Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 20, 1910, Page 8

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‘ St 1 Smepiorate. sufterint _the ; Wrary Sy Fovigencd Jonrsal. , 4 ; John Bright used to tell how & bare Es AT GH"HGH afe;‘:&’ m’w._ ‘g’g:-;:'"h s % s ' ber who was cutting his hair once ® 4 . - e Gtk 4 One, FIRST SPIRITUAL UNION. y said to him: “You 'ave a larg -And still the church ed long one the Wy e Annual Meeting Held at the Spiritual sir; it 1s a good thing to 'dve a large before the expression of social Lo h Academy on Friday Evening. ‘ead, for a ;;u ‘ead means a large Willi i 3 reac] thy 1d through the lodge. brain, and Addressed by Rev. William T. Thayer at the First Eaptist | rooched the :‘??‘P‘;’g‘ strength to The annual mesting of tle Tirst adspeny usetul thing man can ‘ave, b it nours 2 O] it i task. word ‘Eccle- and the tual unios as hel tl cad- L e} O on The Relation of the Church and Lodge. R whtich word Chureh SprnES, Tor 1t 15| om o Park atreet Friday evenine | numerable, -We touch one another on 'l;:::t g’:":‘:" Cale ol ik | points to its genus and describes its conditions e The reports of the secretary and | all sides, One man’s misfortune or Character. Eccleria called out for def- . The primary functions | ¢res Were read and approved, and | guccess. his wisdom or his folly, oft T | inite, recognized purpose. The genus 2 show of the most successful sea- " The First Baptist church had as its, of church and lodge needs a review of | springs from desire to serve. Came not ' the lodge can ‘be fOr | sons in the history of the union en by its consequences reaches Has Passion for Languages. a* @uests Sunday morning Hope Rebekah | the genus and character of both. to be ministered to, but to minister! [ church, for it is not belief Rev. Albert P. Blinn, to whose | through multitudes.—Blair. Friedrich Theil, a peasant of Rau 7 o And is fathered by a sense of power | mands confesston inspiring lectures and untiring.labors in Saxony, whose leisure hours havel BRES No. 31 L O. O.F, enEiEhiche The Lollgn awakened to action by a sense of hu- | Saviour of soul ana Lord of 1ife. The | the society owes 5o much, will re e ekl 3 g sy bk lodsge, No. 11, and Shetucket lodge, No.| The lodge is the organized expres- | manity’s need. Whence came this|primary of the church is to awaken in | turn the first of October for the sixth Good Manners. ISt Baaient Asabio, ai 27, £ O. O. F. The choilr was assist- | sion of the spirit of brotherhood. Its | agency that called out for purpose.|the immortal part of man, not alone | geason. The instinct of self-control, of gen- | Lat i brew. ferit, TASABIo, =8 ,d' in the music by Mrs. Charles Pierce, | 8611US sPrings from a desire to affiliate | Long cycles ago sin entered the human | pelief in G but dependence upon| The old board of management were | tleness, of coneideration and fore- | Gaelic, is 76 years old, s 4 in a service one to another, and is | family. Moral degeneracy of man- | God and His re-elected unanimousiy, except that |\ RiRL O FO R e which | Bing to study the English lunguag who was heard in a finely rendered | fzihered by a sense of power awak- | kind is recognized; life Is imprisoned; the Dr. W. W. Clapp was chosen to fill the ugh K £ Thetl. 18 1n. correspondence with som: Soio as the offertory selection.. ened by a realization of a need |soul is insolvent; the cry of a needy . still, throw | vacancy caused by the death of Hen- | B0 to make up what we call good Sth eSIa R ahiiioatets bt the a8 The Relationship of Ohurch and| Whenca came this spirit of brother- |soul rent the heavens. God heard the ry R. Hayes. The officers are as fol- | breeding; the absence of noise and o , kas Rev. Mr. mmya;'; topic, | hood 7" cry and came in t‘hhex fomso:.!(}od :nd infinite m" :o‘. rs%g’rl?:;y,p xé:x -u(éll:pp; burry, and thousand and one little —_— and Ms text Peter 2-17: y the apirit Its spirit comes from gospel of 1led into being this cl one reasurer, £l 1ditors, lease people, A L inih/ Comibe. » pervade the hour and the thoughts | Christ, the church of whose gospel |[and the same time the church was or- £ and | Henry Bellows and “."m. Cll!gp,Bcom- ;’:!-IV;K ::-ic::e.'::n:lnlxc _.:ra v.” A Y ‘_uwmm ‘x'lrl P which direct our meditations, and the | forms the strength of Christianity. | dained to be the had of God that| bai shares mittee on speakers, Ity - Dogw spleas: 2 7-y fellowship in worship all bring the wel- | Bear in mind a distinction here: Spirit | reaches down and lifts the soul of man | warmth, so the great gulf Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Brewster, taught us by our own hearts. Good | ison who feels so good that she aM come of & n-.\.:-mlm'y to you this|of brotherhood an for service | out nif the sxougetnh:r de!w;ui n.n‘;i d:.:- :m—o::ht the :ll’l:n):‘h of 5‘- living E:g :!. A, l{anflnlor:lnm::& 1{??:"31 - RIcker: | manners are the fine flowers of eulti- | most screams with joy, In a for hour. He said, part: spring from Christ ih meat- | ert of sin, and arm of needy = | issud rem eart God omm! . D . . E. 4 1l : “ Your presence here today in a ser- ing.‘ 50‘“im|tin;: s of rfinp:;r R0t | manity that reaches up and clasps the | sweeps through the deep ocean Oof | Mrs. A. Gould and Mrs. Charles A. | Vatlon, and everybody can have them. | years when we meet that girl pushing vice of worship amd meditation, in | thinkinz of church—recognized and | power by which it is able to rise. The | worldlimess and sin and meits the icy | Burdick. 3 ; keeping with a eustom rich in the her- | ordained channels Christianity— | Church is God's ambassador at court |plight of materlalim and _unbellef; | The children's Progressive Lyceum | .woo o .pichien for Crimin 56 55" poadibla f0r' & married wom: ftage, is In itself a recogmition of the | Christianity. the body of whieh Christ |of man’s soul. God works not for | transforms glacial barrenness held their annual picnic at the Draw- | Feo Many “Rights” for Criminale, | | o 0 20le b ‘sire we shall laugh.—g church and of an essential relationship | is the life, for since days when lowly | amelioration of society, but for Tre- |ishness into the tropical luxurience of | bridge Saturday. it e e | Atchison Globe \ between church and lodge. Waat that [ Nazarene {rod hills of Palestine to this | demption of soul. service and benefaction All hall to| It proved one of the most enjovable | tween the criminal and soclety more 3 3 relationship is presents the question | hour, mo wronz rithter no. shaciles | ve. then, is the sublime task of | her Lord, who wcreates through her an | ever held, there being forty Dresent | and more advantage is ‘given to the — a baby buggy and looking as cross a: 2 : : ho_are whoee answer I desire with you rever- | brc ken, no wounds of society healed, | church, Keeping channels open be- | atmosphere in which the social organ | from here, while four couples. Who &re | g0 yo 4o bandied tenderly. His Literature the Last Resort. ently to seek this morning. Some|no burden of humanity lifted where |tween God and man, of keeping cur-|may work. She merits your love, your | members here, drove up h\m;x h'el‘:) Tights are-Iarge, and they e ¢ Peopl. ¢ Hiterat ” ! seemingly find it Gifficult to discrimin- | Christianty is absent /% | tains lifted that reveals the heart of | aii. London. The party went on the o ge. : eople resort to literature exact ate, and thus to determine the line| Institutions of philanthropy are | the eternal, and keeping the door open train, which stopped at the Dfa" W ag‘re spected even if honest men’s rights | yn proportion as they are unable ta which indicates the relationship. As|formed alone in the ranks of Chris- |that reveals the heart of man in its The Greater Hoax. and lheybr:;;:r:led‘ :.?ct:‘:acm’er:fl‘ .fl suffer. Some of his privileges might | make a living any other way. Literas one stands before a large pane of pol- | tianitv. How, then, came this spirit | need of God. Senator Dolliber's attack upon_the | It Was & basket plenic and there wemt | be withdrawn with no loss to anY | ture as a symptom of financial despain ished glase to nd it o jpartial mirrer | of fellowship' and desire to serve to The Relationship. present tariff does not lose in effec- [ poosing were enjoyed. Ice cream was | one meriting much consideration.— | hag received far too little considerss the perspective bevond, @nd 1n which | church, the ordained cxpoment 0f | Lodge, a social agency, Christian fn [ LY®Ress by reason of its wit When | served. The commitiee in charge in- | London Times. tion st the hands of economists.—Phik he sees @ reflection of that enmviron- | Christianity, was busy in forms of | principle it must be for expression of | po, FA¥T Year—the discovery of the :‘:udeddzyn g“’g'; %eeb:“ o R —— adelphla Evening Post. meat of which he forms & pert, care- | (heology and dogmatics. The sp ¢/ spirit of brotherhood, is but an echo | Lorin pole by Dr. Cook and the_re- | D% 21 : Diggs—T understand that you encour- T i A €ul obeervation is essentlal to ascertain | religious liberty from whict f the spirit of Christianity. The lodge | 1 . b § pi wherein the glass is & mirror and & | antism sprang was oo busy Taust: believe In_God, for He is the | Sison, Of the tarlft downward by Sera| Rankin—There is one thing that has 480 your son to practice on the cor Children Cry means of introduction to a eeparate |for its freedom against the hty | source of Ohristian faith, and it is as| gnich everyone can appreciate, Of the | Not gone up in price, anyw: 1 s - Qriggs—Yes, He's only been s environment. To discover what is sub- | power of Roman despotism to give any | well for a seed feeling the rays of the | t4o the tariff act was the greater | Still (puff) buy a five-cent cigar for | playing two months, but today I FOR FLETCHER'S a nickel. Fyle—I see you can. Phew! | bought the house next door to me for ot CASTORIA f BOSTON STORE ANNUAL JUNE SALE OF MUSLIN UNDERWEAR | Begins This Morning at 8.15 o’clock stantial and what is reflection, is my | of the power to succor needy societ sun to deny its existence :s for a lodge heax. Dr. Cook is already almost for- task, and to asoertain the relationship| Thus is the purpose well defined. To | responding to the influence of brother- T gotten, whils Semator Aldrich’s mas- | —Chicago Tribune. half its value.—Smart In preparing for this annual occasion our chief ambition has been to demonstrate in the most convincing manner that it was possible to get prices down to the extraordinary value-giving point without lessening the Boston Store standard of quality, and for this particular reason we desire to direct your attention to the superior quality of the materials, the fine workmanship, the generous cut of the garments and the exclusiveness of each model. You will find it a sale profitable to your pocket, full of fashion helps. In aword IT IS NORWICH’S BEST SALE OF MUSLIN UNDERWEAR—highest in quality, most careful in making, greatest in variety, widest in T e LET NOTHING INTERFERE WITH YOUR EARLY PARTICIPATION IN THIS VALUE GIVING EVENT ~—mma WOMEN’S CORSET COVERS — Extra quality of : e =3 WOMEN LONG SKIRTS—In tucked ruffle trimmed, Muslin, fitted style, high and - square neck—Sale I UG Prominent Values in Women’s Xt Y et o 25[} et S e Price R S I R B s Sstes iatele o ol ° 3 i A T R \ bes WOMEN’S LONG SKIRTS—Extra quality of Muslin, WOMEN'S CORSET COVERS —French style, lace | ngh‘ Ro tucked and lace trimmed flounces—Sale Price...... 500 trimmed, fine material—Sale Price ............... 20 Women's Night Robes, Low Neck and Short ) WOMEN’S CORSET COVERS — French style, lace Sleeves, lace trimmed, extra quality of Muslin; also Bcaufivfill assortment of F\'nmen's l.nnz.Skirts, 1rir‘nmrd { and insertion trimmed, also embroidery trimmed— Night Robes in High Neck and Long Sleeves, tucked 250 YIIESE 8 1S Tupition; sleo mibididery #nd inses; $10 50 Sale <Price [T, 0 e =t Semesece i 250 ruffle trimmed—value-soc—Sale Price ....... = ton, prices ftom/98c, $1:39, $1.49.80; -0 -x 0w s iviley . VVO:\JEN’SdCQRSE_T CoN F,R.’\'i~ e in Also full assortment, in Embroidery and lace trimmed, $| 49 i ace an insertion tri ned, e - t - - J' Q q ol Ainmeai i “’“” _______ 390 at 69c, 98¢, $1.19 and % . COMBINATION CORSET COVER AND SKIRT— WOMEN’S CORSET COVERS— embroidery, lace and insertion trir ed, large as- T sortment of patterns—Sale Price ............... 5uc - Large and complete assortment in CORSET COVERS, : WOMEN'S qs”(l);ll.czkllfg ESKIIRT“S WOMEN’S NIGHT ROBES—In high neck tucked and French style and fitted—Prices 69c, 98¢, $1.19, $1.49, T > T 2R augty of Mys embroidery trimmed, also lace and insertion trim- X0 g $4-50 med, in low neck and short sleeves, assorted pat- terns—Sale Price ....ccoeeceecvsvnnsscsscscncvn 506 deep R R P A R R RIS Lace trimmed, also ruffle trimmed skirt, extra quali- 500 ty of material—Sale Price ....cceesoeecsnsssopacn Sale ‘Priee -l DRAWERS WOMEN'’S SHORT SKIRTS—Lace and insertion trim- b med, also embroidery tucked. ruffle trimmed—Sale Large and varied assortment of styles in Night Robes, WOMEN’S MUSLIN PRAWERS — Deep hemstiched | Price . 508 high and low neck, short and long sleeves, lace and ruffle trimmed, extra quality of Muslin—Sale Price. I 220 embroidery trimmed, full sizes—Sale Price 6gc and. Bc WOMEN’S MUSLIN DRAWERS — Embroidery and tucked ruffle trimmed, also hemstiched ruifle trim- 250 CHEMISE Large and'complete assorttient in Night Robespall the lin, hemstiched ruffle trimmed, assorted sizes— 258 latest novelties, extra quality of material, lace and In lace and insertion trimmed with ruffle trimmed embroidery trimmed, low neck, priced at $1.19,$1.49, 3 skirts—Sale Price . MR e stomese s = 0c $1.69, $1.98 1O ....... R ETE PP PPPPRPRE S P 55.98 gc Large and complete assortment in Combination Corset ’ WOMEN’S MUSLIN DRAWERS in embroidery, lace Covers, and Skirt, also Corset Cover and Drawers, . and insertion trimmed, full assortment at soc, 69c, Chemise in lace and insertion, also embroidery trim- SPECIAL ATTENTION TO MATCHED SETS o8c, $1.x39, $140 to ...... ... .. ... .. Ly, 34' 5" med—Sale Price 7g¢, o8¢, $1.19, $1.49 t0 .......... M.BB AT SALE PRICES. THE REID & HUGHES CO,, Norwich, Conn.

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