Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, April 15, 1911, Page 4

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e by Hetin Bar iletin Job fl ] l& 1901, average 1005, average . April 8, ournal-Courl m' of the club inary opportuni. R he is d have done’ his work kept in advance of in_his.cap” 1 upon his head severe crit- ential opposition; but is heard, and Mis layouts are many of his defamers ac- knowledge their error and become his ds. - #The Journal-Courier says: “Mr. MacDonald has adhered to cer- tain fundamental principles of road buflding and it would now appear that in deing so. he has earned the support of the automobilists. “We are glad of the opportunity to note this vote of confidence in Com- missioner MacDonald. He is entitled to have it spread upon the newspaper records and thereby derive such ad- vantage as may flow from it. We have no knowledge of Governor Bald- win's intentions in the matter of Mry MacDonald’s successor, but we can imagine in the case of any governor that the task of finding a better equipped men than the present com- missioner weuld be a mest difficult one.” It would be a real loss to the good roads interests of Connecticut to have a new man given charge of such an impertant and well designed and well forwarded enterprise, which shows ef- ficleney for the -Whole fourteen years of the cemmissioner's service. JANITORS UNDER SUPERVISION. In these days there is no defence for filthy school houses, but where polities plays a part in public school life there never fails to be gross in- efficiency displayed somewhere. A true bill has heen found against the Prespect street school, at Bridge- port, as a dirty place, and The Stan- dard says: But witk sand so plenty and soar ——————————— THE MAIL OWDER CATALOGUE. The mail erder catalogue is about a8 thorowkhly circulated in the homes of tl country as the seed catalogue: al are filled with pleasing pic- tul of geods offerad at attractive prices, and the amowat ef business done in New England citlés by reputa- ble flsms of distent cities is surpris. ing and a parcels pest would not tend the business much. to i ‘r£ way to keep business at home is dume ag the way to astract it to distent pgimts—get into the het n}fiy the trade ad- \'x cireular or pamphlet which the stery ef sargaims in an attractive, way. When thete,are no euts used im these gues, seme eme of ability the Sabrics so perfectly that thie veader can imagiwe not only their loveliness, but the real bargain that in being o But after all the home stove Where fhe goeds can be seen and earefully examined is the pre- ferred place te geot goeds—the place where a guaranty is always expecte The grest mumber of orders these foreign catalegues draw out shews what can be done, against the handi- caps of dlstance and public suspicion by terse, straightforward, conversa- tional description of goods, plus state- ment of prices, The Wome merchant can get and hold all this trade iIf he will proceed in the same painstaking methods to hold it that distant mewchants employ 1o take it away from him. NO SIGNS OF IMPROVEMENT. ‘The first decade of the present cen- tury ave 2 inches below the - 80 the loss for the ten years was 42 inches, or about the nor- mal rainfall for a, full year. New we learn from New York that Vhe rainfall for the first three months » W11 is lower than last year. The New York Sun says: e first qua ler of the year 1911 was the driest n weather buseau records.” To quote Fhe Sun: “The year 1910 was the driest in this neighborhood in the resord of the weather burean except one, 1885, when the precipitation, in- cluding melted hail, rain and snow was 35.73 inches. The moisture short- age that sent the reservoirs away down in 1900 and damaged the creps of nearby Long Island and New Jer sey farms was only a quarter of an inch mere than that of 1895 and was 8.65 Inches below the normal. Unless the bumgs of J. Pluvius' empyrean hogsheads are knocked in pretty soon the water famine this year may be oven worse than last or the ybar be- fore. ‘At Present, that is, from January ! until this morning, there is a short- ige of 2.64 inches as compared with the normal fall. At the same period Jast year the pracipitation was only t 08 than nermal. Forecaster James H. Scarr says the last three months make the driest continuous period of its length in the history of weather bureau here, or since same authority says: “The ainfall this year, judging from pres-, ent indigations and past perform- n will be from 5 to 10 per cent Jess than last year. In Ohio, a local option law has been ssed with reference to Sunday sames, and in future the common ceuncils of the cities will settle the wuestidn. Patities will fix it J. Bestwick, a Standard Oil million- aire, has with him abroad.five gov- two nurses, twe chauffeurs maid, a doctor, three banjc 75 trunks. twentieth-century observer “ays the reason the straight way is narrow is because there is never any danger of straight business becoming congested. ers, and Keen A Danville, I, man has been ar- rested for mansiaughter. on the aevi- denco furnished by the hoofs of his hy Circumstantial proof is won- derful. The Charleston, S. ., News says: “When a man goes up to New Hamp shire to selze an opportunity, he finds that every teacher up there.thinks she is one. Happy thought for today: The rea- son men have more temptations than wognen, says a near-philosopher, is hecause they know where to look for themn. . It is pleasant to think that it is Afty vears since Fort Sumter was fired upon. We are glad the five years that followed it are ancient history. | Guzetty so cheap the effective remedy should be applied and janiters should be held responsible fer the proper doing of the work. Judge Wheeler's sugges- tion that the janitors be put under the control of the superintendent of bufld- ings is a good one and they and he should be held to a strict acconnt for conditions, What is a janitor of a public school for, any way? After this shaking up by Judge Wheeler, for which all the people are indebted t« him, we shall probably have a sharper lookout at Prospect street school, and doubtless elsewhere, also.” If there was always striot super- vision over the jamitor there is no doubt the work would be better done everywhere. Bridgeport is not alone in such negligence of duty as this. NOT PRIVILEGED NUISANCES, There is a movement on foot in Rhode Island to put a legal check up- on the autemobiles which pour forth a volume of malodorous, preventable smoke, and keep it up as an evidence of the slouchiness and inefficiency of the driver. There is an effert being made there to amend the automobile law se that there will not be an unreasonable amount of smoke from any motor vehicle on the highways where the territory con- tiguous thereto is closely built up. The Providence Journal says upon this proposed addition to the law: “The majority of cars cause very little but some discharge as much smoke as a large chimney; and because of its pungent odor this smoke is more offensive than that from soft I. Smoke indicates that the motor needs attention, and the chauffeur who does not ecomply with the terms of a reasonable law should be compelled to do se or to find another occupation The public has endured motor-car smoke long enough.” - This bill is supported by the Rhode Island Automobile club, the League of Improvement Societies of Rhode Is- Jand, and the law department of the city of Providence. The Journal says: “The gegecal assembly will make no mistake ip passing the amendment desired.” EDITORIAL NOTES. The Canadians claim that the only fiag trade follows is the one that ‘the ductioneer carries. ‘The chronic worrier just worries when everything is all right for fear that it will not keep so, The ice has gone out of 7!;19 Peneob- scot river and the salmon fishermen are thinking of the sport ahead. — e Queen Mary's coronation trail is to be 18 feet long, When it comes to ex- tremes the harem skirt is not so awful bad, The way champagne is being poured out in France indicates that the price of that which remains Is likely tg soar. e e A democratic exchange says that if some of the B's are not run out of the democratic party it is going to get stung. The farnfer who lets the robins beat him getting up in the morning is the one who finds most fault with the busines There are other men besides Lori- mer who are sweating because they appear to be in danger of being fully found out. The state of Georgia has gained 49 per ceut. in manufactures in the past| five years. This is a good indication of industrial growth. “Leeb at the Custom House of New York,” is spoken of as a fine 0ld pic- ture that has cost the wealthy smug- glers a million and a quarter, The Russian douma votes ten times pesaimists. keep tasti; as much for naval vessels as for edu- cation, and they think they are break- ing down autocratic tyranny. No Reason to Brag. Judge Colt has just decided a case 28 years in the United States courts, yvet we smile superior when we think Al)‘! .'ll:l'ndyco vs. Jarndyce.—Boston erald. When the Tears Began te Flow. The grief that Senator Bailey's res! nation didn’'t cause is commensurate only with the grief his withdrawal of it did,—Richmond News-Leader. A Golden Glow. The Horrible discovery that J. Peir pont Morgan owns Mexico goiden glow to the picture.—Pittsburg A western A W = lea thn‘ man who sees the ‘things in the fruit and | his time: This is a much better a nition ‘than that the optimist 1s the man who sees the doughnut and the pessimist the man who only sees the hole. It is a good thing that we can- not tell what is going to be always, from what is; and itis a -blnu&;hiut to have an eye of faith that olds the promising and the beautiful in: stead of the depressing and fear creat- ing. Mr. Grouch and Mr. Grump, and Mr. Glare and Mr. Snob and Mr. Snub ‘were never born, for they are the crea- tion of an evil conceit; but the world could not get along without them— they are examples warning men not to copy them; and most of us know & peril when we see it. Emerson said that the only test of government is the kind of men 1t pro- duces. Measured by this test, muni- cipal government in New England is immediately found wanting, for under it half the’'population is found to be asleep and’a large part of the remain- der somewhat dazed, This is what makes the new government by com- mission idéa take so; but is that like- ly to produce any better men? Is it likely that a system which lessens the in public life and less frequent will pro- mote democracy? It has be said that those who govern most make the least noise; and the same thing may be said of those who steal most. If the only cure for democracy is more democracy then the trend of. today is away from that equality of which Americans like to boast. Government which depends upon flattery of the pesple instead of upon their ability is @ cheat and a snar You may not have thought of it, ‘but the thing that makes life commo; and cheap and wretched is—you! Love attracts love, and misery misery, in this world. Like attracts llke, and there is where the student is sure to find the affinities, although some peo- ple think there is no such thing or condition. If what you put into life regulates what you are getting out of it, what you are getting out of it cannot be very creditable to your sense or judgment: and the fuss you are making about it is humorous to an intelligent observer, of course. If you could see this you would do different, vou think, this moment—do different and you will soon see it as clear as crystal. There is no mentality more befogged than that which can see but will not. It is vanity that makes life ocommon and cheap and wretehed—not the good and the true! It is a vain ambition to want things one cannot have—it a good ambition to aim to achieve them. Get on the ri, side of your proposition and it will make to you all the difference in the world. You do not think this is a crazy old world if it does constantly look for things where they are not to be found, even after being told. The pursuit of happiness is one of the fool pursuits of all the ages. Happiness cannot be pursued, for it is a state af mind de- pendent upon your view of things, or freedom from fear and anxiety, mat- ers over which you have command; and yet, happiness will sometimes come over a person suddenly under the worst of conditions because of some unexpected good turn, just as it mind and conditions had very little to do with it. It is really considered an impertinence to say to a person: “Are you bappy?’ This, of course, is be- cause so many are not happy, I heard an old-fashioned person declare that “happiness was just a happenstance!” ‘What do you think of that? The way to get most happiness out of life is to set the heart upon good things, and to give as little thought as possible to such things as disturb the mind, There are too many people who are really ashamed to be known as eco- nomical; and a senseless practice of the present day is the aping of pdo- ple of larger means by those of less ability. It does not take long for a person in this world to discover that appearances are among the most de- ceptive things. Too many people lik to appear what they know they are not. Few people realize that to prac- tice economy, and to do it well, is more than accomplishment—it is an art. It is true that saving money for the mere purpose of gloating over it, a dwarfing and senseless practice: but the denying of one’s self little pleas- ures now to provide better advantages and greater pleasures for others later on in life is a fine and praiseworthy achievement. Do not be afraid to be prudent, for it is the imprudent who make mischief in all the walks of life. April is upon us and the day of bet- ter things is not far off. The month was not belied by the poet who Wrote “When April one day, was asked whether she could make reliable weather, she laughed till she cried, and said: “Bless you, I've tried, but the things will get mixed up together.” She has greeted us this year with a cold glare: but it is likely that the hot dave will come all at once, we know not how, and we shall look for shade from the heat when there is not @ leaf on a bough. We get the bluet and the violet in April, and they are both symbols of promise; and the grateful robins are singing up the sun in the morning and closing the day with ‘their sweet melody at evening. And here is Easter in April this year, the day on which the sun is said to dance. When April blows his horn it is said to be good for hay and corn. | of the family came home from church is | and | more joy than she had thought would ‘greatest femtival P delight to ?r' ‘which she others. - “good= cal to ~Her n:zln(' at the church = door, still rings in my. ears, accompanied Haster by ‘“He is risen!” the Lenten season of preparation had been profitably spent by her, and her joy culminated on this day and showed itself in every line of her smiling face. How hard it was for her to he kept_from it all, we less devoted ones could not understand. Lylng on_her bed, she pletured to herself the u(ht& the flowers, the va- rious hangings ahd decorations of the altar and jts surroundings, and her heart sank within from sadness, and ‘her eyes-filled with tears at the vis- ion, Rousing herself from her reverie, she determined to find joy for someone else, if there was to be none for her. “I cannot go to church on h&: day,” said she te a care-worn mo in her neighborhood, “but leave your little one with me, and go yourself. “She will be too much for you, I fear,” was the reply, “though your offer is very kihd and a great tempta- tion, I admit.” & ‘Not at all,” was the answer. “We'll consider. that settled, then,” and al- ready she felt repaid by the grateful look which brightened the tired face of the over-worked mother. Easter morning opened bright and clear, for the great feast came later than usual that year, and the sunshine seemed to have entered her heart and soul and reflected itself on all who came within her influence. , Early in the day came a box of flowers from one who remombered those who were kept in on that day. These were followed by a pot of daf fodfls from another, so that she felt that part of Faster joy was in being remembered by others. She had borne in previous years an active share in it. Now she was to know the pleasure of receiving from others. Many Easter cards had arrived for her the previous day, but all had been laid aside to be read today; and the thoughts thus ex. presséd were sufficient to fill her mind with food for contemplation during the entire day. When the other membery they found her in a happy, contented frame of mind,, ready to enjoy. their description of all tl had seen and heard. Much of the h's devotion had been at hand for her reading, and though not with the worshippers in bodily presence, she had joined with men of this sort are the ones who get oftenest together. The worst man is not the man who looks the worst or who talks the worst or who seems to have the worst habits, or who has the worst reputation—he is ghe slick fellow | who has repute for honesty and good habits when he has neither; the fel~ low who conceals himself with the garb of piety when he is doing thines to injure his fellowman—doing things to sap the very foundations of the state. SUNDAY MORNING TALK TERMINUS OR GATEWAY. Life and death, two great realities, one no more aveidable than the other, although some people think they can keep death at bay by teking a journey to another clime or by employing phy- sizlans and nurses. Life and death, two constant neigh- bors, always in the sharpest contrast, We have our cemeteni great anq small; but these ‘“cities of the dead” are not the only places.touched by the angel of death. You come out of your heme on a bright spring morning in perfect health, leaving your dear ones well and happy. You walk down the street blithely, with keen antici- pation of the day's work, when your attention is suddenly arrested by the sight of crape on your neighbor's deor bell. You draw back with a shudder, feeling at first as if there was Some. thing incongruous with the brightness of the morning in that bit of crape, that signal of sorrow 'and bereave- ment. But one learns as he grows older to reckon upon the.presence of death in places where it would be ordinarily un- anticipated and at times when th suddenness of the exparience strik like a knife to the heart. So it com about that there is no phrase mo: | frequently on the lips of some persons than this: “In_the midst of life we are in death.” It is never 5o far off as | to become altogether unfamiligr. It steals in upon us through avenues we had thought barricaded against it “O_mother, praying God wil] save Thy sailor, while thy head {8 bow'd, His heavy-shotted hammock-shroud Drops’ in his vast end wandering grave.” Life and death, two great mysteri one really no more a mystery than t other. For who has measured_the heights and depths of living? Who really knows what life itself is, whence it comes, what it is for, into what it |18 capable of being developed, what its i This is a checkered month, but as a forerunner of better and brighter day it will hold a warm place in the hu man heart. Tt is a sort of John the Baptist month—a preparer of the wa: surprising how few people thereé ho can.properly define scandal: It is telling a great deal that is not 8o about an acquaintance just as if you really knew that it was so. It §s often the result of hearing too much and thinking too little and being too volu- ble. A bright little woman says acandal is what's said about vou— news, what fs said about the other fellow. Those who dote upon know- ing the privacies of life seem too capa- ble of originating the whys and ‘where- fores, and when they are exchanging confidences, how they do get the real and the imaginary mixed up. It is a &ood thing that no one ever knows one-hundredth part of what is being said about him in a quiet and whis- pered way. This in confidence: How the world does exchange matter not fit to print, when heads get together, Of course, it always has, and it may not be too much to say that it always will Scandal appears to Le the natural pro- duct of our own acts magnified to suit the fancy of a large and interested constitiency. It is charitable to think that the world cannot help it: and there isn't a single indication that it wants to. When | read: “Some men never get into such bad company as when they are alone,” I corfless I wondered if it was possible for me to be in that class; because if I figured myself as being in that class, [ should feel it was time to resolutely go about sgetting out of it. We all must recognize that a man all by himself is mighty bad company at best. We are no incent- jves to oursel A man whe flocks by ‘himself all the time is very much like a stick in an eddy is just turning upon an unstable center. Tha man who is! in the worst company lends a( when he is alone is net a geod man | blv. feels deeply to associate ‘with except for mission- ary work; and it seems to me that hidden resources, what its ultimate: Jestiny? _Death js a different kind of | mystei but both 1ifs and death are | often baMing, bewildering, staggerins. i That is, they seem thus to us if we | have never found the keys to either | mystery. Little bits of steel, notched here and there, open the ponderous | doors of otherwise impregnable safes. {So an idea, a hope, a visiom, appar- | ently at the first look inslgnificant, if | cherished and used,’swings baek at least a little way the doorg that guard the mysteries of both living and dying. The key to life is made up of two ele- ments, love and service. The moment one begins to love and serve, many of | the tangles around human existence | vanish, The key to the mystery of | death is faith which learns to gonk» upon dying as a mere incldent, not as | the end of a long, perhaps weary or | perhape joyous road. On the contrary, | faith looks upon death as a gateway | into a larger, richer life. No one can| reach that realm of ampler existence without passing through this gateway, but faith dwells lefs on the passage, which may take but an instant of time, than upom the eternity of joy and fe- licity which awaits the redeemed soul. Faith voices its Easter song Iin the sweet belief of Whittier: “That death is but a covered way, ‘That opens into light, ‘Wherein no child of God can stray Far from ths Father's sight.” . 8o if death be not the terminus of life, but the beginning of the best kind of life which we can pogsibly con- caive ,it pays to begin and relate one’s existence here to one’s existence be- yond. _"Prepare to meet thy God" was the sign that -the Salvation Army soldiers used to paint on the recks aleng the highways, The solemn admonitien may he narrowly interpreted, but it contains A great truth. . As Jowep Ceok once remarked: man te be hlxn, ,in heaven must have a heavenly ming on|val was strictly a religious ?l'le. and them tn mind and spirit, and her sense of lonelines; ve way to ome of "M. v;;lfim more uvor'_fi i ‘The mother clai her home-coming tha: fully for the kindness shown that a warm feeling of appreciation added to the happiness of the invalid, and she found that the day had been one of be. ible for her. m;:ld not go fim to find Easter its observance was confined to a few churches, whose jey in it was In- creased by the devotion and self-de- nial of the previous Lenten season. Now-a-days all denominations have some special plan of study and work uring Lent, and vie with each othe: in celebrating Easter day with appro- priate services and bheautiful decora- tions. This means progress, for so beautiful -a custom cannot spread too generally or be too well observed. But can we feel the same about the prusent practice of turning the day almost entirely into a soclal holiday? How ought we to feel about the Easter parade as occurring in larger com- munities? These parades seem to be entirely devoted to the display of fine clothes. There is an element of right feeling in wearing one’s best to places of worship; the common clothing of everyday wear may well be replaced by apparel of finer sort, for nothing is too good for the house of worship, but there the line should be drawn be- tween showy attire worn for vanity sake, and dainty apparel to show ap- preciation of the da Easter offerings formerly meant gifts for God's service, and were the result of much forethought on the part of the giver. They represented self- dendal and devoted work from many a faithful believer, lwb!nfi forward to the joy of bringing an Faster gift to the great feast. t what do we see { “Haster offerings” are adver- 1 by all classes of merchants, and include eatables and drinkabl, fine clothes, boots and shoes, ‘hats and wns, candies and tabloe accessories, Rfin‘ real significance of the day is lost ‘in the social merry-maki at. tendant upon it. A time of joy it cer tainly is, and all things should unite in making joyous, but the plea I want ke this: Let not turn our o nothing better than opportunities for showy display and mercantile greed. The trend of the time gppears to be towards flippancy and# irreverenc | I i Those who are sincely attached to their religious belief must try to hold fast that which is good, 5o that the more | careless will derive from them a better sense of the real meaning of Easter ¥ AN IDLER. Glorious indeed it ia'to seek to live constantly as He lived whose rising from the dead Christendom celebratas oda) 5 THE PARSON. y. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Questions Werthy of Notice. Mr. Bditor:—The points raised by N. B. Williams in his letter to The Bulletin of April 12 are worthy of no- tice, He says, in part: “Mr. Editor: If there was a law for- bidding any one visiting the North pole, is there any such evidence that Peary ever saw it, as to lead to his conwviction? * * = ¥ If not, was it wise for congress to make him rear admiral at a salary of $6,000 a year for life? If.not a beneflt and stimu- lated no one to pursue the cause of right, why should congress pass the resolution?—N. B, Willlams."” B The above naturally turns one’s thoughts to morals, on a large scale. But, dear Mr. Willlamis, what could congress do to satisty, politically, the “club” friends of Peary, when they (like the man who whipped his moth- er-in-law) pleaded extenuating cir- cumstances, but with an_ apology for causing him trouble, rush through a sort of hothouse forcing and fix Peary up & box hermetically sealed with a | cover of glass so he can'sce through it and be sure it is there all right, a ‘tious food and the most dainty and delicious. BAKIN( POWDER Absolutely Pure The only Baking Powder made’| from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar { No fussing or fretting over thebiscuit-making. Royal is the aid to many a cook’s success. Royal Cook Book—3800 Receipts—Free. Send Name and Address. BARRET & BUNN _Eccentric Irish Comedians The Poli Drama of Next 6¢ Play Easter 'Week Attraction NINETEENTH WEEK OF _Presentin( the Stirring Military Northern Lights A Picturesque and Powerful Play of the Frontier No Advance in Prices for Easter Monday IN MIZZOURI” Players the West Feature Miss Ethel delicate, hand-painted leather medal wrapped in a silk “rear admiral's” commission granting a $6,000 yearly slice from the U, S. slush fund? Undoubtedly there will be a big de- mand for an unlimited coinage of warped rear admirals in the future. It will not much surprise me if we ‘pole” that horrid zone and are talk- ing with the Eskimeos pretty soon by telephone, and the first thing they will ask us if the wires are working right, “Did_Peary's convincing evidence (?) win him out—of his sorry plight? . W. MILLER. Jewstt City, April 15, 1911, Buying Tobacco Land. Frank Green has bought the Chuailes Eno farm in Windsor. This farm ad joins the new plantation of the Con necticut Tobacco corporatien in East Granby, a corporation that is sup- posed to have been taken over by the American Sumatra Tobacco company. This farm is eight acros in extent and is one of the best tobacco farms in the two valleys. Hard to Account for Them. Some are born to greatness, some achieve greatness—and then there are Dr. Cook and Representative Bennet. —New York World, Seeds of maple trees have been known to germinate in ice. “The Mexican Filibusters” .. Laws, Soprano. | and give Pisture, Music. r. c. oEE TUNER . 122 Prospect 8¢, Tal. 811 Norwich, Ca IF YOU WANT A FIRST CLASS PIANO, get a SHONINGER through WHITE, THE TUNER, 48 South A St, Tattville. PLUMBING AND GASFITTING. JOHNSON & BENSON, 20 Cantral Avenue. SLATE ROOFING '\Metal Cornices and ights, Gutters and Conductors, and kinds of Job« Mz,lrgfl.p::;apflr attended to. Sanitary Plumbing A peep into an up to date bathroom is only less refreshing than the bat! itself. During the summer you will the more look to the bath for bodily comfort. I will show you samples and wlans of the porcelain and other tubs vou estimates for the world of putting them in.in the best manner from a sanitary standpoint—and guar- antee the entire job J. F. TOMPKINS, 67 West Main Street The Vaughn Foundry Co. IRON CASTINGS furnished prom; stock of patterns. No. 11 to 36 Ferry Street S. F. GIBSON Tin and Sheet Metal Worker Agent for Richardson and Boyntom Furnaces. 3 55 West Main Street, Norwich, Conn, T. F. BURNS, Heating and Plumbing, 92 Franklin Strest. & ket i ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., NEW_YORK. allowed The Thames Loan He who every day thinks no- acts werthily, is pre- God by paring himself te m by through living in No Admittance AFTER THIS WEEK without loss of interest. Be a Doer and not a Wisher The Bank of Friendly Helpfulness to the Christmas Club & Trust Company DON'T WORRY [ It Makes Wrinkles | . Worzy over {ll-health does your ! health no good, #nd merely causes | wrinkles, that make you look older | than you are. | If you are sick, don’t worry, but | about it to make yourself vell. To de | this we repeat the words of thousande | of other former suferers from wom- anly ills, similar to. yours, when we “Take VIBURN-0 It 18 a wonderful female remedy, as you will admit if you try it. Directions ‘for its us2 are printed im six languages with every bottle. Price $1.25 at druggists. FRANCO-GERMAN CHEMICAL CO., 106 West 12th Street, New York, EASTER NOVELTIES Easter Booklets, Setters, Cards, Favors, Ducks. Rabbits, Chicks, Flower and Fruit o } Etc., Etc. | NRS. EONIN FRY, Franklin Squa

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