Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 8, 1910, Page 13

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(Written Specially for The Bulletin.) One of the distinctions between suec- ul and unsuccessful men is that successful man sces whead, a long ways ahead. Now, no man can see ahead if he js looking up into the air or down on the ground r sideways over his next-door neigh- the b hackyard, er behind him at day befors yesterday. Or any other way except logking forward—keeping his eyes on the future the beyond. I 1 _your wagon to a star,” coun- selled Emerson. He wasn't thinking of \ literal star, far withdrawn in the in- | finite depths of blue night: h= used the w 1 figuratively to suggest something ahead of us and above us, a little out »f our reach, perhaps, but something | which would certainly hold our eyes and our attention to the front, and keep us moving in that direction. All the successful statesmen of the world have aimed high and far ah the v start Napoleon, when he At only a “Little Corporal,” dreaming mastery of pititully in the Grand Army and -ope. Disraeli failed first attempt at is foresighted—he | al | coula * eech in the hou of commons time will come when you wi hear me.” he said, smiling. People re- | embered that when, as premier o kngland, parliament hung breathles n his words. All the successful noney-getters of the wo have aimed igh and looked far ahead at the ver start. Astor was seeing half a centum nto the future when he invested all| the money he could lay his hands on pasture lands and swamps out the then limits of Li Old New Y | oking ahead, he foresaw the time| when his cheap land would b2 worth | ndreds and thousands of dollars a | ot instead of fifty dollars an | :ller, Morgan, Carnegie nt gobblers of our own day reckoned on profits to be or railroad ment next spring.”- rvbody says this is the very finest and sweetest c ery [ ever had; I must be sure to get the same strain of seed from the same seedsman, next year.”—‘“That heavy dosing with fish-serap gave me simply tremendous spinach and lettuce, but it didn’'t seem to be worth much for on- fons; Mem. for next year, more fish- serap on the lettuce patch and some- thing with less nitrogen and more pot- ash on the onion bed.” So it has gone. ‘We are all doing this sort of thing, whett and potatoes. buckwheat. we raise garden truck, or corn or ) and rye and ve to. We are com- velled to tl 1911 in terms of 1916. We are always reckoning in the pring on the harvests of summer and fall. oats But the most of us fail to “git thar” with more than one foot at a time be- cau in our life work, a single vear or a single rotation per crops isn't mu to con taken God unthinkable ars to the ‘hills intervals nd ledzes and swamps of vour farm into their present s He doubtless done it in the fraction of wanted to. But that acted through 1 ow processes of and erosion and the other f natural law. he ean find all about wh putting into one acre in llenniums. has more “gall” t. It's a life work rt of what we ought to know abot top six inches of that acre. The sooner he begins, the more apt he will be to get at least into his “A-B, abs” before the t comes for him to crawl 'r the green coverlet of the hill- cemetery. et utions er who tt 300,000 hours, h 300,000 than been de The troublé with most of us is that we don’t begin soon enough and don't ok ahead far enough manipulation o & combina- | SAvait” I ::r,:fnh» only che tion. All the molders and mak- ench course’ youth £ by ¢ bz i never can know, for cer s of civilization, the poets and the 0 Took ‘aheatd) and tFy thors and the prophets, have begun | ¢ e T the vifion " ot tHE the probable future, an gracious does of this the nearer it P & ‘und by setting. thate] the more 1 in that irection. RS hel| will come to discounting that future. the only ane who “dipt into the| Of course John Jacoh Astor aidn’t Pustre $60 st BOMEL s s o R .ctually_know, when he bought land above Canal street at $50 an acre, Life is short, #& be sure, rechoning it | that be Wwould be able to sel it at in terms of geologic aeons or astro- an é before many yea perheomd g el g Ha e 2”1 But he had watched the movement of ng it In seconds and minutes, 7The| things: he had studied the fendencs ge young man who reached | Of population and busine e bt it B h00d of | ahead; twenty., thirt erhaps 19,600 days of life, over 450,000 | @head, and put his hand and his hope i third of his hours in sleep ours. Assuming that he spends one- he still h more than 300000 to eckon When he's :hed 18 it's high that he shall ave made up h whether he going to live those 300,- 000 hours each one for itself and with littla thought of the future, or whether he istgoing to treat them as a bunch and start on some sort of plan to make them dovetail together into the frame- work for success Once, a many, many years ago, the zled old friend who had lived near- 0 ears f its gains and its losses asked me: How old are ou then under 30, and told him so. murmured, “4f I were only your and knew all T know now.” ~His s were on his own past, not on me, poke. A moment later he a ualty blushed over his own. words as came back into his vi..on, and he 1ought how it might sound to me and how I might take it. He began to pologize. “Dear friend,” said 1, “don’t 1ange word. I undersiand. God 1ows I 1t with my 30 yvears I had your 'S experience and knowladge. could give you the back and you could give ifa and had seen and “AR” he s w th Ane town Silently hand. again experience, we two could mal sit up and take notice, eh He saw I unde tood. Now, the point I'm driving at is that there isn't any business or avocation on earth which more insistently calls « wi equately reward head-itiveness *h is worth mor s Money is ju and hasty pudding, som use to live with. But it's not - the obiject life. any more hash and hasty pudding are. If of 18 or 20 1 young fellow nobler Farming is a life business. Tt is one to learn slowly and very care It 1= one where we t huild go slong. and where w nust be sure to fay good foundations—foundations to d the racket of years "n before begin to put The 5 ure of the nakes us re ead for a rable time. t wer I've been planning for 111 wk pateh. As the crops de- and ripened to profitable ma- turit or sickened to comp > fail- wre. ['ve been fc sting the n ®o0. “We mustn’t 5 again; th wrong with the soil; they | and can’t be made to."— best of Gen- give it same treat- One May QOvercome conctipation permanently personal co-operation with by prover the bene- ficial effects of Tup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, when required. The forming of regular habits is most im- portant and while endeavoring to form them the assistance of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Sennz is most val- uable, as it is the only laxative which acts without disturbing the natural! functions and without debilitating and it is the one laxative which leaves the internal organs in a naturally healthy condition, thereby really aiding one in that way. To get its beneficial efects, buy the genuine manufactured by the Callfornla Fig 3yrup Co. culy, and for wvale by all leading druggists. Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is never clawsed by the well-informed with medicines which® make extravagant] Meriden Jour and unfounded claims to cure habitual constipation without personal co-op- eration i he reached over and shook my ur b of ming. t that mean none which will money. I'm not thinking | fly of money, but of _ manhood, . both to the world | s the | fit to be | on that future.. His doing so made him the richest n of his time and erected his name into a synenym for boundless wealt There’s a future for us farmers, us of the on-coming generation. anyw We're passing through a f adjustments, pelitical, economic coming wi¥n politics | The time n't going ail greed and graft; when morality is 2¢ to imean than a veneer of hy poc g of corrup- tion; guing to he something o i game of heads that I-wir tim When go- isn't - ten dollars. ompelled to The farm- | to find out | to be | "AS JOB JOLT SEES IT | The hogs that get crooked legs for lack of exercise are not human hogs. They seem to be immune. The farmer who crawls up on weather worn and rotten old ladders to fix the barn' or prune the trees may save a dollar and break his neck. No farmer is rich enough to afford to buy poor cows; and it is the poorest economy that a farmer of limited means can possibly enter upon. Samantha Psalter says that when powdered sugar gets hard it is easier to run it through the food grinder than it is to 1oduce it to powder with a rolling pin; and she generally knows what she is talking about when it concerns victuals. The farmer who gives his stock ap- ples, carrots or potatoes two or three times a week discovers that it is good for them and of real value to him.~ Parson Dawson tells us that the peacemakers are blessed; but Bill Bangs says that the pacemakers ap- pear to him to reap the most substan- tial rewards. Many a man who expects his wife | to have eagle-eves in his interest is as blind as an owl in the da thing that concerns her. he hired help who break down the trees when picking fruit are about as profitable the horse that runs awhy with ths milk wagon. It better good condition all the time than it is to let themn get lean and then make | special effort to get them fat again. b Cv Cvinel s sl he chnudt At | ford to dress well bocause he has the burden of a great thi Cy has plenty of fool company in this field. as is to keep the stock in The scythe that hangs out in an old tree all winter not in first S shape to cut grass with the following July. The man settin® is clas, who knows enough to let hen alone is not that wise when he meets a guarrelsome woman. a Do not dig potatoes in a hurry that are menaced with rot, for cold weather will kill the fungi and more of them can be saved by digging them later. Sariah says that the man who looks forward to see what's going to hap- has the man who watching happened beat to death. pen wk is 2t has Mrs, Dawson says she doesn't see should get excited and swear over politics any more than they should their Sunday-school les- son. i why men 0 over The fowls that are smail of their age | bring prices now, and that is about all there is fancy connected with them. fancy MUSIC AND DRAMA Freder seqn n | began his | Manday Lancaster, Pa. in Shuke- speareé’'s Timon of Athons.” Liebler & C will make their pro- { duction of ascagni's new opera, “Ysobel,” Novermber 14, at the New theater, New Yor Monday the third week of the hirjwind hing engzagement of m> from Mil- New jYork. vtime to any- [ THREE PRIZES MONTHLY: The woman wkose price was above Rubles made ber Own Dresses—See Proverbs xxxi $250 to first; $1.50 to second; $1.00 to third. Award made the last Saturday in each month. EVERY WOMAN’S OPPORTUNITY. 2 The Bulletin wants zood home letters, good business letters; good help- ful letters of any kind the mind may suggest. Wednesday of each week. They should be in hand by ‘Write on but one side of the paper. Addtess, SOCIAL CORNER EDITOR, Bulletin Office, Norwich, Conn. NEW COMERS TO THE CORNER The variety of letters this week ; for the Social Corner shows that there is live interest in the department and that the resourcefulness or the writers may be banked upon with the front and other young people will assurance. “Sweet Sixteen” comes to be sure to follow her example. and as a jollier “Jack the Hunter” is sure Lo, p ease many readers. Inquiries are al- ways in order, and everyvbody How to Accomplish Results. _ Bditor Social Corner: The Corner 11 real help to wpmen who haven't | time to think—the woman who thinks | | she never shall be able to catch up [ with her work. Let me suggest a few ways to do things: When the hole in | knee stockings is too big to darn se {a patch from another similar stocki Next cut off stocking just at ankle, | turn upper around so that the pate twill come hack of the knee when Sew together again, open and seams and the result is one that satisfy the m particular mother. Be sure to stretch material when sewing ankle seam. To make grape catsup, take f pounds of grapes and press through a colander, add two and one-half pount of sugar, one pint of vinegar, a table: spoonful each of cinnamon, clove allspice and cayenne pepper and a half a tablespoonful of salt. Boil until rather thick: bhottle and seal. i mice with meat or poultry. To make potato soup, into a gen erous tablespoonful of mashed potato beat gradually a mpint of new milk. Stir over the fire until very hot. then in | starch dissolved in a little cold mik. | Boil, still stirring, until there is no jraw taste of cormstarch in the soup. and season with salt ittle mino- ed parsl The potato must be free from lumps. Rice may be substituted but must be well mashed, and the millc must be added slowly. With the unlined narrew ts now in style it is necessary to wear petti- coats to harmonize in color wi most every froc May Blaney has chosen to play the [of the woman of average income who hen pheasant in rantecler.” finds it hard to own one silk petti- ——— {coat. much le: ortment. The llbert Hubbard is to appear in!difficulty v adjustable frills | vaudeville over the Orpheum circuit, {or flounce: ‘h come ready to ad- starting at Los Angeies. ust to any top. These flounces promi for the coming be bought ready | such popularity son that they ¢ 1ade in all m lingeries or rich 1k= to durable mo- 1 well-fitting voke top | a flounce of any color |is buitoned on or can be adjusted by | drawn-strings through top of flounce. | I hope these receipes and suggestions be fe of the may ters nd of value by some s Corner. POLLY POE. Stylish Headwear. Corner: It 1ueh may not we think This is | stir in a heaping teaspoonful of corn- | e ! from the sheer- | invited to write of the matter which most interest them.—EDITOR: SOCIAL COR ’ his beautiful large dog started off down | the trail. Just then a fox jumped out from the brush ahead of him. On went the dog like mad, after the fox, and ! ran straight into the broadaxe! When my friend came up he found his noble | dog ng there cut exactly in half. | Now didn't he feel pretty bad? Well, | T guess, but he was always rather | bright of mind and hasty in action, so quick as thought he seized a bottie of Twentieth Century glue which he had with him, and dawbing it on both sides of the dog. stuck him together. Up jumped the dog like lightening for the fox and caught it. To the amaze- ment of my friend he found he had glued the dog together wrong! Two of his feet were on the ground and two in the air! But this proved to be a great improvement, for when he I 8ot tired of running on two legs, he just flopped over and ran on the other two. I tell vou this last incident as a | sort of warning. Never go hunting without a bottle of glue in your pocket, for you know accidents will happen. vou all be benefited by these hints, and have a large “catch om. JACK THE HUNTER. { | Editor Social Corner: The “Courier” has the same .old New England 5 * that has always made it popu- and. aithough T have been living in Sunny South™ for vears, each rier’” reminds me that my “home” s the best reading matter T get: but. being a woman, T naturally find it more interesting since the “So- cial Corner” was formed. The various and recipes from the New milk at 9 cents per quart and not up to the standard at that, T have substituted condensed milk as fol- lows: For bread or rice pudding when one quart cow’'s nilk is desired. I dis- solve three heaping teaspoonfuls con- densed milk in one pint wates this (mal to one pint cow's milk | fore only one pint cow’'s milk is need- led for a pndding. | For layer cake: One teaspoonful con- densed milk dissolved in one cup eold - is equal to one cup cow’s milk. ryving pork chops, make a eggs and bread crumbs dip each chop in the bat- one pound of chops served in will go as far as 2 pounds way this there- | member, when benoa'gh'fllys load your sufferin head is bowed, That God 'ill n{m:kle sunshine in the trail of every cloud. Norwich, Ct. -/ . BLSIE. Sweet Sixtecn Makes Suggestions. Editor Social Corner: 1 for one thank you for inviting us into your Cozy Corner. Many times bhave wished that I might write and tell some of my young eompanions of a few pretty things I jnake; and I hove they will do the same, as we shail all ne doubt want to make many pretty things for the holidays. Do any of you press autumn leaves? You know the leaves should be col- lecteq before rains bleach them. After belng Ily pressed and dried, they can be prepared by being dipped into a mixture of white wax and a little gamboge. Keep the wax at proper temperature so that it does not set in lumps on the leaves, or on the other hand curl or crimp them. Have any of you ever planted a sweet potato? If the beauty of the foliage of this vine were more widely known it would be more frequently used as an ornamental plant. It can be used in water or in earthinpot. Select a sound potato of good size, let it set upon the edge of the vessel with the lower end just touching the water. A good deal of heat is required to start it, then give it a sunny placae and plenty of water. If it is to ba trained to run up over the windows, remove all except two or three of tha stronger sprouts. It is a beauty it grown in a vase set upon a bracke In this case a number of small an tendershoots are preferable to a few large ones. All the care needed is ta supply it with water which the leaves take up and evaporate rapidly. SWEET SIXTEEN. No Mouth for Devilled Ham. Dear Sisters of the Social Corner: ‘When forty years have gone over our heads, the time seems to go much faster. It has been so short of time since the springbirds were singing and now the leaves are taking on their various shades of color which bespeak the dawn of Autumn. Thanksgiving is but a little ways ahead, when we shall give thanks to God for the many blessings and bene- fits we have enjoved through His boun- ty during the past vears, and for tha repast which on that day we shall prepare. 1 have no mouth for devilled ham, but admit that I have a ready tooth for angel cake. T have to omit the fancy dishes and be content with plain and nourishing fodod which I believe is best for us all. I think the admission of the men and the voung fotks to the Social Cor- ner will greatly increase the interest in it. 1 do know men who find pleasure |in reading the letters who might be more entertained by letters from one another. 1 enjoved Uncle Jim’s let- ter. Moosup. FRANK. A Housewife Chats Sensibly. Dear Sisters of the Social Corner: It has been some time since T have been a contributor to the Corner. but I have been enjoyving your letters all the time. Now I imagine I hear some of the sisters say, “Just returned from ‘her vacation.” No, not a bit of it. ‘When T hear anyone say vacation I don’t ‘know whether to laugh or cry, but I assure vou I have wasted no tima in the shedding of tears because it is my honest opinion that the majority of the housewives and mothers in tha rural districts have been doing about the same as I have the past three months. Baking, broiling, stewing, washing and ironing, making preserves and jelly with the making of a few aprons and a suit or two for the chil- dren thrown in: even though we did try to get the sewing all done before the busy season. Too busy to write, but we could read a letter at a time, perhaps, when the steak was broiling or the pies browning. Well, now the “Vacations Are Over” |1 for one feel as though T could draw a long breath and set the pace a lit- | tle slower and am looking forward .to the long winter evenings when I can read my magazines that have been laid aside almost without notice through the busy summer months. Sisters. please do not think T am ning of my lot, for I would not 1 have enjoyed al- to. deins te aoiing do their millinery | Serv ed plain. most every moment of this past sum- rch wh skiddoos | SOn at the 1 w hints upon pre-! In large ci where rents are high. | mer though hard at work most of the over the horizc $6,000 au- | York. in “The Inferior Sex. help it i as well as food and milk, house-wives | time. I have enjoved my three meals, tomobile. He to *be re- | in the season she will have a new| The 1l look bewitching in; 'ted economical vecipes. The New |slept well at night and feel better now quired to work een hours a | . ithe ct of the turban Fngland house-wife surpasses all for|than many who have had nothing te iy 1o 'met thg et Stties. ot 1its S ERT R {ana ; They are made frugality. Will some one give me a |think of but their own pleasure. T when economists are eed that if | new comedy [ sillc to ts and beavers <heap recipe for salad-dressing. have done much of my work out of all men did usefu! work, than half | which she under the man- |as well as ade up hats of si 18 theré not s zefiedy toeen « g2 [doore’ wnd twvs arjoved Ahe) sangy of those hours would supply all the de- | agement of - firm, is callad |and <atins. Some are {rimmed with range from rusting 9 the fhirds_ the flowers and the sun- mands of civilization 5 “The Backsiid and will come to|ribbons, some with flowers and lace | I hdpe to got nearer New England | shine. i iz Sl production on Christimas day. |ard. some with all three. Apparently, | Sisters through the Social Corner. Now, Sisters, before T close this Thi timete comiaa Uai e Havnc - | one need have no fear of getting a hat | Mg “SUNNY SOUTH". letter T want to sound a note of wau;; i M nie Shole chdertls ovee e o e | over-trimmed, so elaborate are many Washington, D. C. ing about closing your houses castern hills, when tha farmers of the | An American premiere, a metrop SRR b e Rl o i el —— tightly, especially at night when the their lives become real living instead | ot Snars. toe e Of Europed {ri ch to choose. For those| Iditor Social Corner: First of all | you afford to be a fresh air crank If of mere exist It's the best time | liams Colonial theator. New York a7 remes there are caps of ;T want to thank all the sisters who|Yyou have delicate WAL hipoy lide- At have oung men wit) | powerful one. this week K, @ lpeaver or felt. with the distinctive sent answers for “Green Tomato |care for. £y o find & eppy Jude sane minds in sound bodies to “get on st e busken | chantecler quill or feathe§s. Kor the' Pickle” T was interested in the one |ing place between the two. ™ e et SETOE Mo e o e etee e » Wi |Small boy of about three mothing is without onions. as we like that best |1 manage after several years of ex wards that destination. Perhaps 1oy Fhe Merry Wives of Windsor” will|in hetter taste than the soft beavers, | The Bulletin is all right, isn't it. Some | perimenting. Provide a way H i figure is wrong: I should say the best | °¢. the first produc O, the regular fwith the narrow brim tilted a little|of the letters on the saving question |ing the bed rooms. Tlike a small wood time to hitch their hoves and their | [o o7 i0e comvany at the New York ypward on the right side. The ribbon | were especlally interesting to me, 1|stove. They are so '?f‘) st d tions and their vieor to that | L atel: New York. The production.|pand is finished with two ends which!save a sreat deal in making over or |Dnight and fire can el o8 band-wagon and help to pull sp | With ! Wynne Maithison in the | fall just to the edge of the brim. These | cutting down clothing for little folks. | Started in the T it forward. Instead of f cast, will be made November 7. re to be had in the more usual, We wear a garment as long as it holds [rooms for the _children's dressind. the farms to the city, t 4 TR but the blacks and blues are, | together. Whet: they ars Enugly tuckecn tTe P oF e’ conuntey e T e > zenith of stage T perhaps, the greater favorites | In laundry I use neither starch nor |beds and warmly covered. open tho S ol e o epe B0l reached in “The Spirit Wave, The fascinating little cap, well call-, blucing. Tn cooking we do not have | window but be sure the bed is Aot possibilities which it is holding before | parvellously peautiful dance of Lied bavolet because it does indeed re- | fancy dishes at all. Deserts not more | Where the Seepers. T am confident them, would turn back contentedly and | .2 the Buropean danseuse who will | semble the peasant cap. promises to|than two or three times a week. but|on the little R e ’ereikvedr Tn hopefully and helpfully to their an- )} P¢ the " feature of the bill at Per- |he a popular innovation here this;we always have plenty of vegetables. |that We sglxle ;'“hw ‘rvn;o! o hg e o cestral acres, and join at least in Bronx theater, New | winter. For some time the French| In cake, I never use but one egg, |doctors bills than we spend for extra building the smooth” and level high- women have worn these little caps!even if three or four are ordered. fuel b_\I leav n‘gndeanxlet' e ota. way on which tr ot of their R either under their large hats or quite{ In money matters. T save all T can, |sides the m}re health a}han‘lnels" SvBRtRAT st iss There is a call for young men com- |by themselves, for evening. They are| My husband saves the 50 cent pieces, Yours for health and happ petent to play.. the wh horn or|made of the mos: exquisite soft fab-|and we teach the children to put their AOH(;.’huli e Disteiet It's a life job, We must take it as|2PO¢ It Is stated that such plavers rics, silver or zold net, and tissue be-{ monev In a little hank. When it it Ehe prar: such. We are not day laborer We | formerly got little more than $1.600 | favorites. They are inifull it is emptied and put into the are called for all the vears we have |# Y€ar. but ‘that now, o i shape quite like the so-called mob cap. | savings bank. : % Little Helps. oo RS demand. they can {the sale trimmme heine a fAower. « m"'l.! T wonder if the sisters would be in- Bditor Social Corner: ‘There are Wwe ' can ‘do.. "The longer | o 100, provided tha frill, lace or something equally n_nple[(m-»sted in my weekly schedule of|govaral little things that are con- sl el e placed coquettishly at the left side. |work Flouse six rooms: family of | venjerft which may be home-made. for the passi ot | Biit These homely hints may be of some |six or seven. Monday is washday: | pe you know how to fix a window so the coming years. It's a work to | Four will be given by the to mothers handy with the needle.| Tuesday ironing, and T iron only out- | tha¢' it may be left open and cannot undertake early and one to stick to, | VoIDe symphony orchest Cz orwich. LS. de clothing. table linen and pillow | b raised any higher. It is by screw- It calls not or for vigor ® for | 2ie hall, New York, - Sty ips. Al else is put away, folded|ing a hinge butt on the side of the patience. Did you every noons ember 4 8, Munchausenisms of Real Merit. !;r'g;("l"";’q\'- e e window, two Bt tousditles ialue jod’s pagience? I don't me: me a ¢ arcl Among > A SRR M ' hursds wash a G B % half-sash and placing «Hi,ilm;'u feticaz lon't me merel 18 m_:w f\-lx.*l A»‘:L'J?a’ l\fi:v A '-HMZM‘;", -““.‘;‘lf“w'hj” i’mlm_m_m,m‘nn.: sweeping: Saturday baking and .}’,‘:me so that when half is open the able sinners,” hut tienee with | exander Heineme ph Malkin, ee! Hints for the shooting ) ¢leaning of Kitchen lower sash can onlv be pushed up to the whole round world and the illim- | and Henrietta Micl £ For. voyiwho are timid and| Of ‘couike thefe are =zlways extra |t " 'This will stop 8 person from ge itable universe ich is but the ema- - not to use a gun is this valpa- | gs that have to b"] d?:“e- but T|ting in from the outside. mall holes nhtion His will—the pati be- | So great hava thé fons bee information - especially written. tafofow he mdin rale ThoAsEtmen | Fh Yrop the Winlow a8 ; - S e 0 great have t ions been g % 5 tasks run over inio the afternoon; | just large enough for a cork to slip n e which “a thousand years are but seats at the first of the four East suecess in the sporting line o the dirty work is done im. the |ihould be bored out on corresponding a yesterday when it is past? The - subscription performances to be you. > longer vour friend b nyng T always go out doors in the | Jhous i either side of the casing. farmer who possesses even a ghint of | given at the New theater, New York, pokes fun at You'and shows you his| MOTMWE [ always go out doore ln the | places in either side of the casiie the divine fores und even a srain | begs next Monday night, that |half-filled hunting bag. You may even | 2ftcrnoon for an hour « ; T oK de in the. corresponding of the divine pz e him there is | the have decided to throw |surprise him by displaying a full one.} s A58 OCTF ‘misprint in my other let Mt‘:}‘\ ~ will serve micely to keep the sure a succes ide which miere | open the entire top balcony. This| Start out some nice frosty morning, . . " Congd to spronm T sald: | o e v, These dre little thingsbut money getting i failure. balcony was closed when alterations ng with you an iron bar. and al, ., =000 T Aoyt i | ACO T ;- and steps. iy : he anaiort i few apples,— sweet ones are the best. | “table oil cloth asrons sav g i Lot ) i e DA THE FARMER to the :\""l rium were made. |G st e o that rabbit Durtos veur | ones.” Cut out esired shape, put tape | * Sterling. MATILDA. e e —_— D L —morrow | around the neck to hang by, and — Appearance of Prosperity. One of the b P R v _""“fl"‘fl””‘)"\‘:‘fl:‘fl’;:“‘;}mtl;"‘\i imadn = {around the waist. Goodbye for now. A Bad Example. The first essential in drawin | anw of the branches of busir ass0- | ro ¢ apples on the iron bar and stick it | Best wishes for the Corner. ‘Fhose rich people who smugsle set & trade is to prov : that you \‘,”':;"'{ “"\‘”\‘.‘nr‘l"'};‘“:;“ i "‘y;";:; ']'l-:“:“ down the hole. Then w and in <\! MRS. P. H W. bad example to those poor people who e a prosperous busines The pub- | Ne i Re . is bel ot- e 7 7 i 5 el —_— = a1 Chi News. e, bellaves That i€ o tran 1o comib- [Ty formed. Dhis'is nbthing Jess. than f,‘”,“‘ Lt Sl |T}|,lilli: :‘)‘x‘ul A Sunshiny Letter. merely. steal —Chicago News. out he will be doing a 1 business, | the mation of all the leading | ijck: It is so cold that their tongues| FBditor Social Corner: How kind of and that if his buisness small, it | of popalar music doing ) i Shiek fast to it. Why Pve pulled | you to allow us young girls to -hemme} 9 proves that he docs not | this country. The Wil-| 44 3 Gozen at o time that way! members of vour Socfal Corner. T Don t Pmute 5 marks ars the prime factors in this | " S r"5ig Jike guns very well, but|am sure we shall enjoy it, and I am by appear- | Movement I often used one. Omne morning last | looking forward to many pleasant ax- & : APy :ul oA season I had just used my last shell | changes of ideas. and no doubt when you!' W credit of doing 'a big er ha is or not. If he stic s b1 asonable licity programme for time, he is sure to get the big trade erely because he makes the public believe he already On the other luowl, the man who ad- vertises in e Eer 1 . iy =9 erally credited with being out of t A small space In the newspapers held to indicate #mall hopes of ge! ting the trade anc Lrings a small share of public interest The size of your business will bear a cl rela- ton to the ratio between vour adver- tising and that of your competitors, — al. Bl nos Ayres is fourth city in the two Americas, and 20 per cent. of all the people of Argentina live within a radius of 20 miles of the capital. ¢ e WANT TO ENTER CITY. Shore Line’s Petition to Run Tracks i Into New Haven. A netition from the Shore Line road for permission to enter the city of New Haven has besn reccived by the Loard of aldermen of city. The cotpany wishes (o ¢ Connecti- Sut company’s tracks WQuinnipiae avenus at grade, then Cross the mea, in ows oo a privete line and connect with the tracks of the Connecticut company at Ferry and State streets, The Duke's No Piker. The edo Rlade says Miss Flkins believes fn counting 2 hundred before she marries a duke. Huh! The report is the duecal condition requires that she count five .miHions.—Houston Post, when a nice fat rabbit jumped out { we get into any little difficulties, which we might do. we can have the older on the path ‘before me. Quick as a| flash T put my hand into my ]uwkrtl members to hgln us out of them. and pulled out a large piece of shoe-| While spemting a few vacation dayvs maker’s wax. Withont thinking ] this summer in another city I attend- tiffed it into the gun and abmed | ed Wild West Show. It was very ight at the rabbit’s head. It took | thrilling and mamy daring feats were bim clean hetween the eves but only | performed. Between the acts Cowbovs stunnedd b, Rushing wildly down the path he ran head first inte anoid rabbit coming up, and there T found them, buth stuck together by (be Wwax I had no difficuity in catching them end I find this method 3o much easier than using lead. that 1 think I will do a great deal of huntlng that way this season. T had =+ friend who was a great lover of the cluge. One morning he started ont for the woads and took an axe with him, thinking it might come in handy if he treed some zame. He set the axe up beside the tree nearby, and calling c o Iressed in costume distributed a puem the sudience. I will give vou bhut L ote se. the poern contalms four, but | the Editor seight think I wanted the jwhole corner to mvself. It is called— i A Broncho's Religion?’ I never | Mike to see a man a 'raslin’ with the {dumps 'Cause in the game of life he doesn’t alwavs catch the trumus. But I can always cotton te a free and v cuss, As takes his dose andd thanks Lord it isn't any wuss. There ne use o' kickin'® and swearin’. at the aint vour luck. Yer can’t correct the troubls

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