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(R 4 ly for The Bulletin.) 1 ve in lambasting my fel armers all the time. 1 don’t sw everything, and I'm nof. always abs and infallibly right Uncle edediah, now, just for an example, . ivs right, in his own belief. He . et has made a mistake, if you'll tell ft. 'Way back, three id vears ago. the Deiphic oracle great reputation as a prophet. of the uncommonly shrewd the officiating priestss »uld reel off a jingle which, after the which be seen to have meant There's the famous story King Midas. He sent to find out r it would be safe for him to ake war on the next-deor kingdom. Hack came the answer bidding him go rth and predfcting that in the first uld T thing attle the kingdom would fall. So {idas pitched in—and the first time o met the enemy they licked him to le, destroyed hie army, took him sdnier and turned his own kingdom a vaesal provines. Whereupon oramle loudly advertised its accura- because it had predieted that “the ngdom™ would fall, but never said nich kingdem. pr nto t Uncle Jedediah has something Del- phic about him, | think. He is rather s with bis opimlous and not at all chary of wmaking prophecies, but he «ually manages (o word them so that can elaim « verification, no mat- r how fhey surn oul. Hae's almost as nny as the government weather bu- - Ané 1 really wonder how that ireau 1% going to square its early wemer forseasts with the facts, s It has ‘been declaring air weather probable” in any part of @ country svery day but one for the at sleven days. And it has rained smpwed on my farm every consecu- s dny of the sleven. I'm mighty rowe to see how Professor Moore is zoing 1o get hie cwstomary boast of 78 pe oent verification for his predic- tions out of this November. But I| (ther expect h It do it, somehow. Now, Uncle Jedediah, since he's al- vays right, feels himself authorized to nd most of the time, when he isn't ting forth his own opiniens, in crit- eing or sneering at or abusing oth- ers who don’t chanece to agree h ot Wpin, sure as he is of ntallibility. T am a littie more ined 10 hesfate before fuiminat- 2 too loudly Against those farmers «he differ from me. or those charac- terietics in farmaers which don't meet y approval. There ls apt te be no Jack of critics in any ural community orities of the tewn, critics of the ate. critios of the president, critics their own neighbors. I never found 1at thess chaps were very popuiar, nor that they had much reai influance. Really when you go back to the true aning of the word “eriticlam” vou'll fnd that R doesn't originally imclude erely denunclation: it as often means audation. True criticiem is keen ex- judgment of whatever is crifi- sed.” Right eriticism of a good thing a g00d deed or a go0d man IS un- tinted praise, just as right eriticism a bad thing and a bad deed and a ad men e frank censure. 1 wish a lot of the ehronic velpers in my imme- iate bishepric could be made 10 ap- fnte this my own Jus: before election the stump- Wers try to make us believe that he salt of the earth. Oth- wre those who act as \Aered ug the seum of the ngree with efther judg- sixty short and evil years tc he conviction that piks—and about the same s. We have our “outs a4 we e our good points. It's casanter me to think about the it than the faults, 1 admit that. svertheless and notwithatanding, we as a class, have certadn failings foiblaa which we should be bet sercoming. And 1 want t gently at just one, this talk <ing up an lowa farm paper this ng. my attention was attracted ey firmt ediworinl article, head- 1 wd Roads or Battleships It 14 how the treasury was freely spend- T m ns every vear on the fleet and w we need is for the govern- #nt 1o quil spending these millions n battleships amd spend it on high- ay improvements. It will then d nie good every hows of the day, and e far towards naking the country a desirable place ® in. Tifs from lowa, you'll observe. Towa no seapais, no ocean shore, and all 3ta citics nad farms and warehouses are far enough inland to be bevond ho reach of nevel stuack from either 1o Atlantic or the Pacific. The Towa farmer doesn’'t naed a battleaship to pro- bis front windows from the shells fired by a hostlle fleet, and therefore Vs upokesman dencunces the spending | war vessels, which he money on doen’t need, and demands that 1t be pt Inte good roads, which he does ned You see the point? Phis lowa farm «aior sees what le thinks lowa wants, wnd he (8 quite hot because the gov- manent doesn’t nd its money for voat lowa weits, regard of the A « nesds of Mussachusetts and ‘ommectiout ar New York and Vir inja and the Carolinas end Louisia 18 Ca nd Oregon and the ant holding no briet One May ; Overcome constipation permaneatly hy proper personal co.operation with the hene- ficial effects of Syrup 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 Senna is most val uable, as it is the only laxative acts without disturbing nat 1 functions and without debilitating and it 18 the one laxative which leaves the | internal organs in a natura condition, thereby really aiding one in that way. To get its beneficial eTects, buy the genuine manufactured by the Californis Fig Syrup Co. only, and for sule by ull leadisg druggists. Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is uever classed bv the wellinformed with wediclued which make exuavagaut sod unfounded claims to cure habitual constipation without personal eration which | coop- | A W with | I the share point heaithy i the navy. If T were I think T could show how it is quite a8 necessary for the Towa farmer as for the Manhattan importer. But let that go, NOW, nub of the whole matter lies in the fact that this Towa.farmer isn't looking at and considering the general good of the whole country, first of all, but is focussing his gaze on a benefit to lowa and other inland farmers. And he's quite hot in the collar because a congress, not one-fortieth of whose i members come from his state, won't unanimously devote its energies to the upbuilding of what he feels to be the interests of his state, regardless of and wholly neglecting the interests, even the safety of other parts of the coun- try There's altogether too much similar narrowness of view among farmers all over the land. Mind you, 1 don't say ink that farmers are any or t worse or any more blameable in this re- spect than any other folk. I don’t be- lieve they are. Why, the country has just been treated to the exposure of a prominent scatesman, who is also a manufacturer, who howls loud long for a lower tariff in his speeches and letters, but whose partner in the factory goes to Washington when the tariff is being revised to beg for a higher tariff on the goods they make in their mills. It's a form of incon- sistency which is not confined to farm- ers and manufacturers; it is the para- sitic_growth of narrow _selfishness, which sends its life-sucking rootiets twisting and boring through us all, just as some fungus swells and bloats into bhorrent intumescence on the sap of the luckless tree it is slowly poisorning. Now, there's no use in my preaching at manufacturers and other folks who don’t read thesa letters. That would be like “Ed” Clapp's famous story of the deacon and the new minister. The deacon called on the young man Sat- urday evening and offered him some helpful advice about his Sunda; man. “I wouldn't preach agin in', ef T wus you,” seld he, “fer Deacon Bmith might think you was a-hittin’ him. 'Nd you'd better not talk about | grindin’ the poor, fer Deacon Jones hez | Jest foreciosed the mortgage on Widow Tompkins. 'Nd Mr. Robinson might git mad if vou sed much about bearin’ false witness, fer he's a regular con- | trfbntor and some folks think he per. | jured himself in his last hoss cas. And so it went, untll the poor dominie asked, in despair: “But what is there left that it is safe for me to touch upon “Wa'al,” said the deacon re- | flectively, “it duz seem kinder narrer | Wmits, now don’t it?” Then he bright- |ened up: “Tell yo what” says he, | “preach sgin the Mormons; they hain’t sot @ friend in town!” Rather ineffective preachina, that would be. When I preach I want to think that I'm hitting somebody with- in reach, if 1 can. That's why I'm slamming away at you, Brother Farm- er-man. We farmers are so compeiled by the very nature of owr calling to look close a. home that we are more apt than many ofi.ors to get into the habit of narrow -sightedness and short-sightedness. We have to scratch gravel pretty constantly, and there may be some litile excuse in that for the fact thal too mahy of us get s0 we can't ses anything but gravel. The top of the gravel bank is our méntal horizon which we don't see over. Now, I'm not appointed eensor of your thoughts nor optician for your eyes. But stop and think about it for a minute for yoursclves: isn't that a le-etie bit constricted view of life and e world —the view bounded by just your task, vour friends, your | neighborhood, your town, your state, your party or vour denomination? Modern life is a tremendously com- plicated affair. It's lika a great train of wheels. each one meshing into an- other and that into another, and so lon. If any one of them “slips a cog" ® trouble all through the shop: ¥ one of them stops turning the | others either stop, too, or go on run- ning wild and uncertainly. The wel- fare of each one of us depends very largely upon the good of all. When we have a chance to act together for the common good isn't it a rather un- fortunate thing that anyone should try to put some local or Individual gain above the common and universal advantage No one will deny that a prosperous community, one where every man is adequately protected in rights, ad- equately rewardad for labor, and adequately ture,—no his guaranteed against the fu- will deny that such a com- munity is better and happler and more ‘admirable than that in which one man is housed in castellated mag- nificence behind the moated walls of selfish success while all the others are hovelled in hopelessness and help- lessness. No one will deny this as an abstract proposition. Why should any farmer stoop to s beliave it? I ting as if he for the safe dn’y nd advantage of the country as a whole that we shouid have a navy which shall insure us against sudden for- eign attack, then that navy is for the 1 interests of lowa #e much as New ork or Boston Ir all large matters which concern us as communities and states and b tion, lat's get out of this habit of gl ing our eves solely to the furrow we happen to be turning. Of course we've got to pay close attention to keep the horses moving straight and 12 true and the mould and smooth. That's our noard bright firet, immadiate, individual duty. But, 3a alive, that furrow isn't all there ts in the field. And there are other fields heyond it. And thera are other farms heyond those. And thers ars ather lanes and other people bevond the mountain walle that bound our physical outlook. We can see them in our mind'a eyss, and we can at least tryv to halance up what wa know is for our individual henefit with what we can understand is for the genera! good, reslizing that the goed i= alwats hound n welfa 1 1e THE FARMER To Place Wires Underground. Work be Staried next spring the changing of ons of the of erican Telephone p ipany that rune through Walling- ford. This company'= lire of overhead wires which extends from near Mouu- han's i, Quinnie, running through the Uiue Hils region. Cook Hill district, and on through te Bouth Meriden, is the line o be changed. The wires will be cxtended along turnpike on the turnpike on the wesl «ide, running by the Masonic horas. Instead of being on poies Lhe wires will ail be placed in subways and conduits More than two-thirds of the natives China agriculturalists, using Wethods e==turies old The | and | The sun shines somewhere all the time, if it does not all the time. Some folks have a way of calling about dinner time or tea time that is suspiciously annoying. Did you ever notice that the neigh- bor who has the borrowing habit strong is always weak on his neighbor- ing side, for he has nothing to lend. The woman who gets the Thanksgiv- ing dinner has ‘ find her pleasure in the work for she is usually too tired to eat. Bill Bangs says his wife sells all the tender chickens and feeds him on an old fowl Thanksgiving. This is about the only way she can wake him work. Parson Dawson tells us “the truth will make us free;” but I have known the truth to get the other fellow into | jail. { Cyv Cymbal thinks that it was his | misfortune to have been born a farm- er, for if he had been born an opera singer he could have traveled the world over at $500 a might. Samantha Psalter says “the women {who are all style in the beginning of |life, have no style to speak of at life's 1 " end.” Samantha!! 1 have noticed the man who tells his fellow men how to live, just lives on bis fellowmen; and if we all did that what a failure life sould be. Sariah says to me once in a while: | “Job vou can’t never reform the world,” fand I reply: “I don't expect to, Sariah, {for T ain't reformed myself yet!" ! Parson Dawson's boy wants to know !what the difference is between a kick- | ing nag and a nagging wife. It is about jtime he got married, and then he would khow. The farmer who petsan anio it thinks its master its best f then sells it to the utched | slaughtered, has just misery of both. to increased The leaks on a farm are not as easy to find as the leaks in a dory; and it takes the green farmer some time to find out he is sinking The corn-husKer who is bent upon igetting the red ear and the reward that goes with it is discouraged if the red ear is slow in showing up. A man or woman who has an eve for lal the zood places w sit down and t in, does not make a hustler in the country or the city. It is profitabie to | ke Dblind to some things. The Family makes its bid success- fully as a play for plain people. Thomas Jefrerson will make a tour of the principal cities in George Totten Smith’s farce, The Other Fellow. One of the realistic scenes in Every- woman, which Henry W. Savage is to produce, shows Broadway on New Year's eve. Louise Homer’s recent concert tour was 80 successful that she will under- take another one next April and May, after the «close of the Metropolitan opera season. When Rose Stahl opens in Charles Klein's new play, leading man will be Frederick Trues- dell, who is playing the part of Colonel Parsons in The Desenters. The New Theater announces that on Monday evening, Dec. 5, it will produce a drama of Ameri author i¢ Mrs. Mary Hunter Austin, and the name of the play is The Ar- Tow Maker. Mme. Schumann-Heink will _be heard three times this season in New York, her one song recital being sched- uled to take place in Carnegie hal late in January. The other two appear- ances will be made with the Philhar- monic orchestra in March, The New York Review says: One of the results of chance meeting in the Shubert office is that Louls Hirsch and Leonard Liebling are planning to write a_ new American operetta together, which, if it meets requirements, w be produced next season by the Messrs. Shubert. “Alcestis.” a poetic_drama in Eng- lish verse by Blanche Shoemaker Wag- staff. will have its first presentation at the Hudson theatre, New York, on the afternoon of December 1, hy the Co- Maggie Pepper. her | n Indian life. The | il shine everswhere| WASHINGTON COUNTY, K. LETTERS FROM TWO STATES HOPKINTON Mrs. George E. Reynolds Injured— Automobile Strikes William H. Richmond Thrown Out. The monthly meeting of the school committee the clerk, Miss Clara A. Olne Valle; with al $128.5 board of canvassers the voting lists to be used in the eral election Tuesday, They held their month Monday afternoon, Novembe town hall and ordered bills pai As a proba they proved, allowed and ordered 1 corded the will of John K. Bitgood, de- amount ceased. pointed administrator with the w nexed and John Dy and Warren ed_appraiser Albert Clark and far were recent auto call of John was held . Monday morning. November the members present. were ordered paid to the at the home of . at Ho), Bills amount of C'nvlllad the Vote. The town council met Friday as a of $410.3; George N, A. Tu B. Wells. < and canvassed n- November S. meetin: 7. in the to the e court “randall (homas W er were appoint- v of Perryville at the home The family of Victor Crandall have returned home from John funeral North November Mrs. John E. Mr: W Lewi of Mrs. Stonington Wells and wife Richard Monday Woonsocket, ttended the Wheeler in afternoon. Injured by Fall. B ieorge Well Crandall, fell in 5 Reynolds s Stonington is visiting at the hor who the house of th S of resides at home of her son-in-law, Deacon Roger Tuesday morning and received a bad cut back of her ear. HIC! von. Monday The ( Reynol¢ Henry Kingstor Tower Mrs Greene spendin, Michael Hiam and make She i8 recovering, thous still weak from loss of blood. Auto Passengers Guaranteed Bills. Warrenville Baptist church edi day :onsecration. the Last week Friday evening about 7 o'clock as Mrs. William H. Richmond and her son Jesse were driving home {an auto running at a high rate of | #peed met them on the corner in front of the postoffice. The driver to turn out sufficiently struck wagon, smashing it to picces throwing them ‘out. The shock and tright_affected Mrs. Richmond's heart and she suffered a collaps he two men in the automobile stopped, con- veyed them home, e their names and ordered bills for all expenses sent to them. 2 BES W sum- monsed and beyond @ se- vere shaking up, bruises and tempor- ary affection of the heart, Mrs. Rich- mond was not seriously injured. he autoists were from Pawtucket. Rev. E. P. Matheson, a former pas- tor, attended the dication of the on re- prayer “USQUEPAUGH Cahoone of in tt dence spent Saturday and Sunday the former's mother. Sunday with his sister, Mrs. Sullivan is spending Visitors of the Week—Enjoyable Read- ing by Miss Tucker. The reading given by Miss Myrile Tucker of East Greenwich in the | church vestry was fairly well attend- ed_and greatly enjoyed William Paimer and son of Provi- with Isaac Prosser of Lonsdaie ¢ { Saturday and Sunday with his brother George. Mrs. Georgia Bills of Valley FFalls is visiting at Dr. Kenyon Wakefield T few | days with his sister, Mary McConnor | in Kenyon. Mrs. Ida M. Kenyon spent Monday { with her daughter at Westerly. A. C. Kenyon spent y in New York Mrs. Sallie hony, who has been visiting her niece, Mrs. Arvilla Larkin, has returned to Arcadia. | Mr Arvilla Larkin is visiting her son and family at Westerly. A. C. Kenyon and family were at | Wyoming Sunday- | Mrs. Meda Bo spent "RICHMOND Semi-Monthly Mesting of W. C. T. U. —Personal Notes. Yia eveni Lari Is Clark H n high Hill for Agnes Phillips and Providence, of a da fow 3 burn play who include the play in| . 2 double | with the “Electra” of | the Furipedes. which is also to be given |, B #t a matines on Tuesday, the 28th. Mrs. = | have returned fron Liebler & Con. have heen compelled | Newport by the iliness of Pietro Mascagni, the! Miss Annie Hoxi eomposer. to postpone the production Sunday a: her hor ew York of his new opera, Yso-| The Ladies . They recefved word from him{dav with Mrs that he would take two weeks e Tax Collector . to finish the orchestration amd could ' recently not stari for New York until Novem-| Tax Collector B. Iber 26. The production was to have| Hope Valley Mondas been made in the New Theater on No-| George Tames of vember 21. Wednesday nighi Mr. and Mrs. E. K. Otto A. Fenn of Damascus, Pa. at present employed in the Engineer's de- partment of the New York Hippodrome announces a new contributic to the aeronautio machines of the nea ture in the Bi-Step-Plane of which he is | the inventor and with which as soon as {he has completed a new 1 e-toot model he will flv from the roof of the | Hippodrome huilding sometime within the next month. Fenn is buiiding his airship in the basement of his home 18 Webster avenue, Bronx in such able to find outside the Hippodre at 1 spare time as he his dnties in gine department Getting Fruits from China The cranberries of Cape are threatened with a rival. The red fruit or hung-kuo of China, which 1 a crabapple and cooks up for sauce with the bright red of th and the same popular acidity, is being experimentes with in southern Cali- fornia by ment and mayr become one of the com- i Cod fruit other t f eaches o country, which are not hardy n the Amer winte a prospe this wil jand and other northern climates tha there will be less trouble with winter killing. That is an Important expe: ment, as all who have seen the winter- killed peach orchards of this country readilv understgnd. The failures with peach culture have exceeded the successes more on account of the ex- treme cold than for any other reason —Worcesier Telegram There ted an average v five of about one persons in the Uni- Siales ooke Tike | cranberry | the United ‘States govern- | mereial fruits of this country. It is a | | pralific srower in c‘hina and jtr ted the at exp erma glass te wire i Ladies is lephone Ay exj 153 Main Sireet s mills W. ( their semi-monthly home of Mrs. George Wall le Tuesday heid mee g has rm Ladies’ Far Coafs Ladies’ and Misse te Mis h Mat th * Caracul Coals All our Ladies’ and Misse.’ Hats at reduced prices Spiendid savings for all wlio visit our Cleak and Miilinery Depariment. Long (oats, Maunish mix- tures, in ali colors, alsn black, §5.98 to $20.00 Ladies’ Sweaters, were $2.50) o $2.75, today $1.98 i } WEEKAPAUG. . Pl oot oy | Meeting of Ocean View W. C. T. U— | Visiting in Town. | fhe Ocean View W. C. . U. met at the home of Mrs. Ira Saunders on| Wagon—Mrs. | irankiin street. Wednesday afternoon, with good attendance. After the business of the meeting was finished, the topic, “Young People’s Part in Temperance Reform,” .was taken up. {Several papers were read and an in- teresting discussion followed. The next meeting will be held in two weeks with Mrs. A. L. Bliven. Mrs. Cleveland Carpenter | taining her parents, Mr. and | wards of Westerly, | Attend Temperance Union Convention. Mrs. H. A. Macomber and neice, Miss is enter- Mrs. Bd- { L. Gertrude Stillman of Ashaway are lin Baltimore attending the National Convention of the Women's Christian | Te rance union. will visit Washington and other points of inter- est hefore returning. Arthur er and famiiy move to Wests where he employed in a machine shop. to be are will ~ ROCKVILLE A from here attended the S t the ho of Irving turday evening. ;. Barber has returned spending 4 v weeks with E. Ham- | can bankers' association. Incidentaly | he is many times a millionaire. ndoubtedly none of the other or- phan boys who were taken west with the now affluent and influential O'Neil has done as well as he. But perhaps they were not imbued with his philos- ophy and did not follow the precepts to whicn he savs he owes his success. Hv nresents these precepts as follows: It doesn’'t make any - differenc whether a boy a ragged newsbo; or a high sehog! sraduate with mone he will succeed if he is honest and wants to. There is nothing so scarce in the world as a boy of the right sort. He must be right—truthful, honest, moral, progressive, thrifty and not afraid of hard work. He has got to take hard_blows in business life with | a smile. That spirit of taking a good | hard drubbing now and then and not | whining develops manhood. The hoy | avho can smile at hard luck is built of the material that succeeds. More rich men are holding out their hands in the darkness to give a fellow a lift than ever before. The need of hustling boys with willing hands and hearts is very great. If he has the pep- per and ginger in his blood they—the captaing of industry—want him.—To- peka, Kan., State Journal, Governor Weeks. Tie interest of the people of “cticut now centers in their new zov- | It is well to welcome him with | | | ghter. Mrs. William , at Wicklord. | Miss Ethel Kenyon of Hope Valle: charch h and was the | Mrs. Emory Kenyon, Satur- | i How the Boy Came Back. Something t ought to be of in- to vounz bhoys and vounz men over the telegraph w from | ew York city the other day. It didn't 1 its way nto the news columns of other or | y the I'r e found for them among | n the cattle ranches of a | 'Neil Teturned to New York « he other da as the ector of the Carne trust compe one of the large neial institutions in he countr airman of the republic 1 committee of A Idaho, of r of the 'I.eliMe Sen's:i' Yoiu A Treatment of My Catarrh Cure Free C. E. GAUSS. | th for My method is « i fiva peog ma Mars and $ 7.50 to $25.00 $30.00 to $75.00 ———8STORE OPEN EVENINGS all the newspap In some of them though, it was displayed as the rather fmportant story which it i Tt told of re-arrival in the na- | tion’s metropolis of Bernard Franci: | O'Neil of Wallace, Idaho. Thirty | years ago he was a newsboy on the | str of New Yc He v with- ut mother and father. relatives or He was lly taken charge he children's aid society, and Will Take Any Case of Catarrh, No| Matter How Chronic, or What Stage It Is In, and Prove ENTIRELY AT MY OWN EXPENSE, That It Can Be Cured. Let Us the day pleasantly. We alil desires, whether it be Whiskey, how severe the critic may ke t To enjoy the Thanksgiving festivities there lowest consistent with the best coods. Qur Generous Offer! With every purchase of $1.00 or over we will patrons with a quart bottle of California Port Wine. only family liquor store in tawn. ‘manifestations of confidence. gentleman who is soon to retire the office is also entitided to congider- al Governor Frank Weeks has in a quiet way rendered m%éhr service, His administration has been a credit o the state and he has met the rather trying duties of his position in a man- ner to win hearty appreciation. He has not been satisfied to be a mere figure- (head, but has taken an active, though dignified, part in affairs. i Coming “to the office untried and almost unknown outside of his_ own town, by the death of Governor Lilley. he has et the obligations imposed upon him in a_way that should endear him to all Connecticut, without re- gard to partizan feeling, for he bhas proven himself a thoroughly capable. broad-minded, tactfu' and wholly ad- mirable official. Perhaps, to many people, the greatest surprise was, the manner in which he developed as i public speaker. MHis addresses have been models of brevity, directness and clearness, and have shown a thorough knowledge of the subjects discussed. Connecticut will part with Governor Weeks reluctantly, but will remember him and his service to her with satis- faction and affection.—Bristol Press. Future Migrations. ventually, probably, we shall know cold weather is coming by the flocks of aviators that will be seen bout this time of the vear Aying uthward.—Syracuse Herald. Geo. Greenberger, 47-53 Franklin Street. Rejoice is nothing so pleasant as a good bottle of liquid refreshment to help pass have our particular tastes and Wine or Gin. here you will find an array of bottled goods that will surely piease, no matter Prices the concerning quality. present our The Our Motto: “Courteous Treatment to All.” i | i { | | i The nam=, (Jeo. Ureenberger, The place, 47=-53 Franklin St. E-M-F “30 HUDSCN PETER CECCARELLI Prop. UTOMOBILES Three New 1911 Demonstrators Have Arrived FLANDERS “20” If you are interested don’t fail to take a ride. The Imperial Garage, Corner Chestnut and Willow Streets, 53 “25-30” NORWICH, STAR HACK TRY AND MITRE SQUARES STILLSON WRENCHES..$ inch MONKEY WRENCHES, 6 STEEL TRAPS POLLAR WATCHE:! TIN SN 4 DOLLAR RAZORS S SAW BLADES, eac 50c—3 Specia 5 dozen h 5S¢, per inch 60c—14 (this week only) FULL GROWN AXE WITH HANDLE K. K. AXES, warranted, only.. PLATFORM to 24 Ibs., only RATCHET DRILIL MOUSE TRAPS BRACE four hals AND SCOOP SCALFS, slanting dial THE HOUSEHOLD, .l*SuIIe-.lin Building 74 Franklin Street