Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 19, 1910, Page 12

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CUT YOUR GARMENT.AOOORDING TO YOUR CLOTH THREE PRIZES MONTHLY: $250 to first; $1.50 to second; $1.00 to third. Award made the last Saturday in each mopth. EVERY WOMAN’'S OPPORTUNITY. The Bulletin wants good home leiters, good business leiters: good help~ lattess of any kind the mind may suszest. They should be in hand Wednesday of each week. Write on but one side of the paper. Address, SOCIAL CORNER EDITOR, Bulletin Office, Norwich, Conn. SPECIAL COMPETITIONS s the pury of The Bulletin to invite special competition in the Se- Al Corne 1 time te time as 2 means of increasing interest and bring- ng out from the contributors the very best that is to bé had on the subject nder consideration. This department has just clesed a most interesting mposium wpon Thanksglving feasts, and there is no doubt that every emder of the Corner profited by new recipes brought out. We have had to defer the printing of a few very nice letters for a week or tv The pigeon- hole i now ciesn and ready for more letters. Write when the spirit moves and send the lefters in on any day. Itwas pleasant to hear from “M. Roena” inst week; and “Arethwsa” who was one of our first contributors, is in line gain this week. The old “stand-b, doubly welcome. ounttbility to Woman’s Sph. Social Corner: Woman the masterpiece, and home is her | Tato in “Romola” when possessed of minjon, It is there she displays her | the means to search for his foster harms to the best advantage. yme | father eases his conscience by think- unen crave popularity and seek a |ing, perhaps he is dead, it would be a public career; but the majori re | most hazardous undertaking, 1 hate ontent to follow their natural destiny | my life to live and seek to make a paradise on earth | A young couple start out in life wity »f their home. Shakespeare has no | ev prospect of a prosperous and heroes—he has only heroines. Hand- |happy future before them. It is not some wemen witheut on are like |uncommon to read in the papers of flowers _without perfum but earth | their agreeing to dismgree because of hes nothing more tender {han a wom- | ince tibility of temper but aren’t s t when It is the abode of p they also possessed with the idea 1 One leads a horse by the bridle, an have own life to live. ¥ by a rope, a man Dby her| A young girl having developed some heart. Wemen are taken for what they [abiliiy as an artist gives as an excuse are not, quitted for what they are, and | for leaving her invalid mother vet the most beautiful woman in the |care of strangers. “Oh, I cann world can only g hat which she {up my career! It is my life w 2 have life to live!” What can compare with ing one’s own life for self alone sacrifice and _unseifis® is m life of pelfishness: KNor no man tion for womar Be she civil- [can live to himself. But there is a i or 2 high in rank or |sense in which we can and must live pirit asserts it- [our own life and no one can prevent the annals of history and |1 mean in the development of c ~ here you find a more striking | ter. ere it the overcoming of rising xample of weman's fidelily than in | irritability known to mo one hut our- the beathen community of India. 'The | seif, & without friction with our Wy of a man is still in death. His |own kin, not forgetting smail courte- ve wiwes are standing around him, |sies 1h the hurry and bustle of a work- 1 to save his soul their lives must |a-day worid. sympathy expressed in e swerificed. Flve wemen willingly |looks well as in words and in all ie to save the soul of one man from |the trials which come to us all (as cternal punishment come they will). may we make of them In different paris of the world women | stepping stones to higher and better M various degress of rank. but no |living. A TEACHER. vhere do they receive ax much hom- | Willimantic 2o as in our own country As you puss through a nar Henrietta’s Caution. ow alley Turkey you may meet a bundled e e Beon fgure painfully swuggling along. fol- | vopry h interested in the various wed by her women slaves. Glancing | . h week and find they con shout she suddenly draws aside the | tain ve ful information oo ashmak, daszling you with her beauty. | ,n n the ' letter « Skt At the thme of a festival in Smyrna | \raud the third item calls for two ow may observe the windows flled It &nd again a large pinch of tth beauntiful descendants of the old lonian race. Thelr classic heads are . Now many boil their puddings in rowned with scarlet and jewels, and ! of steaming them, and to those ountenances show pride, passion Faavise themn Lo buy & pisce of i power. There is a striking still- | yppleached muslin and scald it in boil- ness in those breathing images that|in.’ water hefore using, as many a ems Jike the stiliness of a savage | nlans oy been spoilt by putting it at sits intent and brooding upon |in an old cloth that has bursted in the ome scheme Of vengeance. producing | nrocess of cooking e effeot of a will that must be HENRIETTA eyed, howed dowr and adored Novwich The best wife ous, arde An Apple-Peel Accident. ho tnapires | maitor S Corner: 1 wonder - i sditor Soci 1 wonde roberch- i many of us there are who suffer f etter the careless - day recently two 1 ys not Scareely in our Engiis} than ten vears vere walki be found a word m ong ahead of me, when one of them e one our childhood’s lispings |suddenly fell to the sidewalk n %o ear ne 1 caught up with the little fellow and mble him ie > cry r ed had Home-Made Invalid’s Table. i While not he- al? r sme-hal 3 I Corn . 1 n readi ¢ m. P ts contributed M rested in the ” W » v people; aund a the tron |t stient com ble. I will tell you | al a hiclt is both cheap and ve butter. ‘who are obliged to e . ed. It Is a v . to use if ) a box ng.on end is long et Ny pep- @'s use when propped up in bed P epsin o0 sides of the box, leaving » wse thre then and end: Strengthen the pspooniul of liquld rewing iror t in atr-tight jar \d the little while he whole nse sheve up ¢ y the bed so that WILLING HELPER. the upper end e extends over the ch bed and ser able, while the other end on v t ide: Living One's Life. | under the bed and a foot S B a'- # I % o {to the table The t e .'wmk Sag 41‘; of one with whom the writer was NTRSE CARRIE ately associaied Seuth Winak What pe es of living one’'s own 4 ‘e It suEzesis 5 ¥ attract ounds Thanksgiving Belongs to America. ouggenti s eedom, in- | € T Fotect Yowrietf! T FOUNTAINS, HOTELS, OR ELSEWHERE Get the Orig nal wed Genuine HORLIGK’S MALTED MILK ‘The Food DrinkforAllAges RiCH MILE, WALT GRAIN EXTRACI. iN POWDER Drearity the dead viie From the rosdside wall 4Day ends early and the Drops and shivers like a pall Dreary winds from northern lands Heavily sweep the woods night Yet, there are somet days im our 2 B Indian sammer when the violet and ot iIn any rust i i L cricket wakens and again Ay e Bl ey i Thanksgiving, ieafd his cheery s And. then coines the home festival with its annual invita- tion to praise and gratitude, and do- mestic cheer. This family festival shines again before us with all its wonted charm. To some it means feasting, to others sport, to others a family reunion. Ome occasion for gratitude is that modern conveniences of travel make it possible for so many to enjoy these reunions which is an essential feature of this day, for we are a home-loving people. The commingled odors of roast turkey and chicken pie, mince and pumpkin pie, fill the air—yes, pumpkin pie that true Yankee dish. The glorfous thing about Thanks- giving is that it belongs to America. The Puritan fathers who established Thanksgiving would discover a great change in the external conditions of home life. We have duties that are sometimes hard and bear burdens that are some- times hea but nevertheless it is a good world to live in with a_promise of better things on the way. We have great reason to be thankful, to be glad and grateful should be the aim of everyone. ARETHUSA. Brooklyn. Housekeeping Helps. Dear Sisters of the Social Corner: The humblest man or woman can be pure and strong, and the world is al- ways benefited by such a life. The manifestation of goodness is always a help and comfort to some one, A life of virtue and achievement is born of high aspirations and lends a charm to life and to endeavor, the beauty and force of which cannot be denied. 1 send herewith a few helps which will be appreciated by young house- get a better polish on your knives, add a little baking soda to the i and s what a difference it will Silverware may be easily cleaned by being soaked in buttermiik and rubbed, and it will take on a polish to be ob- tained no other way on engraved or filagreed par Do not fail to save the best part of undershirts for washrags. Bound with braid or white ribkon they may be dainty enough for the spare mooth, strong stick three or four lengih with a V cut in ome end seful to have bandy. With it pic- ures may be lifted from their hooks and be repiaced without the use of ps, which makes climbing unneces- 1 | { body does not know that po- | tato parings dried in the oven make | first-rate dling. | A wee bit of cotton pressed firmly into the thumb and fingertips of kid | gioves will prevent ripping and post- pone the day of shabbiness indefinite- Iy. Indian meal soap may be made by cutting into small pieces caetile or other good soap and slowly dissolving on the stove until all lumps have dis- appeared. then stir ia the meal until thick, add one teaspron of the tinc- ture of benzoin, and when cool pour into mould to set. May the cditor and the members of the Social Cormer have a happy Thanksgiviig. FRANK. Moosup. Social Corner Scrap Book One of the best correctives for a torpid liver is the juice of half a lem- on, taken in a glass of hot water every not morning before breakfast. Do sweeten it. To prepare for a ooden wedding make friends with a carpenter and provide great wealth of shavings of rious woods. Red cedar is of a rich aded red: pine is yellow and creamy. walnut gives a soft brown, poplar white. Decorate the rooms with these. | Wreathe wooden platters and plates with these. If you can get cedar pip- kins, them™ for water and other cold beverages. Exercise your ing nuity to contrive how many things may be served in wooden vessels. Let | the invitations be written upon birch vark tablets. If you have open fire- places kindle wood fires within them. To cure soft corns between the toes, orb all moisture after washing by pressing a bit of old soft, fine linen be- tween the toes. Then dip a bit of ab- | sorbent cotton er linen iint in baking | soda and put upon the corn. The dry alkali correcis the acid of the part and thus draws out the soreness. Here is recipe for sponge cake. It does not require a great number of eggs, and 1 am sure it will be appre- ed, since eggs are %o high: One whole egg. yolks of twe eggs, one ta- blespoontul of butter, one and one-half cups of sugar, one scant cup of milk, three cups of flour, two teaspoonsful of baking powder. A cold water sponge cake: Beat to- egss and a cup and a and a half cup of cold ;ups of flour and three teaspoonsful of baking powder all together, flavor with lemon d bake in a moderate oven. custard: Pare and tender apples n readily be put While hot add a ta- the yolks of four core and An apple r good sized steam until they through a sieve. blespoonful of butter, ezgs, four tablespoonsful of sugar and la eup milk. Stir well, then turn {into little cups or moulds and bake in pan of hot water for 20 minutes, or 1 the kr de comes up clear. g8 to the es a stiff heary en. Serve cold A Chinese contemporary states that an electric_light company has been started in Chungking with purely pri- vate capital amounting to $300,000. Tt is managed by Germans and British. | KING DENTAL PARLORS, DR. JACKSON, Mer, Franklin Square, novise Norwich, TOLLAND COUNTY SOUTH COVENTRY. Friends and Neighbors Do Honor to Addison Kingsbury on 75th Birth- day—Albertin-Palmer Wedding. Tuesday afternoon, November 15, a reception was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Addisen Kingsbury, the af- fair being planned by Mrs. Kingshury in celebration of Mr. Kingsbury's 7hth birthday. During the afternoon and evening seventy-five guests called to extend congratulations to Mr. Kings- bury upon having rounded out three- quarters of a century and to wish him muny more years of health and hap- piness and a continuation of his help- fulness to the communi Mr. and Mrs. Kingsbury were assisted in re- | ceiving by Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kings- oury of Northampton, Mass., and Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Kingsbury. Refresh- lnents were served by Miss Grace Bradbury, Miss Julia White and Mrs. W. H. Armstrong. One of Mr. Kings- bury's gifts was a handsome lamp, presented b the Windham National bank, of which he is one of the di- rectors. N. €. O. P. Supper and Dance. | H. S. Dean lodge, N. E. O. P, Held a supper and dance at their rooms Monday evening. Albertin-Palmer Marri Benjamin Albertin and Miss Flsie Palmer, both of this place, were m.r--l ried on Friday evening, November 11, at the home of Rev. Louis Flocken at Willimantic. Mr. Albertin is the old- est son of Mrs. Mary Albertin, employ- ed as machinist by the E. A. Tracy company, and Miss Palmer having been with the Kingsbury Box and Printing company. They are residing in the Risley house, belter known as the Seagrave place, on Wall street. Miss Helen Potter is with friends in Vernon, Vt, for an indefinite stay. Miss Celia Day has taken her place at Miss Albro’s. Old-Time Social and Oyster Supper— Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Mathewson Gone to Syracus There was an old time ladies' Aid social at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Oren Russ. About ninety were pres- ent and over eighty sat down to a g00d oyster Supper. Friends were present from Chaplin, Warrenville, Mansfield Center_ Gurleyville and Ash- Mary Barnes of Norwich is making a visit at the home of Mrs. | J. H. Bacon. | Dr. F. A. Young of New York was in this place calling on friends and neighbors last Saturday and Sunday, while looking over his farm. Mrs. Frnest Durkee of Mansfield Depot has been visiting her father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. David Russ the past week. To Live in Syracuse. Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Mathewson have 16ft to make their home in Syra- cuse, New York for the winter, after spending a_week or two with their brother. J. M. Church of this place. A_number of members and friends of the Warrenville Baptist church at- tended the exercises of the dedication of their church last Tuesd MASHAPAUG Republican Representatives Elected— Sale of Charles Homestead. Messrs. Harris, Chandler and others passed last Sunday at their cottages at_the lake. Mrs. George Crawford is spending a few days with her son Dwight in South Framingham, Mass. The town went republican, as usual, the représentatives being E. G. Walk- er and C. A. Prouls. Bert E. Howlétt spent Saturday and Sunday with his uncie, Adelbert How- lett of Worcester. About one inch of snow feli here last Saturday afternoon, this being the first smowstorm of the season. Mrs. 8. C. Hollingworth has return- ed after spending a few weeks In Fall River, Providence and Milford. Alonzo Faiibanks spent Saturdsy with relatives in Worcester. A their rehearsal was held at the home of Mrs. L. M. Snells last Tues- day evening. Place Brought $8,500. Byron Charles, & lifelong re sold his farm last week to Narc John of Fiskdale. The sale i cluded the -Charles homestead and furniture, new barns, stock and tools and a two-stery tenement house, and about 300 acres of Jand. The price paid is reported to be $8.500. ident, " ~ BOLTON | Abington Pastor Accepts Call to Con- | gregational Church. i Rev. Charies Burt of Abington has accepted a call to the Congregatio church of this place and will move here soon A large audience church Saturday evening to he reade: Robert 8. Mctee of | Al enjoyed the read terspe ed it Purple a M gathered at the 1 r the | Harttord which were in- music by | Winasor after a | ter, Mrs. W. C. White |~ Mriss Anna B. Post is visiting in New | Haven. TURNERVILLE. Minor Happenings of the Week. Mrs. W. E. Jaquith and Jaquith attended the Williv on at South Cove J. H. ¥ ard Sou . Sherman of her daughter te and Mrs. D, ¥. Ja s band in Williman- suthbr Mrs. F ig> is_vis- A, Ra is ‘emploved af T returned from 2 week's visit with relatives in Stafford, accompanied by her sister, Mrz, Carl Helm i EAGLEVILLE. Stringing Wires to Connecticut College —N. E. O. P. Banquet Guests. | h Wedge of the Rockville ting company is wh E. O. P. ttended = | banguet at that place on Wednesday | evening. MANSFIELD DEPOT Evangsiistic e Services Clesed Thurs- day Evening. Evangelist Flanders closes hie mis- sion at the Baptist church Thursday evening. Thege meetings have been well attended and with good resuits. LETTERS FROM TWO STATES | \ccording to information that comes from thoroughly reliable source, there is likely to be a movement to abolish the criminal common pleas | court of Fairfield county, as it i8 con- i =tituted. said the Bridgeport Standard { When he was last & member of the S Five persons were received for bap- tism Wednesday evening. The wells and springse in this sec- tion are nearly dry amnd the outlook for the winter is very serious. WILLINGTON Rousing Temperance Sermon—Charles H. Ryder’s Funeral. Sunday morning Rev. T. T. Dar- row gave a rousing temperance ser- mon—it being Wenld's rance Sunday. His sentiments on the sub- ject as eloguently expressed had no uncertain ring. The Endeavor meet- ing continudg. the temperance talk. Willington is a no-license town, but if there are decaying carcasses in the yards of all your neighbors it mat- ters not from which guarter the wind ‘lows, the stench will contaminate your yard. Intemperance never goes qGuite out of fashion: why should tem- perance lectures? Mr. McCarthy from Hartford spent Sunday with his wife at the Baptist parsonige and they returned to their home Mongay. The youhg ladies will meet to sew Saturday afternoon with Mrs. Clarence Eldredge and Miss Lillian Mathews at the Pierce cottag Funeral of Charles H. Ryder. The news of the death of Charles Hiram Ryder at the Norwich State hospital, Sunday, was not wn ted. He was the eldest of the four children of Charles Pearl Ryder and Janet Di- mock Ryder. His r, Hiram Ryder, heli the of state treas- urer and high sheri! The fyneral was from his home Tuesday after- aoon. The election day dinner was well patronized and highly complimented. D. B. Gardiner ' on his longest western trip of the year. Rev. C. \':" Wolfe and family are finding much_to enceurage them in | iheir present Seid in Michigan. i The four Pierce sisters are Sunday school teachers in Pro: 80 the old church is still sending out helpers to carry on the work of the cities and of the world. STORRS. Cattle Purchased for Experimental Purposes—Book Club Meets at Grove Cottage. ‘Work has been begun on the moving of the horse barn te & new location south of the pi Temporary gwar- ters have been Btted up for the horses by roofing over ome of the barn cel- lars on the farmer Storrs estate. Water and sewer connections have been made for the new cottages and they are now ready for occupancy. Poles are being set te supply the college buildings with electricity from the line that runs between Williman- tic and Statrord. The farm department has just pur- chased a carload of beef cattle from the Chicago stock yards. These cat- tle will be used for experimental and demonstration work. Meeting of Book Glub. The_Book ciub met at Grove cot- tage Wednesday evening. The read- ing was from Heney Van Dyke's The Spirit of America. The Rev. Francis Beadle of Frank- lin occupied the pulpit Sunday morn- ing and alse conducted the evening service. President Charles L. Beach and Prof. L. A. Clinton are atiending .the con- vention of agricultural oolleges and experiment stations held at Washing- ton, D. C. Dr. Charles Thom was called to ‘Washington on business. HEBRON. Schoolboy Fractures Leg—Fall Vaca- tion Begins. Miss Fiorence M. Jones, a pupil in the high school department of the He- bron preparatory school. is il with pneumonia at Mrs. Frink’'s on Hebron Green. Miss Cogswell, teacher in the Sixth district. visited Miss Sara Deyle's school in the First distriet Friday, No- vember 11. One of Miss Doyle's pupils in dis- trict No. 1. Joseph Mack, fractured the tibia in his right leg while wrestling during the neon hour last Friday. He was taken to St. Joseph's hospital, in Willimantic. Mrs. Harriet Bisseli is quite feeble. Attend Teachers’ Mesting. The teachers of MHebron went to Colchester last Saturday to attend the teachers’ meeting. Harry Houwton of ew Haven, supervisor of penman- ship, gave talk No. 2 in his course of interesting lestures on penmanship. Schools closed November 18 for a ten day; Mr vacation. Valentine. clerk and aseistant postmaster in the Hebron postoffice, visited Danielson recently Special exercises were held in Hebron schools on Frida: the TO ABOLISH COURT. Movement to Do Away with Criminal Common Pieas of Fairfield County. eek it is said by lawyvers who have heard of the movement that the plan | to be substituted is to model the court after that in New Haven county, In that county the court i§ organized after the superior court. As is well known. the superior court has a criminal side and judges are regularly assigned. Just so with the common pleas court of New Haven county: it has a ecriminal side. There two judges on its bench and they turns in sitting on the criminal talk side. It is believed that some such idea is to be suggested for the common ourt of Fairfield county. The: 1 court as it is now constituted be abolished and two judges is to named for the common pleas court as it is now constituted. Then a crin inal term can be held and there ca also be two civil sessions when nec essary Tt is believ that Senator-elect Jeremiah Donovan will be the prime mover in this propesed legislation senate he attacked the rourt as it is now arranged and it is intimated that he is prepared to make a move in the | matter as soon as he is sworn in. It is admitted that there will be | strons opposition to the proposed changes. It is pointed out that the | criminal court now does mueh more | iness than it used to and that there | which it is in session for e weeks with several triels ciaimed that since Judge anks became prosecutor the court has done very effactive work. | especially in dealing With Hyuor eases. | it is guite apparent from the talk one | B that the proposition to change | the churacter of the court will meet with strong opposition. Senator-elect Jeremiah Donovan was in Bridgeport recently and in an inter- view he said: “Yes, I propose to have a try at changing that court end 1 don't care how strong you put it [ think it is all wrong &s it is and will do what 1 can to abolish it Fasten a wire hook to of a_grape basket. the handle Hang over the line when hanging out clothes and push along before you, (hus saving mucn time, 'PLEASE LADIE s NOTICE! | will, beginning today, Nov. [9th, and for a limited time only, take orders for GUSTOM-MADE DRESS SKIRTS, complete for $5,50 each (This will include both the material and making.) Made of Black or Dark Blue Pan Wire Cloth which retails at 89c and $1.00 a yard made to your measures. ENTIRE SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. Marshall’'s Purchasing Agency, 164 MAIN STREET, i o N. B.—From Oct. 15, 1910, to these SKIRTS at $3.50 and ALL Norwich reulating Library Nov. 12, 1910, we have made 97 of proved most satisfactory. During the years 1908 and 1909, we made more than 3,100 of those same SKIRTS and we recelved less than one dozen alterations in all. Every woman was more than p >d_with her bargain. Nothing . bet- ter for a second best or house wear. Come in ome, you will wonder how it is possible for us such a low price—$§3.50 complete. and Jet us show you to make one complete at British Justice. Americans have regarded the C pen trial as a model of criminal ¢ procedure. The dignity and dispal with which it was conducted before the crown's highest judicial officer, the consideration shown for the prisoner's rights and the unbiased examination of the evidence on w the verdict was reachad made it appear a perfect example of swift and effective justic It is therefore surprisig to find ti trial arrangements the subject of criti- cism in the London press. The pres- ance of “overdressed women” in the court reom and the curiosity of fash- fonable idlers of hoth sexes who sought to gratify their morbid curiosity by watching a fellow-creature on trial for his life are condemned as derogatory to British jndicial tradition. ‘It be- hooves ue,” says The Saturday Review, “to_take care that we neither do nor suffer anything which may sully the reputation of English justice.”” and other journals condemm the tenden- cies manifested at the trial. see; for they Tepresent interests tha® As to whether a court-room crowd | dictate the American price and unloaa ‘was over or under dressed and wheth-|an idle surpMs on the foreigner : er or not spectators “peered at the | the only bargain. If Taft sticks to prisoner as they might at @ caged an- | the text and the sermon he preached imal in the zoo,” that would seem to |]ast August on the Maine border, the Americans & minor matter in view of | jand barons will ‘mot turn down tha the main fact, the swift and orderly | reciprocal hope ‘of the nation.—Lewis- administration of justice. That the|ton Journal republican. English should find L:‘!‘(‘ for serious Wt R concern ip it may be taken as amother manifestation of that jealous regard He Got There. for the purity of their court procedure | Two years ago Congressman Trin- which. has Kept -British justice” un- {cis Burion Harrison. when addressing No Jug-Handled Reciprocity. Reciprocity is ineffectual and a fake when it surrenders nothing and ta all in sight. Canada will not toler a club, like the minimum and ma mum, to force nations which trade with one another to trade with us on the same terms without our giving anything in return. The purpose of the system is to retaliate against a n tlon which will not trade with us on our own terms. The reciprocity for which Blaine, McKinley and Congress- man Dingley stood reduced the Amer- ican duty on certain imports in order to obtain roduced Canadian duty on definitely mentioned exports. There is no reciprocity in giving naught bt a club! based on giving a_ bargain must ive a bargain. There is no good trade which cheats either of the contracting parties. If Taft's contention touching real reciproeity with Canada is tenaciously adhered to, there will be no tariff ws such as the standpatters would like tc sullied.—N. Y. World. an Italian audience on New York's East Side, was asked why he did not speak to them In their own language. New Hampshire’s Legislature. “I would if 1 could,” l]n- replied. “and o i shen - |1 promise you that if 1 ever come Lc- Everything promises to be very 3 3 f COme ! compact and comfortable for Govarnor [ [0Te vou again to make a speecn * Bass of New Hampshire, for his plu- | Will make "r in Ita ;nn,d I“_n olter rality is @bove 7.000, all members of [ 92y h¢ kept his word and deliveres - % i | twelve- i e musica the exeoutive council of the state are | twelveominutes talk In the musicar republican, and the republican - B I jority en a joint bailot in the leg light .of - his_hearers. The of our big citles Is now so heterogene- population B I e oS han- | ous that the public man who is mas- made constderable gains in both the [tere of several naguages has a dis- genate and house, however, and among :mez‘sjw- ud\:nntu]g4»_ Mayor MecCiellan » ) AMONE | found it %0, and in_our own state e B T T ot o b0 fo~ | dov. Curtis Guild, Jr. has found this feat were several of at least local dis- tinetion. The indieations are that the democratic minofity in.the house will reach 140, which is a. very large showing for their party to make in the | papular branch of the legislature.— [ The famous Hoosac Bpringfied Republican. | electrified. acquisition very serviceable on a n ber of occasions.—Springfield Re Jcan n- b tunnel will »s Thanksgiving and the Holiday Season is at hand. Why not get full measure of en= joyment out of it by having a new Steam or Hot Water Heater put in or the old one put in order. Maybe it’s a new Bath Room out- fit that yvou require. In either case send your order to BROWN and get the best for the least money. REMEMBER THE PLACE Robert Brown Estate, 55, 57, 59 West Main Strraal. ARTHUR M. BROWN, Manager Telephone 133 Open from 7.30 a. m. to 5.30 p. m.

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