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up. his creatures upon ani . ; be, RVENINGS, 2 ty; &d those who —— y; > PP - e operates 10 -enenu ~Anexperienced, | the balances have been M‘m irresponsible qt.n"-‘.:um— Riahonast Soaiant will'ie 1md‘:°mmma s of the hence “hen. men to go Into the banking business Rushand ‘:0-1;: iy Y g_c' g ‘EEE:‘ i i gEEd i ] in the trail of bad banking, ok ers.” The gibe 18 dne of the most use- Between January 7 and March 17[less things indulged in by humans and the total of individual deposits in the | Eibing ever continues an a4 senseless & state guaranteed banks dropped from | Prictice-/ | Bive & e in_our own community, the angel 384,750,580 to $40,728,977—a decremse faithfulness of A has been abroad and verified ! "7 ALL NEXT WEEK it § million b of mers than five ped s on :‘n:hp;g e 'of those talken o @ it has been ead, & R banks have thrown up their deposit| the eggs of insects, and he scoured the from us 4 ] guarantees and haveé been re-chartered and brarches for the embryo 3 ”»':fl' L 4 “Who can fill muhnc:m.fi 2 e y | @ natfonal banks, but enough new g':" vhich were likely to prey upon to strike. b | By family b 5 d Thomas® u’i'g i niFE| i’.fl! " saLct | t it ! ' i il f 3 Eo 0 | £ 3 Bx i i 5 H liage and fruit the coming summer. 60N ¢ -4 , where they are missed mos! g show a decrease in the total numbet | hud pear por oheo irg gt Viich o o ;. We know the W 1l go on of only five—from six hundred and| ter birds, and which he could not have | Lo8’ ? A O W i gt ninety-five to six hundred :‘nd mn;:y. ;ave‘liloo‘kgdé hutl :’f hag mone of the T take “P,, N thoee. i have /besk these -state| instincts a loafer al 2 i . - cheerful 2 'Phat we “guaranteed” banks are mow at a low- | Dreferred to work for his daily bread. e f:::"m:"w"z“‘; s tsdn We weil such time since Navember, 1909, although| ;. 30r thege brave lttle midgets heve 3 weE . the number of Banks is still very much | ingpired poets to sing of them, &nd| o af Soish it eiboraing | But “it is an ill wind that blows no- larger fhan it was at that time. nnu;:llm o admire them for their g body go0d, an’: :h;r-_ et e — acrobatic s and musical notes and ing' of good - CAN THE STATE STAND IT? | companionable disposition. Their mer- | o1¢ cipless under its mereiless blows. | jouen it s ard to romentber th - The ‘expense to the state of thi| X QUCKEICNS ta 5 Plestant sound M| . Sometimes this warlike foe turns Decoming i oo ears. dvte . than Hore's a Play that is‘well warth ase- proposed reduction of Working hours| jore notes fm mating time as “CmKINg | o priy ad il usual have we been favered with lec- ing. Nothing funnier . ever ~written. at its great charitable and humane in- | uilver.” One highly imaginative writer. b Don‘ttm'w ":. b 4 tures and musical _opportunities, . stitations fs to :e" a m:otler alk h;vem- saya the male’s plaint is “Sweetheart,] foeis an AR i e By Enough in these lines have U;‘::‘ e A Sure 1801, average . . gation.-, . unions ask for an eetheart.” ; 1 | forded us to ¢ e e e e homy to Tun | memories for the whole ygar, and our (b7 © will present Brandon Great Comedy ikt i} .!;Iil ! iLf i i an eight-hour day- at hospitals and g reaching it just in. ti tne Blues. 1905 svishen other institutions. At the Norwieh| Hew trus this is: “A little bit of| 55 meo It SRAshGd OUE Sf his gras ang | faith in_the 53 i T Bl - Hospltal for the Insane it is calculat-| Sleeting, a little bit of rain, the blue | twirlea away again, What more | Which shows itself in Iindly tIoPE SEW YOUR BUTTONS ed that it will cost $25,000 & year, at| DU Sky for greeting, and crocuses|iaughable sight than a smart-feeling, | Of others, is increased when We (o7 . BN S NS ON TIEY W’clok oar g least, to conform to the proposed| thrne w“”w%‘, — za"‘"‘m" fashionably-dressed = young =woman, ::::: tg'::e:&e;:lg:wu. ‘thought on UK WIGL A S FApOntiNE Sy Se -------- ee snow-white blooms were €| trying to cling with one hand to a 3 dents to clothing. s Ve - ’ change. Additional employes, addi-|south border looking up to the invit- | broad-brimmed hiat, whil the other is | the Dart of hose who brought them tiobal room for them and additional|ing sun, and although the temperature| vyiniy striving to carry a m d par- | here, mot simply for expense attending their maintenance| Went down 16 degrees below the freezing | Lol At the seme Hime. the Mutch Then 'to Gesend o« lonter lovel e o POLITICALLY MENACED COURTS | heside wages, Wil run up to fhat|Point and remained there for two ays, | wind i» doing his best to entangle het ; ; ¢ they stood there & ster do- litical air a_little? Isn't the water| |, o Fow states in New England have| smount. The inktitutions can con- | UE¥ S0l Juere I & TEUR Claster do”| foee in the folds of & clinging skirt | (. ction o litle less confusing than /Come an orget ur Troubles volitieally mengced courts. If the court | form to the requirements, but does|yoauty with which God had endowe a month ago? At any rate lét us ; appointments afe ot entside of politi-| the atate want to shoulder the addl-| them.’ The roas of the Gfarch winas| MAreh Wind does mot enoy SUCh | fiope so. Also lot us Hope that this The Laugh Wil Do You Good oal fafluence, politics is nsually s tional expense? There is no heart-|in the tops of the elms and the vibrat-| as I often am on & gusty March day! uproar of the elements may re'lu}f in respecting enough to keep itw hands| breaking complaint of overwork now |ing residences under the high wind calmer and sunnier d-y; iow;.avorf. off the judiciary that has come from the laborers in| Pressure bespoke the violence of the| | ges a areat oloud of dust coming|and in the -:leli'ktnxl‘r:ata‘ rw?m ot The political factions In this state| these institutions. All the same, lot| Sale, But they stood like the thresjtowards me with evil early spring on m - ode: ill be swept away. Already are warring in Hartford for the con- | S kn;-tvnm » facts iy the teport and ity i e R o S e ‘;&3"“";@% the: geese ate fiying northward, and trol of the city court judgeships and| know What the change may mean| ihem with beauty and protects them | ponent immodistely turns His Back and | the robin’s whistie R are showing up to the fullest cxgent|to the state.—Bridgeport Standard. from harm. Tt seems to me as if there 11 the of te quarter, and | birds and the flowers what & menace to decency and jus- — might be & Stil small voice 10 16 Tite | Loty o pain (o R e an inde. | their duty at Nature's call,” though tica irratfonal politics can be when| This i one illustration of the in-| tle flower which looks up to Heaven | pendent. swish, as much as fo say,|dsvs be cold and dreary. it e ovoked to change judgeships | crensed cost of things. If labor in| When tle earth is seer and brown and{ ‘wihought yYou had escaped that hand- o % 2 b public institutions is fo be increased| (e Winds are fouting the snow abot. | ful of dirt, idn't you? . Well, {ake this, | _Marchs battling winds will soon ve |} MATINEES BREED THEATRE merely for partisan reasons. (0 ther- | pasi ey ahould leave us readier oA A eourt whose judge has been madef 33 1-3 Der cent, why, the taxes ars is is an i e T e e bpearance, | than ever to help along the g0od work "":.' e s ag subserviemt to a political clique 18 & ::";n"o 7 :n :“ m:rm i omn:fl’itf:rhx; Edmn‘:(lin, and # doubtless has prompt- | when, beguiled by & lull in the gale, | of making this grand old world the 2 ERTGER | Plckurey farce upen freedom and justice. 3 thousands of souls to do lkewise: | we venture out thinking that the wind | best one yet. AN IDLER., c “The Two Reformations”—Western Some are openly, condemning | 48¥s must call for 10-hour wages ev-| “My rule is to go Tight forward in do. a with the sun. Nevet +his “m;l,q :nni astation ,: erything produced costs 20 per cent | Ing what appears to be right,” said he, JR8 gy s political power. and The Day glves| MOre and must advance 20 per cent. in| -leaving the consequences to Provi- - notice that wiile “the present legis- | the giarket. = These: concessions ta|fence’, But the worldly wise know|siorm: and the sense of supremacy it | difference in our own comfort it would o make! that this is not the custom among men, ” labor opeérate to raise prices exactl; sives the human soul must -be experi- N Imattar, That pubire opinion will scoe| 8+ excessive protection. o the memu-| o Loaand (Nt setfishness over ihinks | SC04 'to be undersiood. " Let's pretend that this world I8 2| ple of esch generatlon beliove Armiy| CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY, force the law malers of this state | Iacturer does. 1t is no new thing tof you.” is . the . sentiment Which has| ¢ W ptg g A | e e L With aispleton upen the oRsris of the e i tind ragh varnor. 1 - | have what seems to be a real blessing | grown ont of business life; and whila| M & man i W8 piety S “That doubt and trouble, fear and pain, e 4 AT haves dially invites i #ive the governo: P MWer. WO 0D Y o Gt 26 4 6 ‘Cutde this spirit was doubtless active a cen | ontiate he would not be human. ©| And anguish, all are shadows vain, | youniger people to settle certain issues cordially invites the Public to a Doist Sudgds of mindr courts, as-well ok ok e e tury and a half ago it had not gather- | 90 not know how miany religions there | iyt Geath iteelf shall not remain | for themselves They forget that the| : as of the higher tribunal A MAN WHO WILL are, for we have no necessity for any world grows day by day, that life t A On the facs of it to be surs, some| expands in evers aireotion -with tne | LOCIUIE Off things are very much awry in the| passing of eaeh hour.—Chdrleston | 1d: earthquakes, famine, wars, in- ews and Couri : ’ s . MISSED. | ¢d the boldness or frankness through o4 The fight 4t New Haven t, SEi Dbut the one which triés %0 express in "oln:u Uliman ;y ovm’l‘:rnowo:ugm:: T‘;{e Rev.llé. ds_ Kaufman, who last ;‘Tsnkxlig‘o-np‘:lhr:cc&lg :vh:-w :Izt{‘ls,":.nds ‘:: °‘mm!flz’9;l&mplu Mot:ghast. Wh‘:‘tl blé 4 man as Judse Mathewson is| Week concluded a pastorate of six|just as good for all time me ¥t was 3 et able L ewson is Seurs “’“eh the Tvinity, Mothodiot] when he':mcflc ed’it, for the abiding g;‘:‘.flantghfir ?ow it may be a::re;:ad‘ austrial strife, unreltflctoid lzgudmlmi Litt Orders for Wall Biieek Prof. HERMANN 8. HERING, C.S.B. e ek this i i church of 'this city, will b€ missed by | truth cannot be knocked out by senti- hat wubecribil * oth ‘bor, twelve hours & day in the steel 3 “‘éw,"dl N. H. ple in ng ssue and carrying o g creed and profession: is: en 5 gtlwes beréavement, fallures, injustices,| Perkaps J. P. Morgan told Wall 3% a fnish. Thare is one thing to| MADY friends and wcauatmtances of| LS Geria Gonscientiously dos | Eroconident that bellcf and faith are | iln, Geoin. It requires & bold and well | street how to cut up while he was | Hemer, of the, Christian = Scienco - t A th Nos ot o religious L e ] "t 3 - | sufficient; and main — ? 4 " ip, e rst e said about both thess gentlewien ing what is ight perfects the mosterly | TUNCHE BB S00 R . nap oy e ORI Church ot ‘Christ, Scientist, in Boston, It requires, indeed, something beside Mass. at the Y. M. C. A. Hall, ad'that 1o that thelr ongemie ey o] wus 4 Hibork! mindéd and open hinded| ™ \amit thelr honesty in all their trin-| MAN, Nobtrusive in manner, hut ever T e ettt | 2 ¥ et7s 1anp of Kb, LEGAL NOTICES magination, even a brave leap o . 3 5 but if we can somehow or other Monday, April 3rd, 1911, at 8 p. m. sactions. ready to co-operate in any good work. A bright western m er recently | {44, o chioned after the Master's. DA — through the use of imagination or of No cards of admission required. a faith or of both, come to believe that - S ————————————————mesey Miss Florence, Browne, Sopranc. Christian Science —by— There I8 no doubt the time is ripc | His able discourses; many of which | called the attention of his hearers to to be more confusion than to have the appointment of judges t | Were printed in The Bulletin, were|hc fact that the cellar of the mind ,“"’;'ez:,f;‘i g g g g ey 5 . ; ?| needs 1o be kept clean and well ven- all the eourts removed from the influ- | Te8d by people of all denominations; | p above all Nves was lived as &n eX- | aye, ~whole this good world, | “nces aad prejudices of partissnabip, | #nd We know that they made a deep| thisicd-oF 800d spiritual Health as|Zniie thae it might be emulated by | eer e OOl MR 16 & €000 NOLL L/ e g i e e * | and lasting impression upon readers| dwelling places for the continuance of | Men- It is mot nfc"flgmflf me or | shadow and the joy outwelghing the| Notice is hereby given that, pursuant| . _ THE COMING WOMAN. not of the Methodist faith. He was, physical health. He warned us to be- | 24V one else to point out the trus life, | 551y, we shall have another thrill of|to the order of the Count of Probate for & ¥. C. GEER I'he coming woman is to be a bus. | *C democratic in spirit. that he at-|Ware of the ideas which are naturally | for that has {’“;‘fl“‘f;}-. and those Who | hope and satisfaction in fife as we are Lho Diwcrist of Noful Stpnington, Con T iness woman, trained and finished, and| tracteR tho attention and good will of| Sour and the thoughts which ave fer- | {4 TR0 T hom: "They cried | Ppued, to live It day mlter ooy not| 191, I Will sell (and the samo iz sdver: UNER she promises {0 ha just as methodical | the Wworking classes, many of whop | Teniitons and ghe notions which do|1orq, Lord, but I knew them not” all S bialt. W are rieh, nearly every- | tised for sale) dn undivided hait inter- 122 P - e E o % e be ’ - 4 3 e farm and real es Wi rospect in the kitchen an in the counting room. | 1014 him in warm personal esteem. | uoc OUP WOL 15 Tore Bt to be cast Qo of U, either in heaith er youth or | 25 the Coats Blace smupiis pe | ¥ Tal B11. Norwisk Cb friends or oppertunities or self-mast-|liam H. Ceats at the time of his death, ery or faith. Multitudes of our fellow- | at th&ovlllt‘e of Nertih Stoningten, Only the bifnd und the ignorant| I frankness, kindly ways, readi-|jept in the cellar of the mind to defile s men are nice, and more would be nicer | said Town and Probate District, either ) IF YOU WANT A continue to talk of the inequality of| "e®S to lend a hand, and Christian up- | and irritate us. A clean mind is SUNDAY MORNING TALK \woman 18 the affalrk of life since siie| TEBtNEss ever commended him to all| heakthy and there is evers reason why ; s Ca e A slet : has competed in aimost every field of| —#S Thoreau puts it—Mr. Kaufman| we should be careful of the condition if we ‘thought them so. This is ael 08000 Ful Guye atter (his punit. FIRST CLASS PIANO, learning and industry and not only| W25 ‘Mot only good, but good for|Oof the mind as well as of the condi- = good a ‘l"" % our characters, for | Sition, or thereatter.’ Said premises get .a SHONINGER through sclence and invention. i mind that being zood was man's| to ;. IS evil thinking which prompts THE FUN OF PRETENDING. ing for another and| hearing and .ofder, at the Probate Of- 45 South A St, Taftville. to crime and excessive drinking which s T ok ovin ihis poor’ o1d | Ace I satd DIgve wH New the Boston Globe calls atten-| MOSt glorious task, and he was ever| aqq i ” 5 3 o e - tom to the fact that sbout 7060 | 2bout his Master's business. Senmes e careiosn-and dcnudey boui| “Lets pretend that it ia a dress” mest of whom are girls—of the 9000{ VWi he has departed, there is no| These, like most other irreguiarities, | Says little Miss Four Winters, when pupils in Boston high schools are tak-| 90UPt the seed he has sown here will | are preventable; and a consciousness | her dolly's dress is missing, and she Ing & eommerciai course indicating| ShOW fruitage for years to come; for | o7 this fact will be a help toward mak-{ jays her dimpled hand upon Angelina’s that the mothers and homekeepers of | 19 has shown many that “life has no| qugio g pan ioternally sweet and eter-| ;uiqiqq wrap, compeiling it to do duty the aext genersilon will for the mout | Plesaing like » prudent triend.” S for the time being as a dress. To be part be bookkespers and stenogra- r. jufman will carry with him to wouls v Tharare By me merns, Ta (eenBTA | iy mew Aeld the. Kindiioat wimey o | I or 2re altogether too many of us | sure it a Lot demv“- any m;mmc are only o small fraction of the total| 31l Who knew him; and The Bulletin | he is Door company, a butter-in and | aind. bor i iie maiote S b m".’&fi satien number of girls in all the schools of | Pespeaks for him in his'new appoint- | maker of trouble. You have heard| fied. Blessed be imagination, particu- Roston, most of whom ‘will be spared| Ment thé sime recosnition and muc.|folks talk about being borm with a|lasly ohildish i ation! ~ How it the course of “intensified commercial| ¢¢®s Wwhich has marked his six years| QUick-temper: snd it would have been | leaps over difficultfes and transports just as true had they said they were| the one who experfences it into an- lct. diseased, sin-stricken world of ours is| D8ted at Nerth Htonington, the 31st 4 rapidly becoming bs(,!llz 5 day of March, g}}x‘xm Sl il aprid Wxecutrix. . Politeness. GEORGE A. PENDLETON..Auctloneer The decay of French politeness has become a subject for passing concern on the part of the French themselves. ea"m' an er It has been frequently remamked by visitors to France, who have alleged 3 ] n French manmers within the| By order of the Court of Probate for The same| the District of Norwich, T will sell at 157 Franklin St. alleged of | Public Auction on nd, Scien- WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 1911, Su"‘s PMSSE“ 5uc imstruction” whic o - | of. labor here. I the et propheed tor-the o00. | ; i SR OIS, born with 8, veakc will, but perhaps | ofher roim, into ail the fove of belng | tflc metcorologists pooh-pooh thls. at 10 o'clogk 2, m ¥ v 3 e 0 80U as wel own up with none of the ns! = at the residence of the late Albert H. ut the purpose of 7,000 giris to fit EDITORIAL NOTES. to say this. Quick-tempered is @ £00d| = Pretending with & view <o ecelv-| question for climate to be materially | Bition ‘deceased. aituared i mile touen| OUF Wagnn Galls Everywhere themselves for business rather than| The Texas, which was used for a|name for the invisible savage: or re-|ing others is, of course, aitogether|affected except by imperceptible pro-|of Bethel church, Town of Griswold, . for home Ilife," #ays The Globe, “is| lATRet the other day, cost four and a| teliation: or any of the other words| reprehensible; pretending with & view | cesses requiring iges to_show results.| the following described propert wignificant of the great cMange tha:| balf milions 16 years ago Which represeiit mean or discreditable | to deceiving one's self concerning real- | SO as to politeness in France; some| Parcel, the home place, ong story and within & vary few yours bas taken Sty A qualities. The invistble savage is ex-|ities likely to result disastrously, as|contend that the change is more ap-| L, oy, o2’ 05i1" 125 acres, more or e place in the relation of Woman to the| - The closing days of March showed|Ics3ed In the acidities of Tife; and|seme have found out who lingered so| parent than real. t of those tak- | BIMIdIqES, ®ith Ao0 Aores, e 100utin 408" o o] At ABril wee wiline & "o | some folls never feel ashamed of these | long under the delusien that nothing| Ing part in the controversy insist or| w. Second parcel, 16 commercial word—a o Willing to come halfway | qualities which make them less than | ailed them and thut they did not need | admit it to be fact. These urge that of woodland, situated pne. change te Which seciety is hut slowly | to meet her windy predecessor. what they were designed to be; and|medicine or the surgeon’s knife. But) the. causes be identified and correc- mHe south of the home plac udjusting iteelt. Inevitably it will con. —_ which Just sour their own life ana mar | pretending when nobody else is really | tives applied. There is @ disposition, il DR o e W timue to affect legislation. Inevitably After April 12th baseball fans can| the lives of others. There is nothing| deceived, when you yourself are not f’t course, to attribute it to women,| 2370 0 mowing, pastura and woodland, it will alter the whole aspect of Am- | cheer themselves hoarse all day. and|lIK® Deing sweet and keeping sweet; | harmed, pretending with a view to eas- | “especially elegant wemen, whose ill-| 5% gyt Griving horges, 1 cow, 2 two or erican life. Inevitably it will tend to| Mave verbal scraps every evenin: gt iR e R o R LT TR L b B e BT I R T L aihce Al Polticl and. oo 2 o 8. ble savage rising up in you whenever | romantic halo around everyday ob- | submits. sh with lambs, 1 shoat, 35 hens. 3 3 économic in- When Chi adversity appears or disappointment | jects and people—that is worth while., Is the matter worth serious consid-|light wagons, 1 lumber wagon, 1 equality between the sexes—the anti- pen China gets up to date she will | confronts you. The invisible savage|We sober. prosaic, matter-of-fact peo- | eration? — Or, rather. should not the | horse mowing machine, 1 horss rake, 1 suffragists to the contrary nothwith- | know that ultimatums are good to|should be scalped and made an end of. | ple, who in childhood could see visions | Symptom be welcomed? 1Is not polite- eI SRR L L standing. And they may as well with. | WCK into official pigeonholes and for- CspeanoT and dream dreams, but who long ago | ness itself a symptom of decay, like the 1 ladder. 1 iron 40-gallon " draw their opposition first as last” get. 3 , The woodsrien! gns of spring and | lost the magic wand that transmutes| beauty of old cathedrals, the mellow- | poiler, 1 lot of lumber, Z sets of har- ,,,,, v e iy . - S o weather are always interesting.’ Per- | disagreeable thiffgs into something fine | Dess of long-stored vintages, or the|ness 1 sleigh, 1 pair of wheels, lot of The baseball season in obening d | . If #ome Norwich men were estimiat-{haps you remember the old rhyme|and fuir—we are the people who need|art of telling the truth? Man in aold fron, and pther articles too numer- most promisingly. At Bridgeport last| 84 DY thelr frontage as real estate is { ¥hich runs: “If the oak precede the| to Play the game of pretending every | natural state is not remarkable for|OUg [0 BCRWICH: , personal property. . geport las . p ol AT Mo Tittle while. g00od manners and will lie cheerfuily: i Saturday, the injuries in the first game| IeIF Value would be considerably ad- . We shall have both rain and B That school which holds that the de-| foimS on real estate will he made of ' th < vanced. 5 splash; if the ash precede the oak, we ~d -~ S B e de-| known at the time of sale. o meason wers a broken arm, a shall Have both fire and,smoke; but if| Let’s pretend that we are rich. Let's | C2dence of a people may be traced by | 1t said day be siormy. sale will take dislocated shoulder, fwo split fingers, | - - they both ceme out tepether, we shall| drop into the tourist agen observing its cultviation of :the Babit|place next:falr weekaay. . - s oy 3 D 5 cy on our : S . ;. n fractured jaw, and a dislocated | -A Harvard professor sass that one-| then have lovely weather.” ' We city | way home and load oursélves up with | of telling the truth = would probably| .., - H- FRANK BUTEON, .In view of the discovery of thuthb. half the cost of living is in the glass]| folks do mot have an oppertunity to| timetables and itineraries to all parts 2 "T = and metal the mercHantable gonds arel MOt the movement of the trees, but | of the werld, then let us @et out the ) s In the same way significant, if & lags | e | 3, ' many neéw brooks about Where does faSanchusett he| PUt UD in since this rhyme hes stoed for centu-| maps and one or two good hooks of | Imbortant barometer of failing physical “Be pleasant until ten c'ziock 4 a8, thet BAHSEY BpOLt 10 S T P ke B L e ris it ic probable that the couniry|cravel and fancy we are on the rail- | #nd intellectual virlity A rebust en-| . "Bo BUCTE U (50 fest’ot | Norwich, all’ of which are At Ml e o S TR % i . {Dpeople do observe these significant va- | road from Cairo to the Cape, or sicirt- Y e Rt pduette.—| the day will take care of itse'f.” 3 % cities over 50,000 Inhabitants, and nmot| Providence is to spread $20,000 worth| riations of nature. It was Izaac 'Wal- ! ing the lower stretches of the Himals- | Charieston News and Courfer. y —Hubbara. | said -to contain trout, we for the other places? That did not| °f Ol upon forty miles of macadam!ton who wrote: “When the Wind is in| yas, or climbing the Andes. Whet's the| ° 2 R T T \ X . come from the Pilgfim Fathers. rogd. this sumter, so satisfied is she| the east 'tis neither d for man nor harm? Th'a methed avelds all the Adapting Ourseives, . It's easy to greet the new day with ! haue gtocked up with a fufl 3 - with ‘previous experiments. beast; when the wind is in the north, | annoyance of travel and secures some| A source of much unhappiness to the| & Smile when you can have the morn- & 3 ae BAREL B e L e kit L . 1 the sidiiful fisher goes not forth; when | of the advantages, which those who| men and women of mature years lies| I08 bath room as luxuriantly warm as| oy, Jing of -k " n s e | e of T the wind is in the south, it blows the| travel at a breakneck pace from point| in their refusal to meet hew copdi-|th® air of the tropics. Why take ? ers of an inch thick, it is cal- of Texas has ad-|bait in the fish's mouth; when thel to peint are likely to overlook. Lets| tions. Many persons get into a rut,| Chances of having the temperature of culated that 25 days in jall is time| JOurned without daing any harm, and{ wind is in the west, then 'tis at the| watch the other rich people a8 they| as it were, and content Hiemaeives with | your bath, dressing or dinine rooms . ] enough for the enormity of hig speed papers. are calling aitention to the| Yery best’—and the wise fisherman | roil to and from on the avenus in their | simply jogging alomg at & comfertable | Delow the safety point, knowing as you mania to sink through it. thgnkful #pirit of the people. does not think of violating the order | equipages, just as the old bookkkesper | pace, They feel that the paths they so_ Well 'ths vAKIADIsHAN Jof |6Gh N e e ‘urtls’ “Prue and | have walked for probably the grestér] New England winter weather. A Lot 7 of this rhyme, even unto this day. in George Willlam Ci 3 o ’ < T I” watched the lordly Amelia as she| part of their lives belong to th DORLESS Happy thought for today: To bump he Portland Express says “It is| The gospel of ence might be| went to and from. the ball and followed 5’5.2.. . '-urvve:ya ot Tt sr:mi.;:: VULCAN 0 up Sgainst the ether fellow's’ co: not-a it 1o early fo get out the ‘fish-| preached contintiously with © Wea : ] ' great| her tn his fs through the e are now re to often has ah awaneing effect upon the | \ng tetkls and see that it-is in-condi- profit, for it is = promoter of peace| of th: n'hxl:fi thro\':t.h all tm ‘a: fln:': e;;e:::.:bn":“:e?d?é. t’z?y l::f GAS .HEATER My often has.un awalkening effect upen| tion for those Sebugo salmon.” and an establisher of pleasant rela-| teresting experiences that take place| sent what they regard as tréspassing|ifsures you all the heat you want and i demonstrate. e Al % tions. Knowing when to keep still is| within grand houses. on their property and decline to adapt|Just when you want it.. The fl'n plm . . 00 the bumper, - - s g lt Y fow persons Kugwn to| kRowing when and how to win @ bles Let’s pretend that ell the pegple we| themselves to the new conditions, Life|catries the fuel, ne can to il % i got or ‘diphthéria from Klssing | M6 i#s 8. Certrude Cooley sang| know are nice. That-ap) t -{is an ing problem:it 'to spill. Get one today and make this < o Aty miemeen nan dust married| G o i v ane i | Sheeuy Wotn ShC petmed his: “TUS| ot i our foHow Stk hat. sk ot | Snks e phascs Fok SoucMaFikion 3t | fhe Mgt Comioriabia wikier ot 7our The e C. ¢ | B lence, urtesy almos! ungues- b P w courtship of 33 years. It will take| T°X/WhBteVer the doctors may say.. | the power of the auiet and whis to| the ces th beorption own 1n- | tonabiy meny of i ':g:u- luiti- | bouse heaters are rarely working. at him sonie tline (o got acqusinted With| Tne Choees Bries fo babn sheq] LIFD frOM Hiws‘Turmoll and worry: to Geion Tmately reseivg thempeives Inte. oid ja-| tisfactor, eMclency In_ the’ earl 5 J e, (ST i . P ribune has Bebn susd} khow, and to work. and e stil”* The rwhy thuse afe ‘Teal Sues under different forms sl there| BOUDS of the day. We have these | | d g e R T Mg i e | Rt et s Aptate o 1n e sutpls s it | & Mirays omoush oyelty Soeut them | ad fheo cacs, hishest duailty. tubing \ ' F; 4 1 as- t] e - s E: 5 done " Comy e o e & peslslature only | g "expectsd to refer fo % mameé of] the blood is hot and speech is ABt to| SRt which now s Intades And| tone to soit that S, e Wy | L S4T per foot, :fyel "1\"" » pany eeds one sessfon’ b ®e scathing and, perhaps,. irtational.| centrols thess le, but which thev| pose that each generation which hag| C9%t of labur and materlal. By 5" e It is under high pressure that the old | themselyes woukl be #& gisd to be rid | preceded us was calledt upon in turm T 129 Mata Streei, Norwich, Cons. ] Ty e o T et T | 02 D2 T Bt S g Y | 2B SO Gy of Nerwich (| ‘ A plumber has’ been ted te the|tion of it under like conditions. o Sk ; . " R g K e 1 of: A PG ST o O 0| SRl i, R T e e Rt e s i Ty f sitien but- which arose feor #on frem time to time under aspeuts. owkle is that, Jn the senate might stop those execus ent promotive of a spirit of love—te | tably as w session leaks. an_rog.igoio\mn hMMM :-fi:‘g;: