. I don’t think |thing more than a part of the day’s owls that roost on trees are mot|Shd It keeps fine: (*'“':lrd;": rh:rail;l;‘ Desis life's Burdens, helped by, the re- | > Toe WoTe teaim ¢ s s o i e it o S s hany ok the fimest |likely to dress off handsome. They | pack in Four cans as solid 48 possible, | collection of what they have seen; but - — . s e. But o! n the then wi I e S . ! 3 . e ot gy difforent S elgthor Tos. | self to annihilation against their dog. | Pecome deformed. have a ‘pail of cold water at hand, | 8Ven then, are all these scenes as dear| ! T bought some last Sunday N e plunge your can into_ this, hold there | t® them as to those who dwell amo: onn! &l x Hear! Hear! klnf ltmn:;—.:-.und, .-::tg-d--u-eg SR gedness. Parson Dawson says, “We're all| DunES SOUC €00 (000 S ome to. ¢ them? We know every pretty shrub|morning.” He -mm]e‘d ‘fl\ '“"‘""r“f‘;": The city beautiful movement If srel. Bowser was uch P or misi - pr R ade where 3 m 0 poor miserable sinners,” and I can feel | top of the can. Place rubbers and |DY the wayside, the rocks, the old|places In that smap wlact WPCIE | properly pushed will-help not only the chuck for dinner quite frequently. He |lated money and left him not only |I dow't have my Sunday clothes on. When reddy. to. van 1t Geain o8 the :h‘\s:; mn:st:n:;:n;o:: g{ :mwgzg_: :;:‘.’,‘é"’:':; ltail:xt‘ealznhhgle;;i;; d;:"vegl; The man who sows a crop of sweet w&}ter and prepare in the usual way. 5 b 2 k r- |corn for the cows is popular in the very much enjoy the letters an fow in an open fleld, and you would | he stubbornly began the task of pay > % Do) e wish long life to the Social Corne: fence rtly hidden by vines could get liquor. and wgakngw just w yere to fé“f.{‘[{.‘: there was in his statements I do not| fndividual, but the entire community, faithful horae rest while we gaze on | know, as he had been drinking = | and especiaily the property owner and the “loveliest views” s familiarastobe| | L AN OBSE " | the householder. The public hesith is a . part of our daily ckerv ol life to look at the hills and valleys — also mere or less avolved. Are you : contributing to the movement? If never that ho even saw the | ing his creditors and repairing his own |barn. The cows like & sood provider. o B ; : : e i about us, to know them in ther ; beastie. But he had generalship in |fortune. He was already an old man. | vl .y com coo gl S i SR - hanges of sunshine and shade. to en- | A Few Facts from Real Lite. = | ;o1 where 1s your public spirit aad joy them as the many trees are bereft| Fditor Social Corner: T was civic pride’—Birmingham News. bim, that dog did. Was there a bur- | The work was slow and the end un row to be found In his travels near | certain. But he kept at it,. steadily,|is one kind of a bug that's fmmune| _ The Cat and the Newspaper. of their leaves, bringing to view not | With the letter of “The Wayfarer,” be- Editor Social Corner: Did you ever h TauRe It b o.tue to Hfe. Hamkn which was & rock or & stump or a |unfiinchingly, doggedly. Northing in |from them all—the humbug. only ngly, y. 2 o e = y an_extended range, but houses A 2 try placing a newspaper under|, . ioq in valley and on hills, homes|sympathy is always interesting and Her First and Second Cholce. elump of bushes? Fe would mark §hat | all his life was more admirable than N < - AL ‘Whoever tries to pick beans or ber- | “pussy?” The household pet loves to} o friends, all unsuspected by the |seldom consistent. "The persons who | oy 'eq marrying a titled foreigner, ;:?:nufl ’.";‘3’.&'&‘2"‘;‘.‘&«":‘ A g o i W By b cuddle up in the midst of the cush ~ h 3 en Del thing-so valuable that which he |ries when they're wet is too green to| ¢ a a st o cush- | . ve no respect for men whose wives Soyer. crouching” almost nose to 'the e = call L & ions on the lounge, In the Morris chaic | SHmmer boarder” B e Lo uat b hiorrified by | 8 ir's highest ambition is to become ground, he would lie for hours as mo- = e 3 and other favorite soft epots, leaving| po hleasures of life or bear its bur- | their own family history. Andrew | the wife of somebody who is entitled 'fionl-unlo:, and apparently as un- It's taken me a long time to get to| It isn't any more honorable for a|traces of her fur behind that willl 4on4"3nd sorrows, and we say: “I will| Carnegie says that it is only three | (o wear a uniform. nterested. Waen, after the manner of | my real pcint this morning, but I've |farmer to rob his wife of her just dues | CU0S 0 Your dress, causing a go0od|ijist up mine éyes unto the hills|generations = from shirt-siceves (o i woodchucks, Chuckie had got through | got there now. What I want to preach - i deal of annoyance sometimes. These | (St = WP ‘e eyes, irt-sloeves—It In not more than that with false starts and had finally settled | 5 i { want to preach | than it is to rob his neighbor's orch- | delectable spots will hold no further 5 P - Ty Mtmen works to witely Can'They Dy it down to steady feeding, Bow. ~rg g i e e B e Py s charm for pussy if a crumfly, crackly | ., OUr city _friends —describe the|from wifely Ikifcher ey ety It 4 e, - ok virtue and the necessity of dozged- » 42 Y | “zorgeous sunsets,” but only the few | kitchen work. I recall that from mill- It 18 a nevertobeforgotten fact newspaper is crumpled up Invitingly = . . o only n 3 attempt to tell of the beautiful sun- | girl servi to servants has only bee! that the people who scoff most loudly at the poets never read poetry Tor another had. tempted 1t well away | Loos 1o our work. There are lots of us| Let a boy know there is somthing in | in u corner of (he room. Almost every who can lay out a brilllant year's|cy,ming for him and he will stay.|cat loves to sit on a newspaper; she from its burrow. Then his short legs ign. Wi lan 1: i would sHiffhh under hiteh without | S2upaisn. N R | s Reop never el ‘Duubhiat likes to knead it with her paws before and operations so that they will figure out, S T vet fascinated any-| curiing up to doze, and a5 the paper rise. There is an indescribable charm |a quarter of a century—that from in that early morning hour when the | barefoot economy and waiking to save birds give @ wonderful concert all un- | money to parlor life and parior cars known to many a acationist. and | was only three generations. The man = sound of bark, he would dssh—not | poracatomd. e b for the chuck but for its hole. So, of e i N oe | % crunches she purré with pure pleas- 2 - oy Ehrte 2058 o Scke "Rid whion: | Peent progt it whon e Soms 308 01T, | Srer e paver Bhema be chubgehsea. | el conters, 6 many rosidense | With & "gned W Bt wieier™s | ppee vOUR KIDNEYS Ter Eot there first was the best fellow | ana trouble. Difficulties arise which o S0 it will not get flat, thus | saicciive which expresses peauty o |good bank account, and both usually N we couldn’t foresce; losses occur which Stealing. et eT (ho, AT, there bellX | delight to some of the sunsets, or fcte in fe are found living tozsther il - h thel lati 1£-rell n think their appreciation must be | happily on Easy street, se B el ot Vour I've knowr that deog to wait a half | VS couldn’t expect; the season is Stealing is an old-fashioned method Also a good idea for the farmer in day, watching & chuck he had found in | Jeriverd, bevond precedent; one thing | of getting what belongs to another. | cherry time'is to cut a newspaper into En old stone wall, till Hoskins came meni Toils r“:_ DSy ‘;“’ flffi"m_ 7| Society visits its severest penalties | oD Strips. Tie these in the middle miong and tore away some of the |TORE falls f short of our hopes; al P with a string and hang to the cherry stones which were too big for Bowser | 2 -‘:Jr:e We are not as well along as|on those who are old-fashioned. Ac-|tree branches. The slightest breeze we planned to be at the end of May.| cordingly stealing is not only punish- | will cause the atreamers to wave like greater with less opportunity to en- | well fixed, with a good prospect ahead o for their heirs. They may not be wor- = 2 It does not bear the charm of nov- | thy of respect, but they will never Troubles. A Nerwich Citizen elty to us, but seems almost a part of | have to air their poverty or their van- Shows How to Cure Them. our lives. At the Aoy FRANK. i 2o pull out or undermine. I have known . : Our tendency is to grow discouraged. e By ‘| day In winter we sometimes !’;fi‘,:";,?,‘:;,f,: to his favorite 0utdoot | 5 throw up our hands in despair, to | Bble (lots of things are punishable), | jong. threatening arms=very terrify- | orimsoned gold sunset sky, reminding # Many people mever suspect their = big as himself, properly dispose of | ELV® uD the struggle as hopeless. | but it is also punished by summary |, org M. C. us thet “at evening time it shall be kidneys. If suffering from a lame, t4¥he carcass for due Tipening to his | That's the time which really tests us.|fine and imprisonment. Don't steal. e - |light” As the da lengthen we| Editor Social Corner: 1 am Interested L k(e it s taste, and then, his task dome for the |18 the time which calls for dogged- | There are better ways. See a law- PRI : watch the going down of the sun until | in The Bulletin Boclal Corner and so [ weak or aching k they 4 time, imp off t6 the kennel and devote | R€SS. Lippi 3 4 ose Economy lllustrated. the long days of June come when, in| want to take part in it. My subject is | it is only a muscular weakness; when | §he Seet Bt 15 Shy I¢ CoaAiEe It oo e yer.—Lippincott’s. Editor Social Corner: Well, here we | our own case it disappears beyond | ples, and in all New England can y0u | upinary trouble sets in they think It tuerons wounds and “sleeping it off. Any man can work across a field | . - s | are_again—same book, but’ another [ God's acre where so many dear ones |fnd'a man who does not like ple? Now | U\ " 00 oo rect jtyelf. And o it s Eut he stuck to his woodchuck from | When he sees a ten dollar gold piece | ~ - 4 chapter. I sometimes get from three | have been laid to rest. It is then|I wish to put in a plea for one-orust the moment he had marked it down as | Waiting at the end of the row. Any Makes Waste Places Useful. to five pounds of sparerib; always, | beautiful beyond expression, a faint|ples, in which the crust is baked be- | with all the other symptoms of kidney bis meat. he stuck to it despite hot|Of us can be jolly when things are| Among the advantages of frog farm- | when company is coming—the company | glimpse of the glory beyond, of the|fore being filled. It makes the pie #0 disorders. That is Just where the g spelled with u large C. After the|fairer world on high. It is not an idle, | much easier to dig s #ur- | unger les. You must cure thess ma But when the cold, ing in France is the fact that it en- sun or driving rain, despite weariness (Coming our was betes troubles or they may lead to d when we speak of a “glorios sun- | this way. F‘ollnwrn‘ a end hunger, despite temptations to | SOUr spring has yellowed and stunted 5 e S = jchase Talibits or bark at squirrel, de. | OUr sickly corn: when our shivering hoics Dersons of limited means to Ut | clean oll the bones out. and use the 0 u . The bes 2+ 'spite apparent hopelessness, he stuck | 8&rden looks about as cheerful as a llze marshes and ponds which are 100 | bones next mea place them in a|set. COUNTRY. Phain custard, cocoanut custard, lems or Bright's disease. he best remedy %o his job till he had fintshed it. Then | 8raveyard; when the market drops out shallow and warm for fish culture and |sballow pan, put in some warm water, | South Covent with a meringue, cream ple. rhubam | 15 yge §5 Doan's Kidney Pllls, It cures —and not till then—he began to take |under the one crop we've succeeded in | practically useless for any other pur- | 521t and pepper, top of bonmes: take = with meringue, prune with & merinkue | 5y, 1)1, which are caused by weak or any dry bread or brokem crackers I Understanding Ourselves. apple-sauce pie, to be served warm diseased kidneys. Norwich people tese - y With cream, stewed apricots with mer- Editor Social Corner: It ls a mis—| 5 " Deaches, same as apricots or | tify to permanent cures. take for us to tell our freinds that we | yith cream. Then this time of year | "p 'y ‘prown ¢ Summer Street, Nor- understand them better than they un- | ngiviqual ples filled with strawberries 4 b . derstand themselves. People resent| .4 whipped cream are delicious. wich, Conn., says he results that followed the use of Doan’s Kidney Pills M. G Y. in my cese were most satisfactory. I tock of his making; when the best hor: icks w freuase own wearlness and | o il on the road and has to g | POSe and produce, on a comparatively | have, pour hot water over crumbs and into horse hospital for a montn, whie |Small area, a large amount of valuable | when cool enough take my hand and we struggle along with the nervous, 'food material, for which there is al- | Squeeze bread nearly free from the water, sprinkle powdered sage, salt, and pepper over the moist bread and work the seasoning in their place on top of the bones and put butter size Now, that's the sort of thing I ua- Berstand by “doggedness. I don't|untrained colt; when our fungous and ways an eager market. care if Mr. Webster ‘does use unpleas- | InSect and weather enemies are all ) ant terme in defining it. The sort of | around us, and above and beneath us this as an impertinence, and they are right. It is an impertinence. No one| ... sSide, Norwich. e 1. Bave e o She T | —then we need something besides skill Geod Work of the Ladybird. but oursely: e x :s.c'm'x‘vu DY ahy other sinsic word than | and sclence and feith or Tope oF Char- | Iigly, Spain, the British West Tn- of bean.here and there over the top. | selves No one cise B B =t procured this remedy from N. D. Bevin “dogged.” And it's the sort of thing [t. We need the simple old Anglo- | gi05 gnq other communities where |ana I emphasize the doni—let your | 4¢P Toots and springs of our behaviour, Things to Do. & Son's drug store, and in view of my nor the motives of our acts. The old| Editor Social Cormer: What to 40| . nerience can heartily recommend it whiol s | Saxon virtue of doggedness. e gy oy sgl;nmfla:nfifi e oranges are grown, have called upon | husband, brother or family see the tin §f thing,_ Its the sort of ghing which | Beaten? “Who says so?” “Not on Uncle Sam for great quantities of i T o rings results. A little more of it in | your lifel” Delayed we may be, hin- |ladybirds to devour the scal v " wi ¢ ourselves wouldm't hurt some of us, | dered we may be. checked we may be o © achle n Gioee | how goofl thiw stuffme. 1" with the s e funsry ang cold ‘and sore we may be. ilitary men generally seem to con- | What then? We farmers are here io sider that Les wes & §reater strateciet | “flght it out on this line. . Am I re- |toward saving the orange crop in than Grant. He was a more brilliant | Pelled at my first attack? Better luck many parts of the world. A Dog That G RE, soldier. But Grant was a dogged | Next time; my part is to pick myself | og- That Gaes to School. fighter. He never knew when he was | UP 2nd go at the enemy again, and en—and so he never was beaten. | 2gain, and yet again. In this war adage, “Know Thyself,” does not mean not to do puzzles a great know all your faults and failings, but ,',,“.d,,,."h;.l,u.,,' e as ®® fhis s bas an excellent preparation for toning know yourself as you truly are in your | where leakages can be avoided. It is|up the kidneys and relleving all com- real belng. We must rise to the real, | not economy to wear rubbers over new | piaints due to & disordered condition of and stay there. Then we shall see) ghqes, thereby making the leather dr; e ans.” ourselves and our fellow men from a|and hard and eeeily cracked. Dish | these ore clearer point of view, and so come |towels used for holders. Shoets used | For sale by all dealers. Price 50c. nearer to understanding humanity | for ironing table. Napkins used for [ Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, and humanity’'s needs than we ever |dish cloths, Sour milk thrown away, |#ole agents for the Uni States. have before. The one who tells you|Canned goods left exposed in can Remember the name that he understands you better than | pails and washtubs left to dry and | take no other. you understand yourself can have|fall to pieces, are all domestic leak- ol AR sections. This insect has gome forth | rest of the dinner accessories. The with healty appetite and does its part | bones give a pleasant flavor. Yantic. r b Editor Social Corner: Reading in An Important Date. a _paper the other day about a lady who did not like dogs, and who said meat is roasted I cut carefully houg! word, but a chosen one, | prising how man: Folled in one movement, he made an- | there is no retreat. I have read of a & sther. Driven back &t one point, he | farmer who with one hired man.work: |y fh“’aé b d:tix ot ‘f" Union | g1e” would be glad if dogs were ban- | made but iittle progress in knowledge | ages. threw himself agamst ihe hext one |ing with hand tools,used to raise about Of the Crowms?” asked an Inspector. | jshed from the land, I felt like speak- | of God, man, and the universe. Let me tell you something new. A that sesmed %o offer a chance. At- | 800 bushels of potatoes a year. He 1603, he was instantly informed. | ing a piece. ¥ THE WAYFARER. Jersey woman who epends her winters tacking Richmond at first from ths|lost a leg and couldn’t handle plow “Right. And why was this date an | Now I think that lady never had a| Norwich. in Californta has acquired a pecullar north, and being there beaten back, he | or hoe. So he bought a sulky plow. 2 fmportant one for you to remember?” | 008 for @ pet when she was a child: NS T babit which she claima is purely Call- refused to retreat and lok his sores. | planting machine, a riding cultivator .. Cr, | and never knew what a great deal of How a Husband Was Cured. fornian. She always adds half a dozen I'he job was to be done and he was |and a horse digser. Now, with that DeCAUse you were sure to ask for'it,” | company there is in a dos. Editor Social Corner: I kn ¥ raisins to the pot of coffee in the HH here o do #. Some of us rerhember | same hired man, he raises about 5000 Teturned the little victim of cram- | “Of course, there are dogs,” just the |, GiOF TR COTNIN: [ ANEN & WIS making. The,slight change in flavor is £he thrill which went through the north | bushels a year. He's making mone; ming—Christian Register. e o ey et teme “them, | bread made by his wife and never | deliclous f ipe ‘for apple u Omn I Is s with one leg where hi ed t alke | g 5 Q - ere is a very nice recipe for e z e used to make could find enough words to adequateiy | Flere '8 & VEI¥ Tee Sl Pl T8 Mie : only a living with two. but this is not the good old family | C7uld ind enough wor h There is more Catarrh in this section g dog, who makes a good watch dog | bi - e SV ils sister. | sugar and one-half cup shortenin Br the country than ail other discases Austrian Hawk Killed in Pennsylvania | 0% Wino, URIEE 0 BOCC e at night | His sister was a shrewd woman and | §ugar and, oneehell SO TIOTINTT | Before you place your order for Au- ut together. and until the last few | There are a couple of verses in one| Wyatt Sprowls, a Washington | \What a v the secing how her brother's conduet was good play-fellow the dog is for . loves, one-quarter teaspoon nutmes, annoying her sister-in-law. she said | love S einnamon, one cup rais- jto Tops or Glass Wind Sh Ids, in. ears Was supposed ta be incurable. [ of Ifatthew Arnold’'s poems which are county farmer, shot what he believed | the boy: a girl or a t many years doctors pro- | not addressed to us farmers at all. But % . Why T have a d¢ i 1s | £ her: “Belle. the next time you com 2 Bounced It a 10cal “discase. and bre | mot, ddressed to us farmers 3t Al But {40 be an ordinary hawk, but which | Why. I have a dog that thinks it is | (3 [T, DS T QeRC Qe you come I DL O D ir 1nta it one | vestigate and buy direct from factory, goribed local remedies and by constant ¥ el e i of the | IS duty to go to school. when he sees | ! g s, failing to cure with local treatment | Other field, and the spirit they incul- |P © a fine specimen of the | . pijgren start off in the morning. | Lois she did and it was served and| . ..% 6. apple sauce. Beat ail to- p ’ . Pronounced it incurabls. Science has | cate is the one we all need: Austrian hawk, rarely found in this | He will 2o another way so as to be | Prgiecd by George, who said. “Beile | L%, 1" hen @dd one and one-balf cups thershy saving the middieman’s prefit. = ke forty- | Address sro“n catarrh to be a constitutional | .. i b t: It 5 f 2 ‘h here first, and st here till it rogen ostacth_to b 1| wThey outhissed thee, plucked thes, |COURtry. It measures 5 feet 2 inches | there first, and stay e Al A = kT 31 flour (mora if_needed). tutional treatment, Halls Catasrh Gurs, tore thee? |from tip to tip.—Punxsutawney Spirit, | time for the school to close. He never é‘r‘,?‘w“y'm'f?..iuf.'wui“\-Sfi'v‘-i ;n’: vl:::n!lr: five minutes. You may add citron and manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co. | Better men fared thus before thee: 2 R e e | arks I ReIUE Y et B SRl xept wtil Senil- She Shanl wel over, | SSERES_BUNL._ %60 SRunst ge Wrens F. 6. LUFFEY, school js su used to sceing him there | KOVt SUU untl the meal was over |win” this cake. Toledo. Ohio, 18 the only constitutionai | Fired their ringing shot and passed; cure on the market It Is taken inter: | Madly charged—ana fell at last. Kansas Men Up Against It. that they treat him as ome of the| WP SISIEE VORIMFEC fo tell George| “These are good things to know and Norwioh, Conn. naily in doses from 10 drops to a tea- : EPoanful." It acts dirsctiy on the biosd | “Charge once more then and be dumb: | Out at Hutchinson burglars have | Scholars, The school teacher lets Wim | ;e by Belle from her regular recipe. | t0 Make practical HARRIET. 824 mucous surfaces of the ‘system. | Let th victors, when they come, . |been breaking into houses and rifling | ihere was o dog In school: but at the | 2nd Georse was cured—he could not| omyich, > Ny SopiAng: FepasepuII 30 e case 13 Fails o cnre o stoatis fOF any | When the forts of folly fall, trousers pockets. “Added to the yell | close of school he is the first one out, | Sfusively praise Em's bread any more. Sprague Umbrella Co. of Norwalk, fars and test:mon, Find thy body by the wall! of ‘swat the fly, " mourns & newspa. | and all the children love to play with AH. “ oihddress F. 3 CHENEY & CO., Toledo, TEm PARMER. . | L U0 ) o “we now hare g | Bim. Expetoe. What Piggie Sald. Qi il e E ' th . | "'Now, the child who has a dog, or a 4 R A L Temperance Aavisable. warning ‘sleep with your pants on.’”— | cat, or a bird for a play-fellow will| _ Something Worse Than Death. 2 m;;:“,;:’fl:&a:::;l:: P = “Should actresses wed?" asks a |Kansas Clty Journal. first of all learn kindness to God's| Editor Social Corner: In looking over . s e it Nt creatures and will not throw stones at | the letters I noticed how some speak | UD to look at a pen of small pigs, re- Glad to Recommend Them. Pari; - Y, not to ex- them nor climb trees to get bird's|words of praise about the herbs and | lates the Delineator. As he looked in, 9 e e e ays: | cess—Milwaukee Sentinel. Drawing the Line. cges. There is a whippoorwill (hat|other things. I wish to praise the of- | o little pig mear him jumped up, put- " » i ‘eakley. Kokomo, Ind. g comes to our doorstep every evening | ficers who arrest men for illegal sale ‘After taking Foley Kidney Pills the A mew authority has decided that | {0M00 10, (G (1o Nietle oy and Kirl| of liquor. Tt i3 a work that they must | UR§ his fore feet against the side of ST, o ®ecame stronger, the secretions natural may play poker with only four cards. | and the little bird does not fly away |j¢ for the benefit and good of the ris- | Nealle turned quickly and said: “Oh, severe backache left me, my kidneys i Go at Task Cheerfully. “under certain circumstances” a man | yith the dog watch for, his coming. | dislike to do, but we presume they do| the pen, and gave a quick grunt. i and my bladder no lon; i ere is nothing so easy but it be- H k, | i < R g RS 4 b IBut if he wants to play with six-the | If, they come out in the garden. but|ing gencration, instead of money. It| mamma fell Bim to say that again! lac very el e e T ..“,mdmcu" when you do It With e | 1. er must get his gun out ahead of | ¥1IL SIng for them a long time. " Tiam | is"saq to know that some men will ©sgood Co. WETRROR - Tavaticn, - ’ ‘ ead of | Jure “the little boys and girls 1 know | persist in seling, or exchanging (pors — and mERS? T et S T would feel very sorry if all the dogs|haps they call it), liquor for mone f His Work. % o NG were to be banished from this land.| when they know It causes %o snuch The Man Fond of His Wor Boardin DON'T GET RUN DOWN b il S i For Bett A MOTHER. | trouble and often leads men to commit| Give us, O gl the man who < M U Emerson: The joy of the spirit tnai-| .., o BeiNes; OF NCHERw. North Stonington. murder, when they would not If sober. | 5ings st bis work! Be his occupation cates its strength. m tired of this eternal philosoph- e To me nothing is sadder (no, not even | what it may he s equal to any of stable ical scrap about the.respective influ- The Beauties of Nature. death) than to see a man intoxicated. | thoge who follow the same pursuit in ences of heredity and emnvironment,” Editor Social Corner: Many people | Last Thursdey & man came t0 ay | gyene sullenness. He will do =~ 12-14 ‘ ‘h all‘.el.. Wisdom from Cato. o ho +live | it now leavi home looking for work. He said he says the Philosopher of Folly. “If [Who live in cities are ATmE | had been drinking for three weeks and | the same time—he will do It better— ‘What s not necessary is dear at 8 |heredit: their homes to spend a part or whole ( y brings & man enough money, . by Il the he had_w ents. | he will v —~T ..m?y,_c.m, L % ey ke hig own envi o of the summer in the country. by sea-|all the money he had was t¢n cents. persevere longer.—Thomas HORSE CLIPPING A SPECIALTY. shore, mountains or among the many | When I remarked “You cannot buy| Carlyle. AUTOMOBILE TO RENT. oman in auist places which are open liquor In Jewett City,” he said: “Yes, g Telephone $33 apresd 8 P eSS S B

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