Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 14, 1910, Page 2

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r of There -are many cleaners on the market which do the work uickly, but they contain abrasive matter, and in, time will wear through brass, - tiling, porcelain tubs and bowls and all hiéhl{ Bolishcd surfaces. O DUST does the work, does it better, and does not wear away the sur- face. Why experiment when GOLD DUST stands with- out an equal? = A "Lat the GOLD DUST TWINS do your werk"". | For Wounds and Abrasions | No matter how slight a skin abrasion may be there here exists a chance for invasion of some deadly disease germ. Many ser- jous cases of illness and even death result annually from blood poisoning X When the skin has been broken,” cleanse the wound thoroughly with warm water to which has been | added a few drops of s Gabot's Sulpho-Napthol Because it is a perfect germicide, it not_onmly doa.‘:nm thoroughly, but absolutely kifls any that have already attached thein- selves 10", the ~wound, . besides making the hurt immune from such foreign troubles in the future. This is the “same “Liquid Cleanliness’” that housewives use to make their homes sweet, clean and healthy. A Bl ot S R ware of imtlations. SULPHO-NAPTHOL COMPANY Torrey Bullding, 14 Medford Street SAWYER CRYSTAL BLUE CO., Selling Agts. 83 Broad Sireet, Boston, Mass. | Lungs Declared Sound-- Life Insurance Granted If you knew a remedy that reelly had juced Tuberculosia: thet had saved trom esth quite a number of people, would ou tFy to get Con mptives inferested n it and jce them to take it; or, would you nothing about it, for fear of giving offense? We know the medicine. We know the people cured—some of them. We hive the stories of cure of Many—an affidavits from some, Wo advertise Eckman's Alteragive to tell those whe have lung disease what has been done by ita use Investigate the following: 13 W. Dauphin St., Phila., Pa. emen: On the evening of May 07, 1 had five hemorrhages from the right lung. My semorrhages kept U, fog one wo‘k—).f hid Sweaty oignt I afl. “Septle pneumonia develaped. My old me I had better go to an- other climate, as my left lung had also me affected. hont that time I met Howard Kiots, SusquebsAna Ave, this city, who emorrheges several years ago and Eckman® Alterative, lame- ness developed In m; commenced to get a nip ot right leg and T right Tums on' 0 told me and that o n Gradudily disappeared, 5 iy (rouble Of thAt na: ince my recovery about a ye; 1 wan aoe Tor life insurance. afion hwl! ;m?:, l:l h‘t.da rr":fnblny that Tt TAES, ol Jeeay avive Eire Bropait 'ver, Throst and Lu ng igps. For eale b7 e Lou & Ov- s, J 41 4 ists. Ty, B whin, Pu., for adastional avidence SO0 Druokeoness Curable Drunkenness is no longer considered a i ominent eclontiscs and pnysi- !rmd el -uel: > e that bas b-m‘ and 18 is sold ! If it wr money will to Eive treatment n Headquarters for Bast Ales, Lagers Eto., In Tewn. JAMES O'CONNELL, Preprister. ‘isiephome 87. : o AN K N T besier s ufl 1 J columns of The dulletin. 18 no am Using mediu a'ld to The Bl injury. , tor ! ruary 15 next. | ex Plans Approved by the President—Work to be Completed by February 15 Next. GO&,D DHST Ftll:an-’ Beverly, Mass, Oct. 13.—Presid ses thoroughly without, the least ent Taft today finally approved plans for raising the wreck of the battleshin Maine from Havana harbor, which call the completion of the work on or efore the thirteenth anniversary of the destruction of the war vessel, "ei- The worl is to be done according to plans made by army engi- neers and to be under directions of an engineer officer. To Settle Cause of the Explosion. President Taft believes that the par- amount guestion in raisinz the Maine is the determination for all time of the cause of the explosion and whether the source of destruction was from the outside or ingide the vessel. For this reason he desires that the work shail be retained in the hands of the aimy engineers and not let out by “ontract. Spain In: ed to Send Representative. has” been invited to send a rebresen- ative to vana to be present dur< ng ¢he work of exposing and remov- % the wreck. Disposition of the Old Hulk. The disposition of the old huik re- ains to be settled. The army en- 's believe that it will be possibie float the after two-ihirds of the essel. The forward third, where th axplosion wrought the greatest havoe and killed the greatest number of the ~i@w while they were asleep in their quarters, is believed to he too far “obe ever to be taken out as a whole ind the wreckage will be removed piecemeal. [f congress approves. the recommendation off the engineers in charge, the wreck will be taken out to By directipn of the president, Spain | sea and given a ceremonial burial in deep water, there to remain until the end of time. Three Months’ Task. Gen. William H. Bixby, chief of en- gineers of the army, spent an hour with the president afternoon and after explaining the nlans for the re- moval of the wreck in detail, secured the president’s formal approval in writing. General Bixby later issued a statement which in a formal way out- lines the work .to be undertaken. He believes that i{he task can be complet- ed within three months and while no special effort is to be made in that di- rection, it is his hope that Havana harbor’ will be clear of the wreck by February 15 next. If the wreckage of the forward part of the vessel is in a condition to per- mit of definite conclusions, the cause of the destruction of the ship on Feb- ruary 15, 1828, will have been deter- mined probably by the middle of Jan- | uary next., No portion of the wreck is to be disturbed until a full opportunity has been given to view and study it An Impressive Event. To this end theé first work to be un- dertaken will be the construction of a cofferdam of interlocking steel pilines about the bulk and pumping the water out. The dam will be large enough to give a clearance of fifty feet on all sides of the wreck. The forward tur- ret of the battleship was blown com- pletely off the vessel and the dam will be 80 constructed as to include the turret just as it now lies in the har- bor. The pumping out of the water when_the rfnm is completed will un- questionably be an impressive event. Brief §t_ate News Wallingford. —The night school will be opened next Monday night. Monroe.—Samuel Smith Hurd disd at the fomily homestead here Tuesday morning in the 91st year of his age. Litchfield. utiful Dorothy Per- kins rose picked by Miss Mabel Bishop in her garden Oct. 11 is a record for Litehtield. Waterbury,—Attorney Francis _ P. Guilfoile has gone to Emmetsburg, Md., to attend a meeting of the trustees of Mt. St. Mary’s college, Milford.—Rev, Peter M. McClean will preach the sermon at the dedica- tory service of the new Catholic chapzl in Yaterbury on Sunday. Naugatuck.—The Mikado will be pre- sented next week by local musicians under the direction of Harry E. Ben- ham and William Hall Miner. Westport.—The third of the series of shoots of ‘the Saugatuck and Westport Gun ciub will be held ‘on the club grounds op Saturday afternoon. Watertown.—The scarcity of water is getting (o He a_serious matter here- The Bethlehem reservwir has ? s0 low that -pumpl from Smith's pond has been resorted to. w;w.mu transfer is annpunced of W, F. Harper, for, the past five years the successful manager of the Meriden change of the S. N. E. Telephone company, to the Waterbury exehange. ! -Bomers.—Mre. Alice Weaver, 45, wife of Aibert S, Hulburt, died Wadnesday ut ‘her home on Jones street from a complication of diseases. She was a trained nurse and lived in Thompson- «ville. before her marriage. The Fire Horror's Lesson. The Jatest forest-fire horror should have the effect of o crystallizing pub- lic entiment of the adequate patrol- ling and protection of our forests that such_calamities shall he made pr tically impossible in the future. Th year has witnessed, we believe, greater amount both of destructio: — INJUNCTION GRANTED Against Trustees of €hanler Estate Regatding Disposal of Property. New York, Oct. 13.—Justice Guy in tlm supreme court today granted to Mrs. Julia C. Chanler, first wife of Robert Winthrop Chanler, an injunc- tion against R. W. Chanlér, Lewis . Chanler and Winthrop Chanler, the Union Trust company and the New York Insurance and Trust company, as trustees of the Chanler cstate; and Lina Cavalieri Chanler, restraining them from disposing of or transferring any property belonging to Robert Win- throp Chanler, until the action brought by the plaintiff to set aside the pre- nuptial agreement entered into by Robert W. Chanler and Lina Cava- lierl is detrmined in court. Mrs. Julia C. Chanler is Robert W. Chanler’s divorced wife, and the moth- er of his two children, of whom she was given the custody when she ob- tained the divorce. The trust company gave bond for Mra| Chanler to secure the defendant against any loss they may possibly sustain because of her suit. Ciung to Their Tin Cups. In the middle ages drinking glasses and cups were rare and they were generally mounted upon & foot or stem of gold or silver, enriched with pre- cious stones. Not until the fitteenth century, when Venice began to send her wares abroad, did the use of glasses become quite general, and even then, in ordinary life, the people clung te their “tin cups,” which were often of beautiful desizn and work- manship. Explanation Simple. “Dis paper,” said Meandering Mike, “wants to know why de cities is over- ecrowded when dere is so much work offered fn de country.” “Well,” re- sponded Plodding Pete, “ain't dat de reason?” Not That Kind. “My husband laugbed at me this morning till I got as mad as a horpet.” “Why?" “Just because 1 heard him of the woods and especially of agon izing loss -of buman life, than any previous ome. The laying waste of the forests themselves is a sufficiently melancholy thing, involving, as it often does, not only vast economic in- jury, but the logs of a natural posses- sion’ that cannot be replaced: but when we hear of towns and villages blotted off the map and seores and hundreds of people perishing in the flames, it is time that resolute action were taken. At the bottom of this trouble is not “crookedness,” or mo- nopoly or plutocracy, or one view rather than another of state or. fed- eral functions; at the bottom of it is simply an easy going neglect to take into account a terrible danger, a will- ingness to run risks rather than go to the trouble and expense of syste- matically guarding asgainst them, which 8 one of the defects of the American_ temperament.—New York Evening Post. Goodwin's Speech. No one can say that Charles A. Goodwin's speech in Meriden lacks force or diatinctness. It is an excel- lent presentation of the issues of the campaign expressed with great clear- ness and simplicity. Fle pays to his oppoment the respect that is due to his distinguished charvacter and public servige, but holds him to a strict ac- counting jto public opinion for h positive convietigns or doubtful views on questions of the hox Mr. Good- win Is pot timid or hesitant in stand- ing for the present corrupt practices act, the state business men's puplic utilities bill, an effective working- man’s compensation act, and the re- moval of all Iimit in death damages. His vindieation of the ecorrupt pra tices act as adequate will becasion surprise and may chaNenge contradic- tion,—Waterbury American. Costly Chinamen. At a cost of §2,000 Uncle Sam is sending home from Boston four Chinamen who ha. heen smuggled in- to this country Neptember 18, when they were found Holyoke. Mas; after making the trip from Canada in hay a freight car us men are Chin Chin Fons, Chin Hom and B v : four are being accompanied to San Fran- The China- cisco by Inspector Wil J. Lurke his son, John | P, W Moy Do Shing, interpreter. Thney will e shipped across the Paciiic. -Meriden Journal The Real Thing. The country enjoyed a little conser- vation during September, which is passing unobserved. The fire loss, acs cording to the New York Journal of Commerce compliations, amounted to only $11.700,000, compared with above $15,000,00 for the mouth last year. and |- 321,430,000 in September, 1908. The difference o favor of last month rep- TRIGLLS & YU WOILh emImij A dol- lar saved 13 a doller earned just as certainly in this ad in sny other dizec- tion —Springfield Republican Success Assured. “What makes you think that voung man will he a success in society " that he has such an ex- appetite for (ea and sul- trao ade! talking of wash sales and asked him to get me a tub suit at once.” About the Size of It. “Half the world doesn’'t know how the other half lives,” said the profes- sor, trying to be sociable. “Yes,” put in the grouch, “and what's more, it's too busy to oare. Some Other Reason. “Do you suppose your father objects to me because of the fact that I am a poet?” “Oh, dear, no. Pa has a judl- cial mind and never believes in con- demning on hearsay evidence.” Time's Consolation. Time is the most important thing in human life—for what is joy after its departure?—and the most comsolatory ~for pain, when time has fled, is no more.~Von Humboldt. el - Judiclal Wisdom. Philip of Macedon, in passing sen- tence on two rogues, ordered ome of them to leaye Macedonin with all speed and the other to try amnd catch him —Plutarch. Can't Escape the Uplift. Wigg—The man who loves a woman cap’t help being eloevated. Wagg— And the man who loves more than one is apt to be sent up, ton. Keep Smiling. When a man smiles, and much more when he laughs, it adds some- A Larger Family. “Do you find the cost of living any Lh“h' than it wag, say, five years | ago?" “Yes, sir. Two of my daugh- ;!em have got married since.” No Trouble at AH. a position to support a wife? Suitor— Oh, yes; I'm a perfect nailer at Talsing money.—Fliegende Blaetter. A Mere Assertion. H, Fly is the name of a New York publishier. It is said that one of the novels which he has recently brought out §s & good ook for an idle hour on 4« screensd+n porch. Substitutes for Human Halr, So great is the demand in Germany for human halr That Jugny webatitutes, chiefly vagetabie ‘Abors, have 'hnen i thing to his fragment of life.—Sterne. | Father (to suitor)—And are you in | —_— Derby Man Has Devised a New and Inexpensive Method. A new way of curing loafers has been discovered by Michael Oates of Derby. For some time a number of men who ‘do nothing but sit on door- steps and stand on corners, have been in the habit of going to the Oates Brothers’ barns for a night's lodging. They would sleep in the hay, or in ‘box, or in any place that was vacant| when they got there. Mr. Oates has warned them time and again that if he ever caught them he would have them arrested, but it seems it has done no £ood, for they still go there when the air is too chilly for them to sleep on door steps. One morning when Michael Oates went to the barn to feed the horses, | he heard deep breathing in one cor- ner of the barn, and when he investi gated he found a well known loafer ouddled up in & piano box and sound ! asleep. Mr. Oates did not hesitate minute, hut went out to his shed where | one of his men was fixing a wagoen | and together they secured a cover .to the box and vlaced it over the sleeping man, and then drove a nail in each side before he awoke. By the time the man realized what was being done to ' him th in place. Tor a long time the man shouted for help and pleaded with Mr. Oates to let him go free once more. Mr. Oates seeing how scared the man was, de cided to have some more fun with him and told the man that was with him to push the case into the canal. This had a_great effect on the f llow in the box. for as soon as he | heard of it he started to kick and cry | for mercy, and in his struggles suc ceeded in pushing off one of the boards at the side of the case, where he put out his head” and pleaded with Mr. Oates for mercy, stating that he would not only stop sleeping around his place, but would go to work. The Joafer was then let out, and was soon on his way to Main street as fast as his legs would carry him, Later in the dav be was seen work- ing on an express wagon. and it looks as if the incident had taught him a lesson. It is hoped by all who know him. that it has and that he will finish out the winter at work.—Ansonia Sen- | tinel. s.. SRR It seems very probeble that there ere smo¥kery insEnkland long before ne introddgtien of tobacee, according to the London Chronicle. Pipes have had the cover securely nailed | A HALLOWE’EN HAUNT. _ ‘This is lowe'2n inment that can be car- | ried out in detail. If Hallowe’en proves | to be an Indian summery kind of eve, | it can be arranged out of doors. Over an improvised gate the first verse may ‘be inscribed and the rest of the mat- ter fitted into the programme as de- sired, acording to the individual taste and inspiration of the host or hostess. t can be simply done or developed to ny degree of 2laborateness. fersainidl an arrangement for a Hal- There's a_haunt in the half moon) A charm in the old spoon; There’s fate in the weather vane. “There's a witch on the fender— No broom to defend her; She rides on an aeroplane. And this is the day they give real | ghosts away, with gates, locks and ' fence posts and doors, and this is the bour when the grown folks look sour and voices turn out to be snores—when even sane people look up to the steeple to see if their road cart is there. They lead out the pony (iis coat is of coney), | a-hat on its smooth braided hair, The world’s sort of jumbled and every one’s humbled—the children 3 atill, for “nobody forbid it—the tick-tack lie: the sill. But ere it's all over the ghosts are ! n clover—and ghosts aren’t o dead as youw'd think. They're social and joily names, Pete, Pal and Polly mute on | write this with real pen and ink. The ! chants and gyrations and all incanta- tions are dotie in a thythm and swin, land. lacking a rhyme and beating of time, a ghost simply ca’t do a thing. FORM OF INVITATION. To ghost incantation— There's & mosk-grown gate | Where gray gnomes wait And gargoyles drip with dew eath purple sky and tree grown Where we'll keep trysts with you. We've been away from gleam of day Until we're rather dim, But though we're gaunt and though we haunt ‘We haven't lost our vim. Qur final word we trust you've heard, Our asking is command. On “all souls’” night By crescent light The gate will open stand. 1t may seem a really quite frivolous thing for ghost folk to send onc a let- ter, but when one has een behind the gate's screen he knows most decidedly better. been discovered fmbedded in the mor- tar of churches buiit before Burope's first acquaintance with tobacco, and it seems only reagonable to suppose that the people of that day smoked herbs of some sori either medicinally or for pleasure. Coltsfoot was inhaled for asthma, though whether a pipe was used in the process remains a matter for conjecture. ¢ Oid-Time Favorite Dishes. Many of the favorite dishes of today have come down through the ages. Griddle cakes date back to the middle ages, when they were a favorite with | | the Britons of Wales; macaroons have | ! taken their plece 23 a dessert since | the time of Chaucer, and the boys have enjoyed their gingerbread and the girls have lunched on pickles for 500 years, or ever since King Edward I1. “set the style.” Built Nest of Clothespins. A remarkable discovery was made By a chimney swesper at Moffat, | Dumfriesshire, England, while en- gaged in removing an obstructlon in | & chimney caused by a Jjackdaw’s nest. Two hundred and fifty wooden clotbespins were removed from the chimney, all of which had been util- | dzed for the purpose of nest bullding. So now pass the gates and shadowy | fates, beneath the still ray of the moon, Where grasses are faded and night winds sound jaded—yowil find the ghost country—too soon. Scene—Inside the gate 1 Where gray gnomes wait— Yon come the ghosts, in crowds and in hosts. They're greeting their guests with a song. 1It's far off and low, and solemn and slow, and haunting and taunting and—long. The twenty- fourth verse is not 50 much worse than that which comes in at the start, but none jess than ghosts or makers of toasts could ever have learned it by heart. A few of the verses: Hither with joy and glee— Cheerful oid shades come we— Full of geniality, Welcome we you. Rumior our fancy lures— Out from that land of yours— Stealing to our 7air shores— Pray is it true? Are you awing out there, And do you call it fair? ‘We think you'd rather stare At what we do. We floated down this night— Could give you ail a fright— And we can light all right So we can, But we are comrades here; Ghosts are not things to fear; They're really kind and dear If you but knew! So make yourselves at home! Give your wraps to the gnome; Try our new soop-cloud foam; s Diaphragmatic Resistance. The wonderful endurance power of | women is evidenced again by the fact that a husky New York college man, who was rehearsing in & girl's part in & play, fell in a fit and remained unconscious for some time, and for mo other reason that that he had been wearing a tightly laced corset for & couple of hours. } I ! Bold Pennsylvania Burglars. i ‘While the chief of police of Mount Oliver, near Pittsburg, was guarding the homes of the borough, burglars entered his home the other night, and carried off a good watch, silverware and diamond rings that were secreted in a china closet. Two houses in the | immediate vicinity were aiso entered. | PR Sl A e | How He Got a Meal. ‘ Tramp—"Lady, bave you got a pair uv old shoes you don't meed?” Mrs. iKindhun-—#‘l haye—a pair of my hus- 1 band’s, but I fear they're hardly fit for i further wear, my good man.” Tramp —*“Alas! Lady, [ can't afford to wear them—I only wanted them to stew an’ eat.” | | The Overturn. | The revolution was effected at las by all the pretty girls standing togeth- er in favor of it. It was, in fact, their revolution, in a very real sense. “A regular peach-turnover!” exclaimed the world, looking on in considerable | bewilderment.—Puck. The Organist's Fox Pass. “At that wedding last night,” said Mrs. Lapsing, “the organist made the woret mistake I ever heard of. He played Meddlesome's wedding mareh | when the bridal party came in and . the march from ‘Lonergan’ when they | passed out.” | Business. | The Manager—Well, Flossis, what ;do you want now? The Actress—I want a raise, and I want it now! The Manager—How'd it be if I'd raise you $100 a week in the press stories and | omly reduce your real pay $2.507 | | Bullet Traveled Far. | The bullet with which a man com- !mltwfl suicide at a Dover (Eng.) | hotel was stated at the inquest to bave passed through his head, through a door, along a passage, and i through a second door. A Sound Exchange. father seat him money to employ a tuter at college and what de you think he did with 1t?" “What?’ | “Said he would combine his father's dnstructions. with his own wishes and hire a chauffeur.” There is a great arsa of oil in the ull of Mexico, said te emanate fram the Teias oil feld, Turn on the dew. Brush off the travel duat, Take of our humble crust; Dance and be gay with us— Welcome to you! Then from the grapes' rich blood nectar is drained, and from a kernel brown rich draft is strained. Fragrant the odor that drifts from . the bowl, rich is the doughnut brown—all round the hole! Poor Jack-o'-Lantern man! baked in a pie, haunts with his “Ches- hire” grin and staring eye. Peach, pear and apple round, bright as the down—cheeks soft and ripe and sound, kiss and they’re—gone! After the dance is o'er, Tades the dim, dusky shore, Blinks out the silver star, Pales the old moon, Melt into air the ghosts— Alas, too soon! —Chicago New WORTH MOUNTAINS ~ OF GOLD ‘During Change of Life, ssays Mrs. Chas. Barclay | Graniteville, Vt. — ‘I was passin, ! through the Change of Life and suffere < from nervousness andother annoyin, gymptoms, and can truly say that iaE.Pinkham’s egetable Com- pound has proved worth mountains of gold to me, asit restored my health and strength. I } never forget to tell my_ friends what LydiaE.Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has done for me during this trying period. Complete restoration to health means so much to me that for the sake of other suffer- | ing women I am willing to make m | trouble public_so you may publis this letter. MRs, CHAS. BARCLAY, R.F.D.,Graniteyille, Vt. v No other medicine for woman’s ills has received such wide-spread and un- qualified endorsement. No other med.- icine we know of has such a record of cures of temale ills as bas Lydia E. Pinkhaw's Vegetable Conround. | © TFor more than 30 yeas it bas been | curing female complaints such s inflammation, uleeration, local weak- ‘ nesses, fibroid tumors, irregularities, | periodic pains, backache, stion ’and nervous prostration, and it is | unequalled for carrying women safely through the period of change of life. 1t costs but little to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and, as Mrs. Barclaysays,it is “worth moun. tains of gold " to suffering women. Highest Grade Automobiles " At Very Low Prices An Unequalled Opportunity fog Xou . T SN S AR LT, S These automobiies are the bast'made in America. They cost from $2,800 to $4,500 new, have been used, rebuilt, and are guaranteed against cheap ma- terials or defective workmanship. We are-now offering a limited -number of rebuilt Locomobiles at attractive prices. These cars have been completely overhauled inour works-at Bridge- port, and repainted like new. You know the repu- tation of th2 Locomobile for safe, reliable service. You take no risk, as we guarantee these cars as we do new cars. A rebuilt car bought in this way isa safer, more satisfactory proposition than a cheap new car. Send for article, *“How Long Will a Car Last ?”’ by H. L. Towle, reprinted from Harper's Weekly. He explains why it is bztter to buy a high class used car than a cheap new car. A few beautiful limousines for six passengers, completely overhauled and repainted. One at $1,300, others at $1,500 and $1,800 Several powerful and reliable seven-passenger cars. Just the thing for family and rental service. Overhadled and repainted. One of them for sale as fow as $1,600, A very attractive c'ose-coupled 35 H. P. car, a great bargain at $1,500. A “20”" Touring Car in perfect order at $1,000. Afso a five-passenger Touring Car of 35 H. P. at $1,200. All have complete equipment of Lamps, Top, Etc. We instruct you fuliy. Among these cars you can surely find something that will fit your pocketbook and meet your require- ments perfectly. Call at our faciory and look them over. Drop us a postal and we will meet your train. When you buy one of these cars from us you get a bargain, and you are assured of good treatment. If you cannot call, send for descriptive booklet and write us your requirements. A few, other than Locomobiles, $300 up. The Locomobile Co. of America, Bridgeport, Conn. The San Jose scale 1 are planted. In will be in large E hose owners make & bus- s of apple growing.—Northampton Gazetie. The Apple Crop. The price obtained by for winter apples is about § rel for number 3 better than the & the best districts those along the Champlain, are price. sive tours of the apple that the crop is prov was expected and that the grower those in York and stern shore of Lake 8 of v One Insurgent View. not do to assume that the “Caesar! insincere. 1t been heard el re than in New , and it has ve no personal concern in the out- come of the ele state. One need not be g Lter exten- S | reactic pathize with the belief th velt would be a dangerot stored to power or the fear whether by _his .direct will or not. events may themselves to [ vor such oration.—Providence Journal. seems to and thus fruit, or el the freer ev is not otherwise a s grower. Bordeaux mixture is cause it, but the r year on many unspr cept for the rust appl smooth and free from fu orations. The retail will be high. The and cost cold storage are so great that the fall buyers are inclined more their risk than asked a man well infor of apple tree planting if the number tre decreased, and said Notice the Two Hods in the Base of the AW Iranees One is an Ash Hod into which the ashes fall through a chute—all of them—and are easily emptied. - The other Hod is for Coal. This feature saves lots of trouble and is patented. Roose-~ sh, re. | Florida Is Growing. That Jack ille’s growth of 1 - cent ;ally an index of Flori expansion and not a sporadic result | of purely local influences is shown by the figures for Tampa, the penin- sula state’s southern gateway, which repo a population of 38, 143.2 per 3 £l he the Then there is the wonderful Single Damper (patented); slide the knob to “kindle,” “bake™ or “check,” ¢he range docs the rest. The Oven has cup-joint heat flues that heat it all over alike. The Patented Grates save coal and trouble. Ask Crawford Agent show you and write us for cir- the 1o cular. Walker & Pratt Mfg, Co. 31-35 Unfon St., Boston

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