Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 16, 1910, Page 4

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"HEART OF THE HAY, ) VH»- K1 e e | TUESDAY, JULY I 9 ] nvith Bulletin and Coufier. THE EAST WIND AS AN ASSET. Boston, while it considers its east wind as a biéssing and an asset, has to admit that it has no control over it. The east wind, like all other winds, (Written for the Bulletin) 114 YEARS OLD. is “a grand old harper,” and The Bul- | g ', =~ = r e been told to be true. golden hair. Trully, you can never sce S == letin - will a“dlnlt that the Br‘)ltnnlan.s Every v who has been to Sunday Crampton is .Q"": lovelier lh-/m twilight sky to know it intimately, Su Hon price. 12c & week; B0c & | know how “to pull down their hat o | school recogmizes this as the regular |\l these hottest of midsimmer days, | L78 [V'0Sr Ot nay meadow lying low | 00 o yenr. e wind.” admonition, . True to what? True to| vhen leaf and twig and grass-blade | SO0 P00 0" o0 Yoursels sunk i the The arrival of the east wind on|God and self—to one's highest concep- | fre thITMS for Toin, while theg Sv| syeet scented “depths of new-mown Wednesday at “the hub” prompts a |tions of right and duty. If this were| JUFRS BINOSSIN, Ol s ‘hay. L i v “ 1 vould be comparatively eas: B et B, kel fhe § Loston paper to say that “One of the it wol D ¥ ey | I SOt Bf S And - e A8 attractiye features of our Boston spe- | DUt you must be true to friends and | FOTd 18 2 ghmour of sunshine and| , yoment age | said that to step Bulletin Business ns 35-8 Ao a i g true to enemies. To be true means {into our hay meadow scems like en- Bulletin Editorial Rooms, 35-3 cialty, the east wind, which turned Nty to the hizhest manhood—to be | 2nd soften the blue blaze of a sky that, ;“ Y ALt gy Bulletin Job Office. 35-6. the” major part of vesterday from a | 231!, €9 Mhe LENest mEnbogd—0 D9 though pitiless, is - yet besutivally,|lering futo a different world A re. mantic Office, Room 3 MUFFY | promised scorcher ito a day of com- | iS00 ‘it ‘for tat in this sort of life— brillantly luminous and infinitely to | {0t OVt Slae looks unreal, and Builaing. Telephone 210. fort and jov, is its delightful inde- s i’ 2 e.loved. The haze that is over every— By there is no scathing for scathing, no thing Is part of the bui dazzle of | the houses look like paper houses, , months Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich Conn., as second-class matter. ‘Telephone Callx: w — S ", pendence of the weather bureau; its|slander for slander in true living. To . atial ly in se. They are Norwich, Saturday, July 16, 1910. | (otally unexpected work of blessing | be truo iv t erect the highest stana. | SUnlEht, with every pebble ot the (BLatZL iy, 0 pretonse, ey i1 S—— == s vesterday, its crisp and saline defiance [ard of probity and honor and live|(ust transformed inte @ crown jewel. | p,jpitations, in which lve the dearest of what the forecasters said was go- | TiSht up fo it. It is far from belng [ With nature out-shining “and “out- | iiije"paper people, all intensely ab- % - ing to happen, puts it high in the list | % easy stunt, but it is the develop- | T2 0K TESUn W TIWEICE G BCE | sorbed in their pretty little paper-doll The Circulation of of Boston’s benefactors. e N Tk ana violet and amethyst. rejojcing in | &ffairs, chiefly the spreading of b “We are niow ready to talk business | It dignified manhood. I yhat | all the mingled scents and fragrances m-:““g‘;‘:;flgg'“",_‘n“’ e i with those Philistines from the outer a of the air, in blended sounds of hum- s The Bulletin. reglons who meed to be convinced of| o T ming and buzzing, the whirr of insect | OnlY_sliging and dancing and ding: | . Boston’s wonderful qualifications as a | What is the use of telling a man | Wings, the call of the cicaca. the hop- | 300" 0y Lo O™ ARG 5008 ng Hudter. that “life is a quarry out of which | skip-and-jump of green things in the | S0/n& alweys of tptee Snd AUEIET- | | he is to mold and chisel and com- | grass, the wonderful everythings that | {0& ' o T Shile plete a character.” The average man | fill the air as grasses fill the meadow, | L3l paper houses show patietic, wive 0 can see that just as veadily as he can | thick-growing, innumerable, singing, | e e T g Bl cnrican 7 B not the malaria. | sce’ the bust of a man, woman or child | swaying, not ‘one too many where a | PP, i B R At en, feel as if he | in o block of Parian marble. The | million throng, indescribable, inde- ;‘“‘H"‘:,em"“n“:m e the: | fact is, there never was in a block of | finable, alluring, enticing, bewilder- | '8 FEHT STOT S o,"‘m“,, hay meadow The Bulletin has the largest cir- | culation of amy paper Eastern | [ summer resort.” g | Comnecticut, and from three to four The Bulletin is aware that Boston's | | | ttmes larger than that of amy im | | €ast wind can give the hottest sum- Norwich. It s delivered to over | (mer day the shakes, 3000 of the 4,053 houses ia Nor- ||and make every citiz wich, and read by minety-three per | [ would give $20 if his winter ¢ cent. of the le. In Wisaham || were on back instead of at home. | marble anything of the kind, for it is | ing—grand old hature’s prodigal ex- } Tl Sattvered. o over 900 Meuses, || The East wind refrigerates Boston ali|of man. ‘Man and his abijity makes penditure of riotous living. mr‘:m’;fi;“’ghld":‘v‘hu:"b"mmm“m"l“l; ielson to over | [right in the most unexpected man- | marble vield to ‘his sense of propor-| After the breathlessness of a sunlit | JPIC 0 PSP Goop' repose that in Putham and D 1,100, ama all of these places it || ner and that is why woolen clothing is comsidered the lpcal daily. is never packed away with camphor Eastern Commecticut has ferty- | balls by any family familiar with Bos nine towns, ome humdred and sixty- | | ton’s sudde rical change. five postoffice districts, and forty- ome rural free delivery reutes. The Bulletin in mold fn every Mr, Andrew D. White, ex-president own mna onm all of the R. F. D.|lor Cornell, and a retired di routes in Eastern Commecticut. does not hesitate -to_tell a representa- | tive of the New York World that CIRCULATION | Theodore Roosevelt saved the coun form and expression—-he makes | day, when for hours the air has been 3 E resistant block , of stome yield | Visibly pappitating, when pot even a|DBOthing can disturb. =Not a astones the mastery of his art—|little ‘cloud, like a mam's hand, has | g 'I'f"b""{; fle ,dm‘;yflh'“ et s his energy into the stone | Softéned the burning of the blue, what | [21I¥, bec-buzzing. ald = be eacting out of it is wrought his concept|can be more luxurious than to sink | o8 Fhe otner RoUnLEy, BAI8 Tond OF the s = beauty—or of naturalness. Man is | down into the depths of a mound of | Feal, this heart of the eternal, teach HAS THE COUNTRY BEEN SAVED? | a creator—he can make mud or stone | new-mown hay?—letting billows of | In% by true living the deep . express his conception of art, whether Sramses rise up on bfih sides lee arms, | Pelng- or imaginative: so out of life|and billows more spring up about your : man_of will and of desire and | shoulders like cushions for the head, | Here, in the eilent places we learn £00d percaption and conception of its | while the, feathery fragrance Intoxi- | tHat we need not live in pathetic paper worth can mold a master character | cales all your memories of when you | tPUSES. HOF Permlh QUTSEIves 1o Dectrie the other kinds of character do mot | were a child and you rolled in hay in [ TPREFRSC T PRETUE alre FO TR tr He says: | bave to be molded or chiseled—they | the pure abandon of your birthright as | t o 1901, average . 5 on s se i i M “Mr. Roosevelt read the signs and | zrow as Topsy thought she did. nature's own. f‘;":‘hm‘ug“:‘fi g‘;:t"‘;;"" m‘f““ with his usual forcefulness took ac- ot s 2 and yet be of the meadow and akin 1905, average ...........-..-5,.920 He caused the searchlight of | Have you ever moticed how often| 4o oo ints our hay—feld 1s like go- | to the Jaris that rise Into the upper like icity to be shed on the corpora- | g s iy S o arrive? | ing out into a new world. Though but | air to sing. Even In village He opened their stock books ¥, orstor A 5 | 2 "stone’s -throw from our door-step, | Crampton there are numberless Week endin = e great ability when a man. The | e = i e ! 9 . and revealed the means and methods | p i TCE BRI WOER S ATk S e | in stepping into the field we enter up- | thought currents for men and women | July 9 of mismanagement. He gave the pub- | faneth onbOn thelon a wholly _different and remoter | to dwell in, and there is no ome of us civilization. Naturally, we live in the | but may choose the roof that shelters mension that | lie tc rderstand that corporations no | scientific v as - ached | <F 2. ) onger could continue to horste thete | scientific world has doubtless reached | Lijjage with neighbors to right and | him, whether it shall be of paper per— — _ —_ — long u tinue to pursue their his ighest a ievement—a ha. the - Py i | harmeul course uncheeked. e halted | boy who at 17 is a star in comedy. 1t |1eft Of us, with glowing gardens on | ishable, or of that substance that is MODERN SHIPS AND. OB RN | e of thoss eocar Tor constl. | has Deeh shown that Beesastty B mat [Bither dide and DOGMMNGE Il Wt the | stormal fn' he hesvens. To Jai S : | > = hood. Tha entas of jneeniliy does | deed, to call it “feld” is to mis-name | stre o eep, sweet, fragrant The rage for big ships is most fa- |have made possible socialistic not last to glorify age. The star that | it. for it is really the lowest of (green of the meadow is to rise in vorable for future of deep water | istration hat is why I sa . T B reater | meadows, the home of meadow larks, | thought above all that Is petty dnd | is before ¥ ime st | N § | et ot dey e is lost in the greate? | with a brook meandering through it in | mean and sordid, all that seems not The brilliancy which holde. the | Which dogs delight to drink and splash, | worth while, to the upper air where as the limited express trains of a While. Mr. White is perfectly si ntion of the world is not of this|and on whose banks hugh green bull- | love and joy and reace are fhe ever- auarter of a century ago. In the way | cere in his cc Tk ke iion 1 Vo “brilliancy of man hows the | frogs croak their evening chant. The | present harmonies and life is eternally of constructing big ships the martial | is called to the the socialist ention of the world long, but that'| YHiage trees never look .80 toweriug worth _""l"“"" .38 to.lcol "' =1 R e e : s"0f matarnity 1s longest | 270 so heavily foliage-laden as from | daily routine rom achanged point o is wilildog HEnd VhRa - 1ol ines B i i iotid, and that mired. It is not the coming man | OUT « meadow: nor our village | View, to apprehend that we are where SI8 ‘wilking band iu d. 1 1is gsopaplisued; and. that] does great things, but the man | POuses so palatial. As for the sky, | Weare fora purpose,that the paper doll | < not so many decades ago that a (one large city is now under socialist Jas artived. To mever be fn the | tenderest and most famillar of friends, | are but the outward nothingnesses -ton ship was a leviathan, but |rule with results'wh | coming man class may be regarded ag | It Mever seems nearer to us than when | which vanish before the holy of holies. now we have the 20,000-ton ship. crease rather than decrease I . =7 | we gaze from a billowing hay-rick up | the inmost sanctuary in which the soul good fortune. ? Dreadnaughts and {he Lusitanias strength. Mr. Roosevelt ma | and’ up and up into the brooding|dwells serene. Like the blue of the Mauretanias will soon be out of the |checked the crage for the ownership It has been said that “vou cannot|M¥stery of it, glad it is never self- |sky, an e gold of the sunlight, an rst class of ocean leviathans. The |of public utllities, but that has been | prevent the birds of sadness from fly- | fevealing, glad of the depths of its | Thi MANATE ey or B e D Whits Star company now has on the |also held up by the unprofitahle char- | Ing over your head, but you may pre- "‘;” {;M;:Zei',-‘i‘;d“:};f; o ::;"‘a}:‘,;’l',]; v et e g poadbucosbr s = 4 . o i 4 AR it | vent them from stopping to sts 3 8 { s two mammoth floating palaces |acter of such public enterprise T e T L;Ubd"‘!"‘,'uf“s“": every one who loves it. Not more | not to be stirred mor jarred nor dis t will by far surpass the great Cu- . possible than to number the stars is|turbed, never to be debased by the ports. We have now ships larger than | Roosevelt saved this country fr the Great Eastern and about as swift | clalism.’ been do promise to in- narders in every dimension. But in EDITORIAL NOTES. e hergea hctical counsel, | ™ o count the colors and gradations | petty or the ignoble, always working iurn the two big hips now under con- | Clirtcen cases of locklaw are | ness hest in the hair of altogether too | Of €olor that entrance the eve. Blue ls | out it own salvation in higher air, 3 ! carrying were permitted to nest there is re- e S W - 34 - capacity by other bigger ships. A sane vacation habit is ome of | Spousible for family and personal con- | blye-pearl. that blend and deepen into P "“;oz'”:r";“'lg tow 'ADMISSIONS AND RESERVED SEATS ON SALE AT And attention is beéing called to the | the things worth cultivating. ditions which are deplorable. We | the blue of wood violets, while across | from T g 21 Corner Broudway - ity whi % ahould = ‘e | the.blue come driffing and glistening | out of the dust of the traveled road act that the coastal city which ex- = , hould not permit them to nest there | th 1 aanr IMSTar the reat | and Main Street crcilth the gremtest SOt o ror | iat e Tot P Sens wiscumbin | When we Kngw. thew mfe <t aun | Dl toes anit rosv-Diuk st - oolie | Kith-ths 00Ok Ewes real, | 4 . e 0 ¥ t eeks, Wisc ds, and certainly not when they are | Fose and amber, all together softening | where we may ses things not as they | on Show Day. =ight in dockbuilding and channel- [ras iost millions by forest fires. | (170 Liiion of anether. ‘The class o | Into the shimmering silver of some | seem, but as they are. o deepening is golng to profit most from | ————— — heaple who leta birds of sadness mest | falry crown, or gleaming in waves | THE RECLUSE. the coming of the big ship. The bix | It Is a fact that it does not take | {i°frcir hair are in the chuss with | Seaside Bathing ship has been coming for several dec- | many aeroplanes to keep a repair shoy | those wh v tre o cross | = ades, and though it may be sald to |bu o st e borrow tiouble gnd ctoasfil Li ahd waAn. 1s SORTOIMIBING MR | M0l the pawon iy, s, thany beas. |/ 1610 einy 0 nIEERIRNA Why & strall > 3 » , | reminds us that “as a rule a man's a | holds and offices are places where | laced Briton or fastidious Parisian AUDITOR'UM worthless things prey upon o et have arrived, it has not arrived to fool: and when it's hot he wants it|grumbling and angry words and hate- | ffould find fault with the full limit of its bigness. The 1,000- | Farly morning in the backyar mind, instead of getting right up ! K 2 5 » e oya nt prevI . . o cool; and when it's cool he wantg it | ful looks are e e | mixed and democratically promiscu- . LR ke (OO o bigvable. thén midday previngusy I ’hmf:xilna’_\sn::nnl‘ing et in AR | peopieiving tharein, thrert i cen® | ous way we have of bathing at our SUMMER SCHEDULE ing talked of es a possibility and t} the beach. | ke This fs very much like other Julys— | stant contact with each other, get|Summer resorts. We have never seen TODAY port that can float and wharf tha = | _ The brilliancy of the poppies in the | jr i j2cks water it doesn’t lack heast. | tired of being nice. Oh, of course, we | fit tc adopt the bathing machine: our monsters is 1i to be the great po A TR aIs L S5 | cr gardens reminds one that we | 55 onz poet wrote of it, it is “too hot |are mighty nice to that pretty girl | free and independent women go trip- 4000 ft. of Independent ot the Mkure Siies Aenibus: butoh | are reaching about the center of| ¢, gsleep, too hot to lie, too hot to|when we first meet her, and all the | PIng to the surf regardless of can- Fil —_— a policeman, - annual parade—a parade that|augh, too hot to ery, 100 hot to stand, | time we are courting her, but when |did scrutiny and the recording lenses im SLEEPING BENEATH THE STARS. —_— — begins with the hardy lilliputs of the | too hot to sit, too hot to sew, too hot | the unromantic duties and experiences | Of a hundred kodaks. They wear an MR. WARREN SMITH Man began his career on earth | OGerMmany gives notice that she does|f0ral Kinzdom and closes with the|to knit, too hot to ride, to6 hot to | that are an inevitable accompaniment | iRvulnerable modesty that lengthens b incarated” So09s 2 eer s g Sudotnl el ot naig b dahlias 3 a mums | walk, too hot to read, too hot to talk, | of the wedded life begin, we quit being | their attire and protects them in the sleeping in the open fields beneath the . a e o extreme left. ~ These blazing | too hot to eat, too hot to drink, 100 | a5 nice as we used to Be. On yes. we |eves of all American men. o T o g VY stars and in the warm season thou- | 32f¢ Playthins. ers cast the spell that binds as| hot to write, too hot to think, t00 hot | are nice to all our companions on tho | A “Disgusted Englishman” writing dmission, 40c, sands flee from ciVilized life to er T well as the odor that dopes. Of them | (o scold. too hot to lease, toa hot to | first day of a long mea voiyage, or fan | in 8 Wwestern paper. objects that no Admission, 10c. E i a P well-bred woman would for an in- Pictures changed Mon., Wed., F'r! If Chicago ‘does have Mabel Osgood Wright writes in a Commuter’'s Wi “The | cough, {oo hot to sneeze, t00 hot to| ovariand jorney. but when. the novel. The | play, too hot to sing, too hot, 100 hot, | ty wears off, when the boat gets | Stant consider the primitive privilege, cognizant of ct that balm likelihood of her milk in the world she is Garden ¢ sleep Dbeneath the A « tet ! stach i Batkar thos m%‘mmej“;'“ it | another respect! poppy, though brief of days. is the | for anything!” This was not written | rocking, or the car stuffy, how our | bathing alone in a creek with a strange A TSR " is & Sracer which checks invalMis —— garden hypnotist. Look steadily at a|for July, 1910, but it fits it as nicely | seifish and brutal instincts assist them. | Man: them why, he asks, should she | — S SRITeLs A2 oo c c A ham—| The burial of King Edward cost|mass of these glowing flowers blend- | as though designed by measure and |gcives. Nc one in the compnny would | I8ROt heérself in the surf among a BREED THEATER, Ghas. MEIH"Y Lessee, ch adds robustness to the physical eat Britain only a fifth of a million. | iN& their multi-colors in the fall sun-| taflor-made. How all signs fail in &/ gver think that we were the same nice | thousand strangers? The answer is y ] s ) end greatly increases the joy of 1iv-|7nis looks economical light. At first their brilliancy is|dry tima July has been showing us: | percon’ with whom they startsd out. | F®&dy to band. The identity of the ing. In the big cities the flat house o ks blindin then as the petals undulate | and the hunter can hang his powder- ¥ * | woman ig lost and her personal safe- ’ top is preferred to the stuffy, over- | The treaty combinations of Russia | °%_the slender stems your attention | born on the new moon, which portends ty and confidence assured when she is heated rooms which produce a condi- | with Jupan are met mromotive of A | S, 70°ed as If a hundred eves return- |a continuance of dry weather. It | You see, being nice 1s not a holiday | merged in a multitude. Thgre are no tion of weakness on account of their | erican trade ir g o vour gaze and drowsiness steals| glways pleasant to have bad signs fail | proposition. ‘It costs time, effort and |Prurient, prving eves, such £3 the alien Lninwiting and unnatural atmosphe it s vou, for each flower bears the | — T i HC e ek ot leritie wuspects, among the host_of If 1aan is not going back to th . } . . of the hypnotic pod whose seeds | It took man untold ages to tell why | ®® - e ¥ look & t | pathers on the American beach. The | Feature Picture. e e o the land Happy tho; for Most | bring sleep” ~“Seen among the wild | the sky is blue. It is not So many | Seems easy to this or that person to|great bulk of them are there to wal- | ING OF PARADISE GULCH”® o going back more and more to |any man can see In the woman ‘with "“wrote Ruskin, “far away they | hundred yeans ago that the most in- | be habitually nice, but depeni upon |low or dive in the breaker., and no | “THE TRIMMING 0! e telligent nations thought it was a czil- | it, he.had to discipline himself before | thought of immodesty 1is in their [ s, bbbt g ing in which the stars were set like | he was able to bepunleformly civll.rax:; minds. It is very seldom, indeed, that POPULAR “u”uluJ“ COMEDY diamonds In a fing. There is no evi- | obliging. Like everything else that|& Vvulgar exhibition is attempted at RAMA dence that other planets have a blue | js worth having, the quality of nice- | any of the popular resorts, and inde- MR. FRANK PLOUF, sky like ours. The moon, which has no | ness is not passed on from father to | eency is practically unknown.—Phil- | o 0 . "l orite Baritone, in Tilues atmosphere, has a black sky, science | son, cannot be bought with money, s | 2delphia Press: | pbtisi= i ke burning coals falling from altar.” They have a charm thcir own, and seen massed ve a glory that calls for the the jure.health-sustaining air of ntsh-. | a -bank account, Slace it has been shown that the frosty night air of winter is benc- | The Goulds can afford to have twice ficial to invalids—that it a cure [as many weddings as other foXs. It |t for tuberculosis—the whole race ap- | is money makes the mare go, afinity | | { i i i | ears to Seaming ‘mrons y L = P L s e e | e e e . o comes with riches and oppor- | teaches us. And this overhéad arch|not necessarily aocquired even in the 3 T T Bed A Toaneat ke e Laoe OLUBAGEL hrer deay et ot Jems T he | s all in your eye—like the horizon. | finest fitting schools, but s the out. Around the Lym Matinee, Ladfes and Children, - B LD b el whr Tour the [ 1oTC OF SR R TIES. SN MR S, wed who is able to ride | The moisture in the earth's atmosphere | come of diligent, patient effort. “Study | Around Old Lyme and New Lyme, | jydd call to the open are sleeping in' tents | ding. He lacked the charm of youth. not walk, although walk- |8 the cause of our Blue sky, but our |t pe quiet,” the apostle enjoined his j East and West and North and South | - = - in’the backyard, in window tents in : e = The is one Tof " the heas physies: | blue-sky fs less brilllant than some | converts, and be doubtless might tmve | Lyme. just plain Lyme and ail the | = doors affixed to an open winow, Great Dritain reduced its lquor bill | exercises known; and city people of | Skies and more brilliant than others.|gided, “study to be nice. other Lymes known to geography and Music, It aid not - . It changes to all shades of blue ac- 1" 1" 1o "0t N easy to define in‘| chemistry, the armies of the state of by $54,000,000 last y piazzas end on housetops. The slee & porch for all-the-year-round open- air sleeping is now being added to limited means spare their nickels to eir legs, although it is to vantage to do it. All mod- | cording to the quality of the atmo-|i.,-4q ail that we mean by this little ' Connecticut are manouevring and biv- sphere. Van Dyke declares that “alr- | Uora% 2o UL SO MO0 by Lile i | owacking. They are also indulging in NELLIE S. HOWIE, Dblue is seen at its best in the §oTges|gtand its import and we know that to | Wht an excited local correspondent bt ot Pia gister S0 ma bad mornings after 2 e B If FHalley's comet contributed ons ittle 2 5 date houses, for it has been recos- 3 ations walk too little and .die too | pfe 08 STE SV 10 BYEE 0 L aln dis- oA v ed a i s per cent. more ozone-to our atmosph g. I one: hea -to-do | & N ma — g be really thought nice is one of gets into print as “Muccatoed shots. et TR e phactioe Gmea T an Tl merom 1 save sechise 3 say Do couldnt afford t Hider | tances ~of 'Scotland”—an indefinable | yic"fnest complibnts that can be | Lime and stucco have some relatin, | Room 42, ’ Central Bullding. rves will sm I Mg TR skuide | (o taagy PeLoin k ERVe manking could. spare the niekels, but he| Plue the-most delicate of all colors— | gig toa Blg or Nttle, It can. | haven't they—New Haven Register. their proper and normal functions, : PE R ould not spare the strength. The | Something not of surface depth, but of{ oy with ft aboutsthe same idea that — = | CAROLINE H. THOMPSON muscles will regamn sndp and power, | It might be well to s | amount we wallc determines what kind | (ransparency builded up of SUperim-| (he epitaph on the tombatons of n | More Work for Teddy. | 3 and the old house-bound slusgiahness | wvater oa the streets quite anhiis || Of legs we hfive nnder us. Jack Ei- | gacd Strata of air may @ Tare the | Young women in an English cemetery | Roosevelts visit to Osawatomle ( Teacher of Muale will fall away before the revivlying in- | rope . TR v s - | dredge. a Boston b of 26 | Nickness. Bibe AN s the eyes | SlEnifies, “She was so pleasant. -/ Kan., next fall i hopefully regarded as | 46 Vashington Strest fluence of pure air 8 oWt | o Jedn fo Gtizens for wreiky d to "Frisco in 77 days and made | oy oSt 00 lors which never seem | . WhY Dot try to be nice, if not all |another opportunity to teach %he coun- | rs inkling | upor: the gardens, 175 miles a single day, breaking|Of Man—the colors the time, at least, all this current | try how to spell it.—Kansas City Jour- . 3 | Weston's best recora Togs “that] o1 Lo o SE ARB Y summer time, when we have special | nal. L. H. BALCOM. She i ne 1cpair of the bubbled armor cf | car 10 miles without feeling over— temptations to be careless or selfish | T ‘l'r;;l-,;fm;l_l‘l;‘l'- STRUCTURAL WEAKNESS | ev: battleships calls for an »ut- /| do xception, not the rule. or disagreeable? If you will but make | A few banks In Germany have re- | goseong given at my resldence or at OF AEROPLANES, of $h.600.000. patriots thoce | The walking habit is a good habit—it | the try and ask God to help you, you | tained their right to note issue given i home of the pupil. Same m-thos as ; te makers were. represents masterful reliance. i will have the happiest summer of |them in 1875, but their outsanding a'at chiawenka Conmervatory, Ber- The uatimely death of Captain Rolls | = — — | your life. | notes amount to oniy 3 1-2 per cent. oot11 th, England, this week,| The healty e the 1as | - Have youtevas Lehpusi- T sl THE PARSON. |of the total note lssue. : s — e F. C. GEER Ibition field, has called at- | cream cone is not as innocent as it things betray ? Language betrays — tention to the s and mo 35 assodlations ang temmer| BEING 'NICE ALL THE! THIE = us, and so do associations and tempe SCHWARYZ BROS., 9-11 Water St. t to look guilty when ded f TUNER 122 Prospect Et, Tel. B11. Norwish, Cu ructural weakness of | Jooks. the aeropiane, while the recent ex- perlence of Cc Zeppelin's dirigibic passenger airship in a ten hours’ strifa with a gale of wind shows the greater 1t o ckel is “You don’t know Dorothy,” said a small boy to me the other day, re— ferring to a liftle girl in the neigh- ood, of whom 1 have been very ncultured man cannot keep the | from his cultured neighbors birds of a feather flock to- make association reveal char- Dropping oranges from an aeroplar bt may show what can be dene with |character through our tastes: and our | bor :z;; and strength of the Germau |pombs, but the people will always pre- 1per on we permit Jt fo be stir- | fond. “You only see her once in a aft. Captain Rolls was not a noviee | - 2 e y g i : whil hen she smiles and acts o THE T Ttation -t6 o % weak or flippant person, hile W ABe r mitation to t real t P P if you could see her as A. W. .' VlS we are not strong our- | Sweetly, but for it was he who surprised the worli | le person of self-control i3 |the rest of us children do every day, I8 THE LEADING TUNER IN Special Sale by making a round trip from England to : a ot T If New Hampshire does mot elect | the oniy well balanced person. and such |1 _guess you-wouldn't think she was ol B s ) and, vet. the |, woman governor, she knows now | are rare Indeeq Blan in areont auch | pice right along. She s just as fussy _EASTERN CONNECTICUT. kit rebbed hig e ap Bis Di-}(hat she has one woman who feels|than half as sly as he fhinks he Is,|and cross and selfish as any of the Fhone 5185, 15 Clairmount Ava Pl ed him of the ability to use = G A R e e e fona s speak louder than | rest of us « D e e pthan | Tast T sea T must stop calling little Dorothy as an example to other chil- dren of good manmers =nd the un- selfish spirit, for it is trwe that I see equal to the task of governing th because * actions the wonderful glide ety s0 o joon g | T 1l glide to safety so often | : | words. We laugh at the ostrich be- employed by skilled sviators, for it | o ause w i g i : 3 2 > | cause when he hides his head he thinks wnbalanced Xis machine and dashed his bos s out of sight: but men who on Mattresses OUR A univers: y professor finds that rim to death as if he had pitched from | . b 3 hink they are do on tha & chureh mpite. The rash 16 o ey | TATEI Elesies and fudge are siems | S Sine? e Lol Hilmen i the | o Wi mud aen FOR 10 DAYS | no chance for his life, whatever, while | O\ (P® Impiety of young women. H not displayving more wisdom. A great | usually ‘on occasions when she would 3 | 2 : the. twanly - passengers on- Fecpela’s jabout the slanz, chewing gum and | many rsons never reach the point in | naturally be behaving pretty well. eg ng@e nr hi e . | cizarettes? life where foolishness ends and is- | T s 1 et iin s o i — £ pretldad e e thalans, | am_ thonkful for Cotton Top Mattresses and a nice large assort- e al ce to reaty Brari, streaks of niceness in Dorothy and in the ground without even a broken . All Gone to Gasoline. 3 anybody else, for there are people ¢ LINE bome, 5o well did the ship behave. | :_mr z;:gvlnflmllfl]:::nm to be the uni- "’L‘;:vc"](“u\d gfldnr:.l\\\uultl:;‘lxa_r;iop‘:g:: ;rr;g Die and ifttle ‘who 8o not even. have ment of Ticks, in any size, at .1-”8, tequar This 3 e oat. are the woolen day and ss intery: £ being nice. n : PL leaves mo dsubt that. the meropicy | MARUGacturers maintaining that beo: | (hc, SWCelest things that God ever | [IolE, Jteniel o PUSE IS, VaIch price $3.50, | IS NOW COMPLETE. aves h ¢ Jaeroplanes | ple who ride in the new vehicles hab- | Made and forgot to put a soul into.” TEWRAS W0, S o€ IoUEL TUAP U89 The Handsomest showing of new Henry Ward Beecher coined that sen- will have to be made heavier to in- |itually wear their second best o 4 = lothes, | timent, and ‘the thought Is mew the crease their siructural strength as [not only on account of the dust, buf assurance of greater safety. These |because the machine attracts all the aeroplanes today are prineipally noted | attention and any sort of raiment will for waifing long for favorable oppor. | PASS unnoticed. If business in any line tunities, and breaking.down frequent- i\’“fl‘:u e ""'f I‘““‘,"f’"““ iv. thny Iy enough to sRow that they are far S T A A S an abeolutely sélfish and wicked life, world’s and goes without having |Put his mates wanted to put ms good Peecher's nume attached to it, although | @ _inseription as they could on’ his the credit remains in a few books of | tombstone, 50 after considerable de- auotations on library shelves. If the | liberation they decided on ithis: “He world ltkes your coinage it just takes | Was not as bad sometimes as he was it because it'is living truth and forgets | 4t others.” When all that can be said | fabrios and colorings we have ever at- tempted. Cool, perfect ftting and comfortable. SUMMER UNDERWEAR in all welghts, majde knee length, full length or in Union Sults, COMBINATION MATTRESSES Extra Heavy Ticking, six inch box, white cotton all around and fibre in the center. Sale price from being dependable. PPt aor, Gusoline.—Nebraska State | yoy” “Thiere is no particular reison |#bont & man is that he exhibited dif- : —at It will take cousiderable serial ex- e noy the world should remsmher mared SREONC JAEERS 00 e 3.98 I 00, Co v % than its eatest 2¢ v mes, a parson hasi 2 perienice &nd a-new deaign before the | Great Britain has thre uowspapers | Ui s, Seat g benctactors, bup you | Wmen, & purscn hasnt mhel metscil $ y regular pricz $6.00. M N’ airship with the qualities of strength |and two magazines devoted to the in- | remembers its men of war, who are|8Y. So it counts in @ child's favor | (] and safety to give gemeral assurance fterest of woman sufirage. Holland, | not alwass Its benefoctors. If mations | o 4 man's for that matter, to be abie to the public will be brought out. Denmark, Norway, Gefmany, Austria, |gloried less in war there would not be | to say “he or she is nice sometimes.” — — ;(ufks'fl.m l'dmm'r;\dl, vln-ol‘\;iul v‘rerne:i such a wide and secret imterest in But to spread this niceness over. The New York politisians may feel | SYitZeriand, Bulgaria. Hungary and| prize fight>rs. The man of head and |Seven days in the week and- thirty well ok over Sitting on Raeseve | E0land have one’ paper each, “whilo | heart and mind-brightnass i mot the|davs in the month and twelve months SCGHWARTZ BROS. 9-11 Water St. 1S JOjEM L1-6 "SOUE ZLUHVMHIS 01 Main St., City We invite you to call and s these Mattresses. 1o put your bumi- WHEN you wan Belgium and Turkey have each one | one who i nsnaily bl . but later on they may feel as if they | woman's magazine which advocates| s usnally-bonled t9t THyin g .,’,;";u:,"fi;,,‘:'f,,, '.:.' .":,'“'; ness befo: fhere is me - had set upen & poreupine siving women the ballot, \ It Te-_foarfully hot ne snraa i el T e e O e My e T ,

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