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; & anfied s 119 YEARS OLD. _ #Saturday, Feb. 25, 1911, ~ OPELLING PROGRESS. ‘it makes all the difference in the h-u community spells prog- It be spellbd in ways Jeast—without & capital P, with a afl!,mwlnqvmhncnmp- e it g o says: ‘Progroess is the ac- mw and the assurance of | tomorrow”. ; and it was Holmes who that “the great thing in is not so much where We in what direction we are Norwich Is looking with an admir- amile New London's way becanse that city is spelling Progress notain ering way, but by making ev- Jetter of the word a capital letter. Connecticut is looking toward London because she is emblazon- ing Mogress across the sky and we f recognize, as Browning did, progress a8 “the law of life."~ Opportunity spowed doo: this matter of ‘kmocking scwblishing 3 =cman's college in Con- nectient, for it knocked loud and car- ried & give and take banner. It was not to demonstrate luck but to fulfil ‘& purpose, and it was plain that who- ever struck hands with opportunity thix time was to help In creating large opportunities for others, All heard .the knock and the challenge to be up doing; and New Londen, not i wealth but bravest in spirit, . mecepted the challenge and is working _ to make the '$100,000 good which is t . placs on a site overlooking the Thames river this woman's college,. which. Is 10 increass the facilities for education “for the women in eastern Con- M.’m‘ ‘western Rhode Island, 3 “the debt due from the _present to future generations.” It fs.mot strange that New London #s finding sympathy and ald in this no partiality in or that rieh men. in tN§ three eastern counties are seeing 18 it the opportunity to aid fn & continuous progressive work. It'is resolution of “the city by the mouth of the Thames,” the civic pride the noble purpose in glorifying by promoting a great and be- meficent enterprise to open forever the door of opportunity to young women resulted in the ralsing of $72,083 of the amount already; and the people of this wealthy portion of the will not see -her for the want of the few remaining thousands ch 1 this_col- as New London doe: Bulletin believes it desires to share In the honor of heiping to make permanent an institution which musy| "\ prove to be a continuous blessing. B . ~ broader hope “The secret of success fs constancy These who recognize the way, will not faill LEGISLATING FOR BETTER GOV- ERNMENT. If new charters and new laws for tHe betterment of government could achieve the purpose without better cit- izenship, there would be no room to pubt that a new and better era had + These legislative propositions to be e into law are signs of disturbed tions, of awakened citizens, of and, perhaps, of.a . brighter promise; but to make them effactive the principles of the law mupt be the active, governing principles of the people. ‘We may do anything we please on ‘Paper better government, but in the final anmalysis the results depend emtirely and absolutely upon the wis- dom, intelligence and alertness of the citizens—their conscience or lack of conscience, their sense of duty or lack of sense of duty, their activity or their inertia. Wothing can take the place of the citizen's/thought and work. 8o long as a majority remaln in- lerent to public matters and are willing to leave,government wholly to the few, jugt so long will the people's interests be disregarded. The only guardian the citizen can depend upon 1% an awakeried {nterest and a zealous astivity for the promotion of every- thing which affects them. CONGREGATIONAL BEATITUDES. . It fell to a Congregational minister of this state to originate calendar beatitudes for his congregation; and] they are #0 pat that they are being #iven national circulation. This is the fashion in which he pointed out the blessed of his flock: “Blessed are those who rise early Sunday wmorning, for they get to church on tim : “Blessed are those who - get to church or. time, for they arrive In the spirit of worship, “Blessed are those who a¥e never , for they cause the minister and epoir to love them. “Blessed are those who must be who do not enter during the pture lesson or praye: “Blessed are those wha, come even At the eleventh hour, but church be- gins at a guarter before eleven.” It took a western editor to discover Just one more. It was this; “Blessed are those, who, if*they ~ come adorned in mammoth headgear, _ remove the same in a Christian spirit.” And it might be cilmaxed with thi; y blessed . are those who rec- ways of the blessed and ™ -~ e ek - " The farmer legisiators of Connecti- ‘cut, meditating on public business all as The C t suggesty, to upon: it next fall, would het f,aftention of the whole to the Teport of " o 2 Al “rne 360,500 ¥eckived by the coun- | /The Bulletiri’ has ‘six letters from Cedar Raplds, representing both sides. To The Bulfetin's question as to whether the comimission fofm of ‘gov- ernment commands the service of best men, the answers -were as fol- Tows: TR “Not In this oityl” Possibly , not!" “This is one of the greatest bene- v Nov - whether- members of the council give their whole time to the duties of, of- fice, we get these replies: “Required to, but do not” “One of them ‘gives all his time— the others have business of - their i < “All that is needed.” “Devote all their time to eity bus ness.” N - “Noi for you canmot expect busi- ness men to get along on such sala- ries. ‘Practically 0. 3 The editor of the Cedar Rapias Op- timus says: “If you could always be sure of get- ting just the right kind of men to fill the various positions, there would not be so much objéction to the systems;. but if you happen to have a bad lot their ‘opportunities for mischief are infinitely greater than under the old lsystem.” The Bulletin had no personal inter- ést in_the writers of its letters, and had no. knowledge of them when it sent to them a list of inquiries. /These quoted comments may en- lighten even the gentleman who wrote the. treasurer of Cedar Rapids to get a_partisan statement of the case, for an officér-elect or employe is a party i interest,’ of course. ‘Is it possible the city treasurer is not aware of the open disputes and various opinions in his own town? EDITORIAL NOTES. The 'face of winter 100ks stern; but six weeks more are Very likely to take the look off. The per capital wealth of the coun- uy is $1,164.79, but if it was equally distributed it would not stay long. Now that eggs have got down in price ‘below thirty cents, they must realize that it is toygh to be cheap, Lifé ‘in the little Latin republics is just one revolution after another, and the world has difficulty in telling what it is all about. Legislatures do not,get business on thelr minds until late, and then it bears so heavy that they are mighty glad to get it off. Virginta has waked up to good roads and the counties are voting large sums of money to catch up with spirit_of the times. The cold storage men just profit by most every cold thing but the frozen truth, and they plainly show they have no relish for that. % Charley Ross has been located in Missouri. With so many fresh disap- pearances there seems to be no need of locating him any more. s The Chicago woman who sald it was her pride that made her steal appear: to have been conscious that pride is something of an athlete. The_czar of Russia has a newspaper, but he is not likely to be too frank in it, for that ‘would make Wm mere trouble than he could stand. Chelsea,* Méss., is now mourning, because after expending $800 for a new charter a vigorous movement shows up to annex Chelsea to Boston. The man who claims that his great- grandfather gathered cherries from the tree Washington cut down has never notieed how young the tree was. The usual number of antl-tipping bills are before the various legisla- tures, but, these will not hinder the man in a hurry from animating the ‘walters. Senator Lorimer =showed, himself capable of making an able speech, but did not have strength enough to brush away the haze of suspicion thht én- virons him. gLy e iivar g A Kentucky nesro has been sen- tenced to prison for life for stealing a turkey. That makes the turkey come mighty high to the taxpayers, as well ds to the culprit. & _ Getting Acquainted. /Gov. Simeon 'E. Baldwin is going ubout his preparation for the tasks soon to be set him with rare good judgment. His campaign showed that while he had been for elghteen years imprisoned on the bench, his im- prisonment had not closed his eyes to what was going on around him. His present conduct shows that he pro- poses fo get into persongl touch with the men with whom he must work in order to carry on his poiicies, or to win for them effective support. Naturally there has been a question in men’s minds as to whether Govern- or ‘Baldwin would be an easy man to approach. He has held the distin- guished office of chiet justice for many years, and that of jtself has separated him from his fellows and made them shy of him. In the meantime, th public has been falsely educated § the bellef that the office of”governor should e filled by what Is known.as 00d mixer,” a man of & social dis- position and engaging manners, & mhn whom _one could approach with- out the faintest _trace of shy- ness. Governor Baldwin is now showing the state that he fully real- izes his dependence upon members of the legislature, and other supporters, by going to them i of walting for them:to come to him. 2 . It there was anything ffeeded to demonstrate his fitness for the post of , his_summons to the demo- cratic members of the senate, mgd robably Iater to the democratic - ers of the house of representatives, to sit down and confer with kim, has Tiled tBe 1‘1;‘1.1. From' now out he will more than cver. recognized as a purposetul man, while the for ‘which he stands will_ in ‘morsl POw -Meriden Journal b ‘front. In view of Our friends admonish us to enough alone ly when we we_see Detter ich an_outl In reply to The Bulletin's question | and if we ' saw things oyes' there is no doubt - ‘hlomfilth‘nol flnl: % Drofldfiiflc. This e point at which we do 8s We pléase and repent at leisure; and as lite runs we do considerable re- penting. - The value of the other fel low's wisdom can he clearly measured by us after we have declined to act upon it,_end have been scorched. We¢ seem be constituted so that we only take advice when e have fto. The man who gets too confiding 800 becomes known as an Jay. Every dilemma in life appears to have two horna; we neldom _steer clear of both. We are pretty sure to let well enough alone if we sense that it 18 well to do so. ¢ ; It is just barely possible that there are Wwho pever get discouraged depressing sense. 1t is not-avell to ~encourage any feeling which puts a gloom ovér life like a fog. Man has the power to rise above conditions becaude he is himself a creator_of conditiong by making new ones. Some one sald: “If @ man wants light he must conquer darkness;” and conquering darkness is the finest steady ogeupation man has ever givan his mind to. Besy in mind that old maxim: “Man makes his habits and then his habMe make hi this led Emerson to affirm: either the best of servants, or the worst_of masters.” Where _discours agement cannot get a lodging® place It. cannat long tarry. Wise is he who regards discouragement as a test of manly power rather than an immov- able weight. If life is the childhood of our immortality why not make it a pleasant memory? think that worrying is ‘hereditary, and the' best llustration of it that presents itself in this light to my mind is the story of the Jittle girl who wept in sorrow because her paste- board globe was hollow and her doll flisd with swdust. Weking up te shams is a cause of grief in uve- nile world; but the adult world is awake to them all of the time and an- pears to look upon them as a neces ty. It is the view we take of things that makes them nettling ‘or other- wise. Some folks think if a thing Is hereditary it must be’ borne witn, while others regard a thing hereditary as an imp unworthy of adoption and immediately cast it out. 1 confess lo belonging to the latter class. It has been shown by acience that the taints, even. which are ours by birth, can be sgotten rid of. Things which do not add to the pleasure of life are better forgotten, or cut out. Where there is a will there is a way. Sometimes | | weonder what has become of those old-fashioned men of New England who liked to be called “Sir;” and those shioned boys and girls who al and “No, sir, “No, ma’am.” Those were manmers that could bs bred out of the race; but they do not seem to have been improved upon. Our_forebears® used to be capable of teaching good manners to all new- comers; but now. we have reached an age when it seems as if the new- comers were capable, of teaching good manners to us. I like the polite ways of our aliens, if they are a little awk- ward or embarrased in making them- selves understood in _our language. Some educator who thought the old politeness smacked too much of. sub- servience for a republic, knocked It out without having anything of value o put in its place. I am just old- fashicned enough to think .that he made a change without having wrought an improvement, or even sus- tained the standard of politeness which once marked our people. Since progress is the watchwerd we may just as well get familiar with what it is. Some people think that forging straight ahead is progress and in a sense it may be; but the pro- gressionists have studied out five movements in progress, and there is not @ false movement among them. To progress you must “move inward, upward, downward, outward and on- ward” You cannot keep in the simple life and pull all those wires for good; and it seems as it that old-fashioned warning: “Be sure you are right and then go ahead,” eontained every mo- Hon_ and every principle involved. This last {s the thing I am going to recommend to my readers. We have no objections to the ins and outs of DProgress in modern form; but we must keep in ihe every-day push—just get simplicity by the hand and walk straight, it we would get there. Pro- gress with us must be an air line, not a trapeze performance, Bernard Shaw will never be popular because ‘he insists upon calling the attention of man to his inconsisten- ios. Men do not ltke to hear tho th about themselves, hefice, they very much prefer to hear it about the other fellow. He says: “Wien a man wants to murder a tiger he calls it sport; when a tiger wants to murder him he calls it ferocity.” It the tiger's selfish ideas could be made known perhaps he would not improve on this definition, Dbut just reverse it. The “dog-eat-dog” plane of life is where things that are brutal are always be- ing dome in the name of sport, from the sporting side. I am rather in- clined to believe that it takes all kinds of folks to make a world, and that is the reason life is made so interesting. It would not he hard to find molly- coddles if the world was reformed ns some men would have it. What would lite "be if it did not include all types and characters of men? If it were not for man’s inconsistencies we should not realize how badly he needs re- forming. You would not think - that ewery man had a God-given right to keep his notions to himself; and thefe is endless evidencé that mdst men are ‘unaware of it. If it was fashionable ::: m"nfl.lfkhtb the:r l;:flonl to them- ves part of ‘the gossip would fall out of life. . Notlons ars made up mostly of things that are not so and are not ikely to_be s0. .Notions are prine! useful in sustaining con- versa m-an tHat is not worth being kept up, i cautioning persons = fo avoid things which are never likely to . 1 opce heard & man say that he. bad a notion that the man who ‘thought the moon was made of gre=n cheese hud an inordinate appetite for that particular kind of cheese. This is o 'high old notlon which perches on X hing i There| her friends called her, was a ite in her Class, and did not want for invitations to spend vacations with them. During one of these happy summer visits she met a young south- erner, Morton Atwater, Who won her ection, and clatmed her .for his bride soon after her college career was in his native city, where he was em- 'ployed in a baniing house. Life held out brilliant prospects for them, and all went well for several years. Happy years they were, dur- ing which two echildren were born.to them, and they became possessors of & cozy home in a desirable part of the town, of which they had become resi- dents. 3 Then came S0rrow in its turn, for a #hort_{liness took away the husband and father and left the young widow to facs alone lie’s problem for her- selt and cHlldren. After the funeral Ter friends discussed the matter for hdr, aa.friends are apt to do. “Very likely she will sell her house and belongings, ' and return to the north,” said one. “I undemstand the bouse is ¢lear of mortgage.” “Yes,” replied another, “and there is a small life insurance.’ e he will teach, probably,” suggést- ed a third, “sineé her college training will readily obtain a position for her.” Meanwhile, Mrs. Atwater was res volving in her mind the same topfe. How should she support her childern and herself? She had no relatives to call upen at the north- Her children were southern born, and her happy life there had led her to love the south and desire that her children @hould learn to love it as their father had done before them. She wanted, alsn, to keep for them ~the home wherd their parents had been so happy. No opportunity was likely to open for teacl in that community. Mean- time, they must live, and, if possible, she hoped to be able to keepSthe in- surance money for the proverdial rainy day. What could she do? A plan oc- ocurred to her, and after much thought she decided to adopt it. Her houss was neafly opposite the entrance to & new and popular pdrk. She determin- ed to open a cafe, and a_conference with her servant confirmed her reso- Iution. & Aunt Chlos was a faithful old soul, having served in Mr. Atwater's family for years before his marriage and knowing no tie atronger than her lovo for “Marse Morton” and his young wife, whom @he had taken into “her heart from her advent into the family s bride. She truly mourned the death of her master and bravely stood by the widow in this time of need. Withal, Aunt Chloe was a notable cook, and “Shuah, Miss Beth,” said she, ‘T'll stay by and help, and you knows cahn't no- body beat Aunt Chloe on cooking. Who shouM I work for ‘sides you and Marse Morton’s chilluns? Nobody else going to bring up dem ehilluns but your Aunt Chloe.” So it was decided, and e modest no- tice, placed in the front window, soon notified the. public to that effect, and patrons were plenty from the first. The Parlor Cafe soon became popular- Aunt Chloe's estimate of her own.ca- pabilities was not too great. No such rolls were 1o be, found elsewhere, and her beaten biscuit were beaten for & are millions of notions drifting around, and nof half so many under restrain It will 'be well when all men recognize their God-given right to keep notions'| to themselves. According to a western sage we are all comers and goers; or, in other words, life is_just right up Bill and then down. We are comers till we get to the top of the hill, and goars Wwhen we start down into the velley toward ‘the sunset; but it is up to every one of us to see how he comes and how he goes. It seems to me as if T hud known lives more like & ioco- motive on a level track which just struck a high rate of speed and kept it up until the enersy was spent. Life at best is learning to 50 live here that you will be useful to others; and the best to others is what brings about heavenly conditions within and witt- dut. It has been well said that “Man goes down in self and goes ‘up in God.” Among the things which can- not be bought 18 & merry heart, a! clear consclence and the divine bldss- Jngs which go with both. SUNDAY MORNING TALK THE DISTORTED Vi aN AND ITS CURE. We are often told that “the single| eye to quote from Scripture, 1s a desirable part of any man's outfit. | This means, I take it, the concentra tion of vision and effort upon one worthy object. The Scripture declara- tion, “ne man can serve two masters,” | points in the same direction. | But like every other good thing, singlé-mindedness may be carried to un extreme, and the inability to see more than one thing at a time may make a°man narrow and prejudiced, may lead him to do harm ¢o others. The ‘world is full of people whose eye- sight 1s too Ifmited. They sometimes block the wheels of progress because of their distorted vision, the twist in their. mental makeup which amounts occasionally to an obsession. ‘We sed in the fleld of politics so many cases of the distorted vision. A candidate, an officeholdes, is judged not by his entire record, but by one, or at the most, two or three specific acts. He is condemned by this or that organization, temperance, labor or some other special interest, because he votedgagainst a4 bill which that spe- cial interest favored. He may have voted fifty other times in accordance with the wishes of those now con- demning him, but what matters it so long as he not ‘in line on this particu- lar measure? Yet he may have acted as conscientiously in this one exercise of a free man’s prerogative as in the But we do mot stop to al legislative record, Foowl mim out” on. ong - i And how prone we are to make up our judgments of friends, acquaint- ences_and strangers on the basis ot s0me one feature in their appearance, some'.one deed or personal character- Sstic. 'We have all undergone. pleasant disitiusions through & CIORSr Acquaints ance with those whom we did not likcs ‘Wwhen we first met them. As the fam- ous Dr. Jowett once remarked, “None of us.is infallible, not even the young- ; way is to start with the lon that no ‘not even our ont. ° The uj dearest “You have quite ruined my daugh- ters matrimonial chances,” sighed “Why couldn’t you hava 2 baker for a sister-in-law?” echoed the daughters. “If this had to be done, why not have gone away from th eity? . It all comes from your Yank: blood. ~ We cautioned Morton against %normenm. So unrefined, to mell o eat!” “Don’t ;expect help or recognition from us,” cried they all. ‘“Fortunate- Iy, our circle of friends are at the oth- er end of the town, aud wo shall sel- dom _meet” and they scornfully left Beth to hér own devices- Staunch friends arose, however, who betriended the brave ' young widow with advice and needed help, and Chloe proved an able assistant. Soon both proprietor and cook found themselves in need of help in thefr different branches of work. Aunt Chioe’s pride in her success showed itself in beam- ing smiles of satisfaction as she saW the demand for her dainties coming from all parts of the town. “Folks fine out who krows how to cook, 1 reckon. None of these Jo down free colored folks about me. I'se learned how to baik long ‘vears ago from the ole plantation aunties. Cahf't fool ais chile with cook-books and sfch trash. . I knows my . cooking in my haid, I does. Don’t hab no sich now- a-days. Also, Mrs, Atwater found it meces- sary to empioy some neat, deft-handed ‘waliters to assist her in her salesroom, The time came at last when the busi- Dess venture outgrew its modest ac- commodations and was established in roomder quarters nearby, while their house became once again the cozy home of Beti’s early married life. Tho children grew in favor with their teaghers, and won their way to the hearts of all who knew them, while their mother felt"repaid in- their suc- cess for all her sacrifices. Before long Beth found time to use her pen, and her literary venture be- gan to attract attention- At last, a book took the public by storm, and placed Beth beyond the need of fur- ther help from other.sources. Chloe, 00, was growing feebie, and Mrs. At- water closed the cafe and took Chloe into her household to be tenderly cher- ished during the . remainder of her days. The daughter, well-educated and accomplished, was her mother's constant companion and comfort, whi the son, already recetved by the sam firm which emploved his father, was her pride and delight. " A happy, prosperous household thes were, Kven the aristocratic Atwaters were glad to acknowledge the talente ed _authoress was of their family. “From a fine northern family, you know,” explained the mother-in-law, “and 'so cultured. ~Amd the children are really exceptional. Blood will tell, don't you know? It's mo more than should be expected from my son's children.” And Beth, for the children's sake, acospted their ovartures to friendship, though she knew her business venturs had laid the foundation of her pros- perity. AN IDLER. in his character. Some of the big- gest mistakes we make, the ones which we rue for many‘a day, arise from this inability to take the larger look at men, movements' and institutions. They are all faulty, even the.highest of them, the college and the church, Decause they are of human origin. Buf they are not faulty from center to cur-~ cumference. ‘We need to beware of the distorteft viston, particularly in connection with our personal judgment of Christianity ‘Why should we comclude that as a system influencing character Christian- gotten the mastery of Bim, cal man that you are, you concludad that his religion was of no earthly value to him. Ah, but you should have seen him the next day when he won out, and the day after that when e sent ‘a 10ad of coal to a poor wid- ow’s home. Or, granted, for the sake of' argu- ment, that the man you condemn is a hypoerite, why should you judge re- ligion by him? Why pick out a poor, ‘weak, black sheep of the fol forgett- ting all about the gnes who never stray far from the right paths, who are, on the whole, ornaments and- bul- warks of religion? “To see life wteadily, and to see it whole,” that is the goal which an Eng- lish poet puts before him and thove for whom he writes. It is the all- round look that saves us from the narrow and distorted vision. Never let your eyves remain so fixed upon a single thing, particularly if it be something painful to observe, that.| your eye becomes unable to traverse the entire field with your vision, to note the beautiful, strong and worthy elements in the landscape and to view it in its éntirety. THE PARSON. $1.35 a Day for Twelve. A 10 year old boy. was arrested in Pittsburg for being on streets too late at night. In the javenile court he was turned over to & woman Pno- Dbation officer, who was told to look him up. Next day she came back and eaid that the boy was one of a respectable family of twelfe and that his arrest was an accident. The fa- Production of the Season. 'THE POLI The Performance of iry Fa PLAYERS » The Best of All Rural Dramas SOUVENIRS OF MR. DUNBAR MONDAY AFTERNOON SOUVENIRS OF MiSS MORGAN WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON A RECEPTION FOR MISS MONTGOMERY FRIDAY AFTERNOON Next Play—THE THREE OF US MATINEES Feature BREED THEATRE OHAS. MoNULTY, Lesses . TRAILED BY AN INDIAN Miss E. Bruseau, Soprano. Parformanges 2.30 7.30 8.45 P.m, Picture, LUMBER AND COAL ther was a working man, earning $1.35 a daay; the eldest of the ten children was 13. Said the probation officer: “They are excellent people and bst- ter home conditions could not be asked ,for.” How was it done? The probation officer didn't know—she was sure only of the facts. Some weeks, ago it was told in Collier's how & Mis~ souri woman kept a_house and a hu: band on $600 a year. When that statement appeared the avalanche started—protests, ridicule: “I wouldn't want to eat that woman's meals!” “Thinic_of doing with a pint of milk I like food to taste oo and not merely fill up. Adso stories of even better performances came in upon us by the-dozen. Ia it not true that two-fifths of the 25,000,000 fami Iles in _the United States live on le than $500 a year?—Collier's Weekly. Ought to Have Used a Yacht. In the light of recent events it seems surprising to use that Sir Thom 4| as Lipton called for the assistance of the police when a man tried to ex- tract money from him by means of a razor,—Philadelphia Inquirer. Corset coats for men? Looks as if Editor Bok and Capt. Archibald Wil- lingham De Graffenried Clavering Butt had been collaborating on the new spring styles—Springfield Union. Baking Powder Economy - ’ The manufacturers of Royal Bak- ing Powder have always declined to produce a cheap baking powder at the sacrifice of quality. * Royal Baking Powder is made from pure grape cream of tartar, and is the embodiment of all the excellence possible to be attained in the high- est class baking powder. Royal Baking Powder costs only a fair- price, and is more economical at its price than any other leavening agent, because of the superlative quality and absolute wholesomeness of the food it makes. Msires slade 4 iiation of Balitg posrders Such mixtures’ are things precisely as we d6, that it is unfair to concentrate our.gsse uUpon Cromwell's waris and_never look at. the less 'oha'u!mu E2 of “' door, or g to mian, Pilsner, Culmbach ;yf”i Pale and Bumv::m COAL “One Swallow Does Not It's smallow after swallow, and it's ton after ton of good Coal, at a fair price, that has made Chappell Co. reliable Coalmen. ~ CHAPPELL CO. Contral ‘Whart and 150 Main Street. Telophones. LUMBER JOHN A. MORGAN & SON, _Coal and Lumber Telephone $84. Central Whart - GOAL Free Burning Kinds and Lebigh ALWAYS IN STOCK. A. D.. LATHROP, | Offico—son. and Shetucket Sts i 105-12 | " GALAMITE GOAL . “It burns up clean’ Well Seasoned Wood . H. HASKELL. 402 — 'Phones — 489 JOSEPH BRADFORD, Book Bipder. Elank Books Made and Ruled to Order, 108 BROADWAY. Tolepbone Mh .+ 3 . Dr.F. W. HOLMS, Dentist Telephone 528 oct10d Shannon Building ' Annex, Room A. {DR. C. R CHAMBERLAIY Denta/ Surgeon. RS S e Quring Bs lust 161 Main Street. ‘Norwich. Genm. Rosc Bowling Alleys, i LUCAS HALL, 49 Shetucke® Strest. s & J. C. GTONR Prop 1647 Adam’s Tavern : 1561 : public the finest standard America, to the ‘of Beer of Europe and 8 aBtout, P. music. WILLIAM L. WHITE, Piano Tlune r, 48 South A St, Taftville r. 0. aEER TUNER 182 Prospect 8¢, Tal. 811, Norwishy Ca WM. F. BAILEY. ¥8uccessor te A T. Gerdner) Hack, Livery and Boarding Stable 12-14 Bath Street. HORSE CLIPPING A SPECIALTY. AUTOMOBILE TO RENT. Telephone §83. Apnouncement for 1911 The Fanning Studios, §1 Willow SL would respecttully call attention to the Wall Paperaign cdery and the works men we have to do our work. We ca fassure the public of a fine grade labor and the very best patterns an designs {n ur 1911 Wall Papers. Wi can quote specially low prices for worl complete, or will be pleased to sell t Dpaper if you have any regular fim do your work. Latest Novelties —————— Chignon Puffs Cluster Curls «__for the New Coiltures Bilson Toit o - 67 Broadway 'Phome 503 [} The Goodwin Carsel - and linusrie_ VODELS FOR EVERY. FIQURE. \ GORSETS ALTERED AND REPAIRE), DONT WORRY - It Makes Wrinkles Worty over lll-heaith does your health no good, and merely causes wrinkles, that make you look older T 7o ars. alok, doi't worty, But U are sl lon't wi a aboul i (6 ake yourseis well o &b this we repeat the words of thousands of other former sufferers from wom- anly illa, similar to yours, when we {"Take VIBURN-0 It 18 a wonderful female ‘remedy, a8 you will admit it you try de. Directions for its usa are i S