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Cold Room on the side of the house where winter blastsstrike hardest always has a lower temperature than tz rest of the house. There are times when it is necessary to raise the temperature quickly or to keep the temperature up for a long period. That can’t be done by the regular method of heating without great trouble and overheating the rest of the house. The only reliable method of heating such a room alone by other means is to use a usu‘scrlo Absolntely smokeless and odorless which can be kept at full or low/heat for a short or long time. Four quarts of oil will give“a glowing heat for nine hours, without smoke or smell. An indicator always shows the amount of oil in the font. Filter-cap does not screw on; but is put in like a cork in a bottle, and is attached by a chain lnd cannot get lost. An automatic-locking flame spreader prevents the wick from being turned high enough to smoke, and is easy to remove and drop back so that it can be cleaned in an instant. The burner body or gailery cannot become wedged, and can be unscrewed in an instant for rewicking. Finished in japan or nickel, strong, durable, well- miade, built for service, and yet light and ornamental. His a cool handle. 1 not at yours. write for descriptive circular to the nearest ag Fine Standard Oil Company (Incorporated) Dealers Everyoheve. | Discovery of a Serum That has been Officially Experi- HOG CHOLERA HAS BEEN BBNQIIEEED mented With Success. Washington, Oct. 5.—Hog cholera has, in the oninion of the agricultural department, been conguered by a serum which the bureau of animal industries has been testing. The bureau thus de- serum-treated pigs and tne eight un- treated pigs were then placed in the same pen with the four pigs which liad been made sick by inoculation. The four pizs which. we had at first ibes an experiment in the Union|given hog cholera all died, and the tock vards at South Om: Neb.. in | cight untreated pigs all contracted the co-operation with the Union Stock | disease from them. - The eighteen pigs Yards company of Omaha: which were given serum and which ‘he stock yards company purchased | were confined in the same pen with the thirty pi weighing from forty to! four originally sick pigs and with the ty pounds each, from a farm which | sick untreated pigs remained perfect- had been free from hog cholera for several years. These pigs were brought to the stock yards, and on July 23, four of them were injected with from hogs sick of hog cholers inoculated pigs were placed in a well and were finaily turned over to the officials of tha stock yards com- pany upon the completion” of the ex- periment, Sept. 17, 1910. The department of agriculture not distribute his serum to fs 1910, pen by. themselves, and within five | but is endeavoring to bring the v. days they had become sick, at which | of this method to the attention of the time eighteen ‘of the T ing pigs | stock raising interests, in order that were each given one dose of the serum, | they may arrange to secure state funds ck headache, one dose ienck’s Mandrake Pills will mako biliousne: complaint, constipation, giddi ete. ~ Wholly v 1a_everywh oW to_preser “harml: suggest D SPECIAL! [or708s 0c | RAZOR | 50c come to life. You have all heard of the man who paid fifty cents for a razor which beat them all. “You have that opportunity right now. ,never get it again. FOR A SHORT TIME ONLY these Razors will be offered for 50 cents RAZORS You may Bulletin Building 74 Frankiin Sireet STATE TRADE SCHOOL Two More Instructors Added to Staff at Bridgeport. Prin- To decido where W your Ligmors. However, o1 us_a trial we will preve th 1s the where you shogld buy Our. California and Rreheh Brandies will y delight the most critica } beet N bonirka: i JACOB STEIN, the of Roche: "Pone 25 93 Main Street. | * 1,0 octid ‘ - — Perished in Los Angeles Fire. \lbert I., Sawyer, the telegraph op- | frator reported among the missing in | the explosion and i h. destroyed i the Los eies Times building early arday mor was former res- { ident of Torrington, z s telesrapl operafor the, od s y] M Press in the office of The v bk walidnil vird N . His health f went s = | here - da the best cream made for the skin. | | ©" cral sears he had heen 1f'you have a red, rough, biotched, || .1 lated Pre Yy]l | ‘.sore, unsightly skin, try this great ||, Pt g m:( the American Druggists Sou can use it for massaging || Ve Britain Tra Growing swrin¥les and for a sallow complex- || . G L fon, as 1t whiten= and beautifles, is ' s _ssfe, harmless and does not grow 8. Bayitan s bair. | ictor in mechan- | No woman who values her ap- ‘ & a graduate of the | rance atd who wants & smooth | [ Massachuse Institute of Technology, | isar skin sbould let a day go by 1 | has been employed with the Gen- | ewithout trying it for the face, meck, { | “*! Wectrical comy at Lynn, Mass. | arms and bands. | s = | @et it for 25c. at any A. D. S. He Is Sere. drug store. t ry to find that one |s g enough not to | | He is Payne the % ¢ convention seut to the d [with nuh-nu Arugiats. y Plain. Smith, the Drugman, 205 Main St Any nSiespest fhlsmuatie Pitcher & Service, 252 ( Ave, | the e Lerou's Pharmacy, 276 West Main St. | a e 1 Has the Price W ha NOTICE Dr. Loules Frankiin iiner Y now | .. focatgd In her new office, Breed Hall, i . j @ num- Roum 1 N > Office hours, 1 to 4 p. me the nh 1 elsphane 660. auglla > huilding number of the o:: "",;:‘,"‘"',ff,’,"l,mfl'.mfiufi schanls to take care of the surplus nrl for 8 results. children. while the other eight pigs were not |for the manufacture and distribution treated in any way. The eighteen | of the serum. NEWBOOKS. KEOKUK'S FIRST EXPERIENCES Art Songs for High Schools. By Will| With the Commission Form of Gov- Earhart, Supervisor of Music, | ernment. chmond, Ind. Cloth, large Svo,| 250 3 page Price 80 cents. | Keoku a., afteh six months of These songs were selected not only | commission government, Teports that for their value in training the pupils | the citizens are practicaily unanimous in music, but also for their artistic | in their approval of the new ruls. And content. 'As a result they will stimu- | here are some of the reasons: late the imagination and quicken the| When the commission plan took ef- desire for a closer acquaintance with | fect th ioners found a deplet- what js best in music. At the same | ed tr and a floating indebtadness time they ar> carefully graded and of 20 per cent. of the entire annual well suited to school purposes. The|revenue of the city. After six months collection includes both old favorites | of administration under a business of high grade and many new composi- | system the city is now operating on a tions adapted to choral singing. F ash basis and the bonded indebted- des non-sectarian hymns and patri- | ness has been decréased by $39,000. otic &t there are many songs for | More than double the amount of particular ' occasions and seasons, as |street improvement made in the cor- well as numezrous chorus number: | responding six nths of last y —— 5 | ben made this ye The tres Metcalf & Rafter's Language Series— Looks last Saturday night showed Book Two. By Rabert C. Metcall, | for less than one-half the results ac- D. Litt., ex-Supervisor of Schools, | complished in the street de; timent Boston, Mass., and - Augus this year the city paid last 3 4- Rafter, A. M. Assistant S 000 as against $11,500 this year. . tendent of Schoc Boston. s.| TLast vear and the year beforz the Cloth, 12 pages, with il | city collected less than $150 in dog trations. Price 60 cents. | licen: In months the new rule This book ipon the naw | coll $1.350 in that fund. of B : by | The city owns of ground igned for the | along. the river front which it rents schools. ] to s firms. In a numbar of ling with la > lays spe s rent was not paid. Some of on oral work, but contains | it not been paid for five 5. 0 many interesting and stimulating | the rents have all been paid to | written lesson inal exercis the pupils ar led for, and e municipal court in the first six selections from standard author ths of Jast vear collected in fines uides to the appreciation of 1 For_the first six months of In Part II. on gramma rufe collections were new subject is introduced only after a t has tory review, and is developed been the custom of former by few clear and . direct que: councils to from § 00 to leading to logical conclusions. The il-| $30,000 to y s city over” from lustrative sentences were very care-|the bezinning of the ¢ il vear to fully chose: Exercises in analysls are| tax in August. On that frequant. amo uld pay 5 per cent. | A interest year the commission- Nature Study for Higher Grammar| ers did not borrew. Instead of paying Grades. By Horace H. Cummin terest they ed to keep a eash formerly Superv Na- | balance in the city depository on which tudy, State N choal, city has realized interest to the sity of Ut 12mo. ges, with illustrat Price Just the applica- nts. >ss methods to mu- Book St b Every city under thi neads of pup! seventh the results lh.at Km? and eighth grades of elementary schools. | Kuk omplished—and in addi The subjects treated cover wide| fon, t ge of observatic and experience, day in the and an effort is made, m the eighth = le, espec to develop the uses A Governor's Salary. 1d methods of classifying knowledg n Jess. than a ye nd a half Henry Light. heat, sound, electricity, =r Lo on has réceived from the Unit. friction, etc.—all these are studie ed government 59,000, most of o that .ths- pupil may under its for personal services as special h laws. and rel t attorney in the M case and in the may appreciate the varic Sugar cases. Presuma- S bly the vi which he secured, Story of Old France. and the collection of $3.500,000 from ber. Cloth, 12mo rters who defrauded the illustrations. Price was worth all that it cost. It gives the story of Fran | y n claimed tha arlisst_times down to aracter and i Louis XIV, laying special secured to prose the many 'Interesting ar resque | ller ;sum. sodes In which the p bounds. | of propor are presented in lite a Ir. Stimson previ book is suppliad 3 ved as United States district E nd wih pYen attorney, 10t extravagant in b4 s e of the sum commonly mous paintings, sthtues and buildings, | Poration attornevs Xeu et WhichiGRet: il data are given. | But when a man who can earn 000 in 18 montk governor a French Composi Guerber. Cloth, 1 ¥ es and vocabulary. »d to accept as 10,000, it looks ew York ought of its chief execu- n. H. A e the pa Governor es had to think 4 | al loss entailed account of the life and exploits , and the con- Joan of Ar ten in an agree- ions whic nfronted him must be purpose in| met by any man who follows him. Tudge 1 in is not 1 to be 3 nt ed governor of Connecticut, but if glish words th fixi lent s elected he will receive only $4,000 tructio onveni ar sal which is $4,000 less than students ¢ y “\u» < jus of 'the supreme icement, a full lary recti the position he pended ed becat of having above ire published i CHmMPLTy, the state he would Chicago. the annual salary B f justice of the su- ical Fences. e salary of the chief Arldrew hepard’s recent s o0 ch—the salary it to this town was plaintly to look : - political fences, but not to make | __ receives repales before they are needed. - Hed $5.000 ar v : for expressed himsel well satisfied | PeDSes s not too much for the b the political situation and as be- | O but where does the ing confident -that trict has | 80 New Haven Times not chanzed from republican tenden- | Leade covering the field thor- SR o onally conducted Another One of Garfield’s Sons. apparently pays his Garfield, the State street law He does not pose as an | ver, who b tahiTie. Fern candidate, having never | holds an ic record. that mrober en to much speech making: | cannot be el by Xdsiv, S b his natural -bent is along | graduates hereabouts Sl husiness and _political lines, and in | holds the amatet eIl these he has ‘heen notably successful und 4 mous Bast 4ot Ansonja Sentinel hite house at Washingta e Col.-W. H, Crook. who is writing h New Haven.—(ol. T. M. Ullman,| reminiscences of the presidents in the president of the chamber of comme turday Evening Post, brings this to as T 1 a letter from Col. Theo- | new attention dore Roosevelt formally accepting the| As Colonel Crook describes it: invitation to speak at, the next annual Get off the track or you'll be run dinner of the chamber of commerce and | down!’ naming Dec. 13 as the date. “Without an instant's hesitation T Discretion in Food and Drink Marks the Wise Man. Sich men live simply. Some wise men (a good many) cat Grape-Nuls and Cream “There’s a Reason” in a Package hakl Sthods wiich imave the world Uneeda Biscuit also resulted ina Revelation in soda cracker quality. ' You realize this the moment the royal purp open and find soda crackers so tempt- ing and good that be rcststed Unee NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Biscuit you package they cannot da sprang to one side, and as I did so I quickly glanced upward. And there, rched one one of the old-fashioned bicycles with a high wheel, ident Garfield’s young son Irvi ing down that staircase like lightning. In an instant he had reached the foot of it, zipped across the broad corri- dor and with skill little short of mar- velous turned into the East room, the flashing steel spokes ‘of his wheel vanishing like the tail of a comet. “] stood for a moment and gasped. That any small boy, even a son of the president of the United States, should | dare to start at the head of that great staircase on a bicycle and coast down it was- almost unbelievable; and that he should do so as successfully as a trained circus performer, was bevond my comprehension. I sprang forward to the door of the East room to pick up the dismembered remains, but it was mnot necessai The youngster was still on his high wheel, and was treading it around and around the great Bast room with evident satisfac- tion.”—Bostoh Record. One Candidate Label. I am for strict aconomy in the ex- penditure of. all public money. If a successful candidate, 1 shall. vote for Hon. George B. McLean for United States senator; I am in favor of a public utilities bill; the bill ‘presented by the business men; or some other good bill; I am in favor of the repeal of the law limiting damages by death to $5.000; am in favor of a reasonable employers’ liability law, in fact, in fa- vor of all the laws that will do the zsreatest good to the greatest number— will bz on the job and vete yes or no on all the questions that do come be- fore the legislature. In regard to any other question, any citizen can find out by sending me a note through the mail, telephone, or a personal inter- view The above is the way a Torrintgon ndidate fo representative an- nounces his political views, through the medium of his home paper, to the voters of his town. It is a plain, frank, open way of stating where one stands on important issues of the day, and it is a style of politics which promises to be popular during the present campaign. This is not a year for covering up. Instead, the call is for open methods, with hearty com- mendation, and perhaps some vote for the man- who is in right. This year, too, there are advantages in dges made concerning issues at e, and the main advantage lies in the fact that the great mass of voters, who will do the electing, are arrayed together on one side, with a view to making more certain of carrying these sues to victory than of having them rry a specific party label—Ansonia Sentinel. Stop Crying Wolf. The United States treasury depart- ment assures the people that there will be no money shartage in any part of the country this autumn or winter; that the banks have fortified them- selves against any possibility of an emergency dsmand. Money in _this country and Europe is plentiful. Crops of all kinds are turning out heavy, some at Tecord-breaking rates, and general business is good.~ s well to have this interposition facts from authorftative sources. 1t will help to allay fears and set the people right asto what they have to look forward to. It will work beneficial re- uits by way of restoring confidence in business and infuse generaily a new life into all lines of commercial activi ty. From official sourcés wa learn that the banks, exercising that intelli- gent forethought that banks are sup- posed to possess, by piling up reserves and cutting down risky loans, have entirely protected themselves and, their customers from danger. Tncidentally, we get an object lesson of what banks may do_when they take a forward view. They were given to understand that in the event of a panic thev need expect littie help from the govern- ment, so they availed themselves of their own power, which is quite suffi- cient when duly exercised — Omaha Bee. Diverce. So many questions come to lawyers all over the land from persons who have vowed to be devoted to each oth- er until death do them part that it may be wise to throw out a hint or two. We may say that English criti- cism of the varisty and laxity of our divorce laws are not wholly unwar- ranted. . But, it is to be addéd, no one feels the disgrace of it more than the substautjal American citizen. Why do men and women who real- Iy love each other suddenly separate? If because of temperamental and tem- porary antagonism, that should be & thing easily adjusted just as you emooth vut'the petty quarrels of chil- dren in the nursery or the back lawn But, it so happens, the man or wontan of maturs years is obdurate; each has a will of his or her owp—neither wit give in. They are “children of a larger growth. “They quarrel; say bitter words: refuse to bend and beg pardon; separate—and thence flows misery. 1f thsre were onlv a tribunal to ‘bring together these loving but es- tranged hearts—which are presently to come never, never in touch—life fer both of them would throb ag As it is, they are bound to dr part and | add to the list which rovords one di- vorce to évery twelve marriages.— Philadelphia Press. The Schools and Automotiles. The business of driving automobiles is making the vocation of chauffeur an attractive one, offering a large field of employment. ' An intelligent, honest young man who wanis to make fair wages can pretty generally succeed if he can run an automol y and know something of its insides. John Hays Hammond is quoted as advocat- ing the training of chauffeurs in the public scheols. He thinks the business is so important that the rising genera- | tion ought to be educate. | really secems no need | schools to take it up any more | they would teach young men o be tin- | smiths or plumbers. The ordinars manual training in the public schools | teaches any boy certain mechani rules and regulations as well as digita dexterity. The start which manus training taught in the schools would | give a boy anxious to be a chauffeur, | is_quite a little. but the balance of the | trade it is fair to ask him to learn | either in a garage or a special train school. The public school system An not undertake to fill the demand for chauffeurs any more than that for dentists.—Utica (N. Y.) Prees. i Unwilling to Discourage. | It 1s related of Goldwin Smith that, {when at Cornell, an ambitious student, with a superabundance of ‘“college spirit,” approached him with the jquery: “How long will it take for Cornell to become equal to Oxford?” |Professor Smith, unwilling to discour- age the youth, and not wishing to | treat him with levity, solemnly Tre- \plled: “Probably about 500 years. This story is still current at Cornell. Bacteria. i Not long since it was announced that Regnault had discovered bacteria | in coal. Continuing his researches, he found evidence that bacteria were | probably coeval with the first appear- ance of organic life on the earth. They attacked vegetable tissues, as well as the bones and teeth of animals, but as. ‘a rule they belonged to species dis-| tinct from the bacteria of today.—Phil- adelphia Record. Might Have Guessed It. There was a riot in Meclbourne, Aus- tralla, among a number of Lascars be- longing ta a steamer lately arrived from Bombay. A swarthy, heavily- ‘turbaned ‘man, who was apparently the lestder of the disturbance, was in- terrogated by the presiding - magis- trate. “Where are you from?” “Oire- Jand, your worship.” “What part?” “Fermoy, County Cork.” * The Victim. Strange Guest—"1 don’t know half the people in the room. Just icok at that woman over there—the cross- eyed, red-headed one. And some one told me she was married. - Don't you think the fellow was a fool?” Other Guest (meekly)—"1 know he was. I'm him."—Baltimore American. A Patron. “Mr. Carriman is busy now,” said the private secretary of the railroad | president. “Is there anything I can do for you?” *“O,” replied the pom- pous visitor, “just a friendly call. I ‘thought he’l like to know that I ride oh his suburban branch now. I'm Colonel Nuricth.” Out of a Job. “Why are you unable to get work?” asked a housekeeper of Weary Willie. “I'm a kindergartener, lady,” he an- swered, “and this here race suicide ‘has drove me out of bpsiness."—The Widow. Conservation, “I see you only have ome chair in the kitchen, Mary. I must get an- other for you.” “You needn’t mind, ma'am. 1 have none‘ but gentlemen callers.”—Buffalo Express. A Lemonade Hint, - If the sugar is dissolved in a little hot water before putting it into lem- onade it will not sink and will sweet- en it more quickly—Woman’s Home Companion. | Telephone 883. WM. F. BAILEY (Successor to A. T. Gerdner) Hack, Livery and Boarding Stable 12-14 Bath Street. | HORSE CLIPPING A SPECIALTY. AUTOMOBILE TO RENT. apr2sd EAVE YOU SEEN THAT New Correspondence Paper just received at CRANSTON'S? Something exceedingly dainty and at very moderate price. Inspection invited. sept2idaw Sterling Silver, Silver Depdsitware, Cut Glass, Clocks, Etc., Useful and Desirablz Articles for Wedding Gifts, Finest Goods Largest Stock Lowest Prices John & Geo. H. Bliss. M. HOURIGAN COMPLET HOME FURNI-HER. Funeral Director and Embalmer. Norwich and Jeweit City. necticut equal to The Buls - business results. High Grade PIANOS Latest Sheet Music AND NEW STYLES WALL PAPER AT Yerrington's 49 Main Street may18d WHEN you want to put your busk ness before the public, there is ne dium better than through the ad ing columns of The Bunetin,