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MOTHER'S DAY. Mother's day occurs on Sunday this year amd it i of such a mature that it need not ®e pestponed, for it is a regular day of meditation and a day when & white memorial flower ma; worn and be ia consonance with th religious services of the day. ‘We may memorialize mother by wearing & white flower; we may pay tribute to her by kindly thought cher- ished in the heant; and we may honor her by again resolving to so live that We may attein the place in Iife she had dreamed we would. ‘We all know that the mother heart prays thather children may be healthy and upright and honorable—able pros- perous. @stinguished; and sad, in- deed, is the mother who lives to real- ize that her children are mot loyal to the true pminciples she espoused and taught them, and that her fondest Mopes have proved o be but baseless dreams. ‘What would the wearing of a white flower ameunt to en Mother's day without the fealing of fillal devotion to her which prompts the child to try 1o live as mother would have Nad him lwe Mother's day is the day when err- ing children may recall the maternal _which 'ih_. _great while the brma-w.lcp.' oped the structure. * ly to be in the path of the fal chinie, so the aviator was the hyrt. % ‘We can imagine what might e Tesult should a 20 or 40 ton ship tu hle out of the sky upon' a buildink in which hundreds of people were con- gregated, or snddeniy drep into a con- gested business street,of a city. are but few present ters wl could compare with it, ° ok There are few buildings that could resist the impact of such a force; and it seems as if the parties engaged in such pleasure or trafe should be made to show that they are able to meet the damages before they are licensed to use them, . ¢ are going to find this a new field for business and insurance clauses are likely to be put, in the insura: cles such as are now put in againsi damage or fire by lightning. ° The new age which is dawning will call for new methods of protection for the increasing risks and perils. SLANDERERS OF THE PENSION, ERS. The fact that the old war pension- ers are dying at the rate of 100 & day does not prevent the vile and unpat- riotic mhgazine writers from libelling them and deceiving a great many peo- pie. It is questionable if any class of citizens today will prove more honest or honorable than the old sol- diers, “Recently, by order of the honorable commissioner of pensions,” says the National’ Tribune, printed in Wash- ington, “every pensioner, male and fe male, residing in the state of Mary- land, bas been persenally visited by & special examiner of «the pemsion bu- reau, and it is a matter of congratula- tion ‘that of the more than 12,660 thus visited not a single case was found involving the least suspieion of fraud, thus vindicating in the highest the integrity of the pension Bureau and the henesty of the pendloner. This splendid record justifies the depart- ment of Maryland, Grand Army of the Republic, in branding the enemies of the pensioners of the d'nited States as base slanderers, utterly wanting in patriotism and destitute of gratitude toward those who steod for the flag and a united country in the fateful days of 1361-1865." Such an examination might be made of the pensioners of any New Eng- land state with similar results. The men who slander _the soldiers who saved the union never were and never would be defenders of the flag or pre- servers of the nation. WHAT MAKES LINSEED OIL DEAR. The price of linseed oil continues to rise and between the high prices of this oil and turpentine the usual spring touching up of property is be- ing neglected. News comes from Chi- cago that the alarm of paint manu- facturers of Chicago at the world's shortage of eighty million gallons of linseed oil and the- greater fear that all seed flax would be exhausted has not been lessened by reports from Canada. Aithough an enormous §ddi- tion will be made this year in the Of course, the insurance companies | vell of a wild Jife seem to No ome can tell why he S e e iy _be for the same reason that it sometimes calls better men ow I we try to get into the Whys and wherefores, of this life we «certainly shall et confused. There are a few le who having nodistinctive qualities ~themselves just praceed to ape some other per- son whose eccentricities please tiem: and this may be well enough if the mannerisms -~ mitated are of good Quality -and put good cheer into life; but there are men who imitate Srouchas and intsliectial ancbs and make. tl es very disagreeable to peaple "-fif-‘."m.y 4o not feel bound 1o “espect, er even treat with common courtesy. ~ Of ceurse, & true .gentle- man treats evervbody with common courtesy, because discourteay to . the commonest person is a mark of ill- breeding in the person guilty of it. ‘Those Who seek to appear to e un- common to attract attention te them- selves easily float into snobbery and every other kind of human foolishness. Pride becomes a_weakness where it is ever manifesting itself. no. matter what the cause of #t. The person who is because ' he conversed or dined” with a “big bug” and talks out it, i8 nearer beconiing a clown than he’thinks. To be one's seif in honesty, honor and sobriety, Is enough for any person. —— A near-philesopher says the time to eat is wher you are humgry ®nd the Lme to amile ls when yeu feel ltke it some readers this might appear to | be a ridiculous sentence, although it | containa a clear truth. There are lota of people who eat when they are not hungry from force of habit, because the time to eat has come; and it is a keen persen who recognizes the differ- ence between hunger and appetite. Hunger .is natural, and an appetite may be, created. The gnawing at the stomach—the craving for food—some people feel, is a manifestation of ap- petite, not ‘of hunger. Plenty of men are slaves to appetite; but who ever heard of man being a siave fo hunger? The fact is our regular hab- ng, whether we feel hun- is what makes invalids ot many of us. The workman has no diffioulty in recognizing hunger, but gentlemen of leisure and sedentary habits are often fooled by appetite which is excited by the clock. And the sinister Smile, veu know, and its kindred, are net the smile natural, but a poor counterfeit of it. There are only twe werds in the English language which contain all the vewels in their proper order, al- though there are several which con- tain them out of the regular orde and if asked to state these two ex- Jyords most any of us e to give up, although they are werds in every day use. How many people say something is facetious The Quail Trap, ¥fay- 11, 1911.—The first rehearsal of the Quail Trap er- chestra was at 6 a. m. Friday, May 29, Bob White was leader, and it was the very firat this in open air co assoluta Meadow lai Wi, purple’ finch, w tone from Hungary, ridge, were all in the ensemble premiere. The drilling of down: flicker in the dead tops of our L vas the tympani aided by the resident stake-driver, first heard on ti sion. The chairs were ‘turned for several prominent soloists expect- ed from abroad every day. The Victrola and the Knabe are lock- od and tho music room at the medicine for song-sick souis when the outdoor world is filled with music from a thousand freshly tuned throats. The second grand concert was begun at 5.30 @ m. May 10th, with sugmented cho- rus and - orchestra., Lord Baltimore, five days late from Palm Beach, came on the 1ith, but his clarinet obligato was as welcome and effective as ever: The rollicking brarura of Robert 0.~ Lincoln, who came from Carolina May 5th, was noticeably in evidence, afd Rosy Grosbeak’s rolling whistle ‘was the mildest of piccolos. The Green- let Trio was much admired, the falset- I'to of Miss Veery Wren aitracted at- | tention; lut the greatest interest seem- ed to center in the wonderful contralto of 'Mad. Woode-Thrushe. Tanagra Ru- bra rang true, Khatte-Burd was slight- 1y below the kev, and so was Indigo’s faint rhapsody. Chat's phrasing was excellent. and Swift's twitter not lack- ing in spirit. In fact, ali the old musi cians and singers were in their usual places, though Veery's wild reedy in- | strumeunt was missed and Cuckoo’s viel unstrung. The largest string of Can- ada geese I ever saw flew over during the Reight of the overture; the whole, 300 seemed to be honking as they swerved from southeast to due narth. These morning recitals will be contin- used till summer heat drives feathered bipeds and bipeds befeathered - to seclusions of shade, at sea, sound and shore. Whippoorwill first called here at 4 m. Saturday, April 29th. I have not run across this goatsucker breedi here, though its calls are heard on all sides of the cottage throughout ihe season. Though our owa bob Whites did not begin calling tiil April 25th, the big covey on Gravelly brook we whistling one week earlier, and ths two unbroken covies an Muddy brook were =aying More Wet it deys before our aturdus el ot when T wa disk . Apr when 1 was dis- ging up purple beeches at Meplewaod, Norwich. Thoush farmers deplored the general absence of a snow blaniet, the open winter kept a great part of the game birds here safe from the tal- ons and claws of day enemies and night prowlers, and we look for more quail than for several years. Our special wards, the two lots of Hungarian partridges, are not so wild as when we fr2ed them, have not late- ly used the distressful, homesick cry and appear now to be quite at hom with their present environment. I hear zards are out of the shell now in tl two nests in our y and the four parents soar over our every 'day. The tiniest chickens in our yards fly from the shadow of the hawks, but no raids are made, because red squir- rels and other rodents are abundant nd always appear in the larder of the large hawks and owls. I have not found the long-eared and mottled owls ‘breeding in this vicinity, and the near- est T have found _the ~hawk With eggs was in the hollow: of & road- side oak at Pcmfret Landing. hile watching a pair of Coopers re- lini% an old nest, on the afternoon of the 30th of-April, the female, -who was meerly twice the size of the male, made repeated dashes at my toy ternler. A freshly-killed and half-eaten rabbit under the hawks' nest may account for the attack. Either hawk could 1ift the dog. 1 know, for 1 bava geen good- sized skunks and woodchucks in hawks® nests, ahd, as 1 have reported eise- where, Mr. Wade and I saw an osprey drep a five-pound pickerel from a great height. But that a pair of white- led sagles carried away two sheep in western Massactusetts, as reported in many daily papers last week, is a feat in levitation beyond my present belief. A nelghbor's cat last weak | brought home a foll grown forret. My cousin was eye-witness of -a fight to the death in the wodds between a wea- sel and a raf Our fleldhand, while coming to his work at 2arly hour on_the morning of the 23th saw a fox in het pursuit of & w: k. and saw the fat quarry alip through Reynard's claws info a wi grosbeaks was seen here Sunday, April 30_ The four flocks, reported by The Bulletin in Hyntmgton lane at | Norwich Town, were probably bunch- ing for the long flight to the summer breeding homes in_the wilds of Ore- gon and Washington. Mr. Upham, au- thor of the newspaper articles enti- tled Birds of East Woodstock, report- ed a single male detacned from the main body, and a pair were seen “on May 3d in the old haunts. Beyond doubt, The Auk, Bird Life, The Con- dor, and other bird journals, will give reports from many localities of this unusual bird-movement from west to east, with details of the long stay, and’ incidents bearing on the return flight. By comparisen of notes, it may be seen why the birds left home, why they came 30 far, why so many favored this section, and whether the males had assumed nuptial plumage on the eve of departure. I fancy the line of travel is mot wholly at night, and could be traced, as we followed our own. division of grosbeaks from Leominster through Lancaster . to Quinsig, through Southbridge . and Lebanon. hill to_the English Nelghbor- hood, through VHlage Corners to the winter home_in East Woodstock; via Putnam to Danlelson, to the winter quarters at Windham through Jew- ett City and Lisbon to the most south- ern stopping place ae Taftville and Norwich Town, The last local company of evening | MAKING GOODNESS INTERESTING We are fortunate in living in & day when virtue tends more and more to array itself in beauteous garments. It used to be said concerning New York oitnaies that 4 e TTHnE daily maldle vice so attractive and a certain evening daily made virtue so repellent, that the 10t of anyone who would follow the straight path in New York city was indeed a hard one. One has to admit that custodians of good- ness throughout the centuries have now and agzin made it appear before the world in most unattractive guises. Deacons are usually represented in fiction as with long faces and they have often been that in real life. Sun- day to many minds is associated chief- Iy with restrictions; the “good” is thought in many’ quarters to be & prig, and even a Dright college girl once honestly deciared that she never knew but one really good fellow that she really liked. But a change is coming over the situation. 'We no longer think that hard, uncushioned pews in themselves promote the spirit of reverence, or that it is an inducement for outsiders to attend church when they see the edifice itself in .need of paint and re- pairs and the ground abouf it in an unkempt condition. So a multitude of improvements in the way of teaching religion in the home and the Sunday school, a vast and-constantly increas- ing number of beautifully printed and illustrated books relating to the Bible and the religious life, the employment of the stereopticon and even the motion plctures, and numerous other devices make goodness more interesting to Dpeople, old and young. They witness also, an altogether desirable change the attitude of rupposed custodians ot goodness. The boy scout movement, for example, is only one of several re- cently inaugurated movements design- ed to copmect high moral ideals with the everyday interests and pleasures of mankind. . Rightly concelved, the virtuous life is the most interesting that anyone :can Mve, and the agencles ithat minis- ter to It can be made attractive. What ook, far example, compares with the Biblo as an inexhaustible storehouse of human interest? Its storles, narra- tions, incidents, poetry, dramatic scenes, parahles, prophecies and character sketches all may be made to appeal ito and fascinate the mind. Only we must get at the Bible in the right way. Few people realize how really inter- esting it is. < ‘ . : withou: recognizing that such a dis- - A picture te hang on memory’s 2 crea d b casualti pt ona lame hen pict ang Ty counsel, and sight the path which if | o “i:;u:“:_;'m::‘;‘ nin tiActive word has passed their lips: O Ent and eaten be & nelpnbors bur: | wall was my Jast ook at our Wood- | ' But someone will say: “It does not ‘ s course, we are 4 % ‘ yond-the-Rock- aetiv followed now wiil elevate a human| ypjieq States and Europe, the acre- | gtemion: i arteun ';l“c‘g‘m‘ la| dos. Thomas Hedges, a Nerih Wood- | stock group of the Beyond-the pay to make goodness too attractive. #oul and do henor to one who loved age in flax will be limited by the fo be commended; and we do not real- stock farmer and hunter, says that he fes twilight birds. As the morning It takes all the herolc element out of = sun grew hot, the flock had been com- 0y Tighteo s Mo one [l did_ and Who|hortage of seed, Even at prices ef|ite that the other sxceptional.word | kio", Of & covey of slx of Sheas Binds | b He o e fow | e e o o e E o Moped for it and prayed for it as mo| 33 to $5.75 a bushel seed flax hug not been presented to us. But” then, favored families on the village flat. one else could. been obtainable. Consequently thou- thers are jots of other things we d( not notice, daughter is said to have found a set of eggs of this introduced species a One mornins, after their back-door dom by offering them free seats in 2 parlor car.” But that is by no means Those who know that mother has| sands of acres intended for flax will notice. We look at the calendar|v., “7o,"ang knew that the chicken | call and hand-out, on' the way to the | what we are doing. On the contrary. been neglected and that she is wait- | be seeded to wheat, This leaves the| ;::.“.,"3,!\E;’”':(”t;:"yf:,‘zfe"";‘;n“:: partridges left the nest all right. This | noonday siesta, the flock rested a lobg | the appeal to the heroic is the very Ing and hoping to hear, may on such a Jay as this be quickened at heart by ld memories and inspired to write e words of cheer mother has been paiting for so long. Mother's day is worthy of observa- lon. The mothers of men through heir good Influences have blessed the world with great and noble leaders. The prayer of the great mother heart for all her chidren is progress— ysical and spiritual—and the child in whem loyalty to mother ceases to house paint situation worse than be- the day of the week that it closes, ex- fore. The normal crop of the United States is about 28,000,000 bushels, but in 1909 it was only 18,000,060 bushels and in 1910 it was 10,000,000. This caused importations of more than 9,- 000,000 bushels last year. The Argen- tine erop, however, was only half of expectations, with the result that the world's shortage was 35,000,000 bush- els of flax seed from which linseed oil is made. That equals about 87, cept in leap years: and how many think you areaware that no century can begin on Wednesday, Friday or Sun- day? Our eyes are not more than half as wide open ag we think. These who are rich and enjoy a bountiful board are to be more pitied than envied. for they never know the hunger or the pleasure which atten the plain livers on feast days. The man who provides himself with the is the only local record of their breed- ing. At that time none had been lib erated nearer than Romfret. A pai was seen yesterday and last Friday a bunch of four were marked down by Mr. Irvin Pai So, reviewing ail local data, we have stronger hopes that our homa'lot of brown partridges will breed. A grey squirrel, circling the walls of our house-lot, is in the angle of vision as I write. VI know not whether he is foraging or mating so far afleld, but half-hour in a swamp maple in fu bloom. The birds were not busy with the blossoms and had unconsciously chosen a gorgeous setting for their prilifant spring dress. I recall a com- panicn picture of a dozen male tana- gers, seen on the morning of their arrival in Lebanon, against a gray background of scrub oeks. In this connection T am not sure that art “has anvthing on” nature, when our red, blue and gold macaw, who has the run of the premises, climbs into the flowering cherry, mocks the cir- thing that interests young men and women with any red blood in their veins. The call to do something for others, to invest their lives in behalf of the things #hat count and last quickens the puises and challenges the manly impulses as no_tame propo- sition could ever do. i Anyhow, each one of us has no bu ness to foster any other than an at- tractive type of personal goodness. We ought to be winsome as well as hon- est, gracious and magnetic as well as pure and diligent. The next time you MATINEES B¢ Feature Picture, . Miss Ethel Laws, Soprans. Advance sale of seats at the Broadway Pharmacy. Positively no extra charge fof early reservations. WM. F. BAILEY (Successor te A, T. Gerdner) MusIC. = % c oEER TUNER 500,000 gallons of linseed oil. best all the time cmmnot reilsh the|I now ses him, skipping aver his stons | cling hawks overhead with Pee-ho! | near the minister pronounce the bege- Be an inspiring influence must be| The exports from India normally are | changes of food like the man who is|highway straight for the woods nearly | Pee-ho! and, clucking, says: Gid-dap! | diction, “The grace of the Lord JeBus abnormal from two to three million hu:h ls. | Deither a rich or excessive feeder.|a quarter of a mile away. The squir- | Giddap! as the May winds mfk his | Ohrist be with you,” think what th‘z]ll H&c l ivery i m:h-—-d o, & It does us gaod to think of mother,| An official report concerning the Can-| Where high living is the rule a dis-|rels in the woods seem to be all on the | snowy cradie. C. LR means In its beariris upon your daly Norwiein, with the love and gratitude of true|ada flax prospects, from J. S. Dennis | o 0cred stomach is usually the result. - ehavior. and children. THE SPRING FEVER. The warm and balmy atmosphere of apring calis forth the lover of nature amd the lover of sports and the lover of adventure of every kind, It is when the fever is on that man hears the call 10 the woods and streams—that the listening ear catches the call of the wild. This fever has moved men to @reat deeds as well as called them to pleasant pursuits. It is noted that the children of Israel left Egypt under the Jeadership of Moses in tie spring; that Columbus started on his discoveries in the apring; that the great wars of in charge of colonization and irriga- tion for the Canadian Pacific in west- ern provinces, sald: “It is impossi- ble to say what the acreage of flax will be this year, ‘Of course, the in- flux of new settlers and the breaking of new lands has added a great acre- age available for flax production, but the trouble is that the seed cannot be had. We don’t know certainly what the result will be, but it is plain that the crop of flax will not be as great as might be hoped. It is a pity, be- cause the prospect is that very high prices will prevail when the seed is harvested.” It is not the dinner-pail brigade who suffer most from dyspepsia, for labor &ives ihe finest relgh to ‘any feast, while the idle and 8ainty are always compiaining of the quality of their food and the state of their stomach. The best things of life are the fruit of labor; a good appetite, refreshing sleep, a spirit of thanks, and a feel- ing of contentment. God was careful to see that the best things could not be bought with money; but that indi- vidual conduct wresied from life its best rewards. The rich loafer has no pleasanter face upon, him in the morn- ing thap the roving {ramp: and neither have the heart-shine of the men who work hard- and live honorably. quires a fifteen-hour day, why should no: the husband share in the work? The liars in this world are not as much feared by men as the fellows who tell the truth. Popular public men have five times as many stories told about them as they can recognize; and they laugh at them because they interest an interested pubHc. Many of the cutest things told of great men are pure fiction and are never denied. A fow stories are invented ¢o extol ir virtues; and on W - Fortinate. enough to. have tola abou him one of the poorest of these. It is the mental briliancy of public men that is explofted and magnified; and we all laugh and they laugh them- famous men failed in many callings before they won success. If you find a man on a hill, he never lit there. He climbed. The one who succeeds is he who does the thing next to him well. There is a powerful sermon in the experience of the bey who learned to skate by getting up every time he fell dow: Education 1is knowing what you want, where to get it and what to do with ‘it when you get it In the name of God if you have got to smoke, load up an old pipe and go at it. If you smoke cigarettes you are likely to wake up some time with your THE PARSON. Canadian Immigration Returns. The minister of interior at Ottawa states that the immigrants into Cana- da from April, 1910, to February last numbered 275,000 The number of British immigrants was 104,000, the ar- rivals from the continent numbered 60,000, and those from the United States, 107,000. The increase in Brit- ish immigration over the correspond- ing period of the. previous year was 10 per cent. Continental immigrants increased by 53 per cent. andthe Uni- ted States 24 per cent. The increase in the fotal immigration in the same périod was 54 per cent. Immigration from the United States during March Boarding Stable 12-14 Bath Street. HORSE CLIPPING A SPECIALTY. AUTOMOBILE TO RENT. Telephone 883. Trunks IF YOU WANT A FIRST CLASS PIANO, get a SHONINGER through WHITE, THE TUNER, 48 South A St, Taftville. 1647 Adam’s Tavern 1561 offer to the public the finest standard brands of Beer of Burepe and Bokemian, Plisner, Culmbach varian Beer, Bass Pale and Burton, Mueirs fhis country nave opened n the pring EDITORIAL NOTES. e it imere | Taeix at fhe clavemens o thess ston | | e T A e wiariots 6 1 sl Ve By | o o e @nd every student is aware that May| Just at present Madere is looking :.fi(l:ri:hlov:“nn:':ll B e 1.'p;::§'f ries. It is a fact, that half of the na‘fivsng‘i‘:fl scare hwiy’:i el beiis ading) h»"f' t‘v.:; .‘,.: P..;ec.L Tl P, B. Ale, Frank Jones” Nouriehe in American history is the menth of| just as much like the governor of |ant. One day the last week in April | Stories attributed to Abraham Lincoln size, a &reat events as well as the blooming of the fiowers. The spring fever prompts man to 4 : 4 dare and to do as well as to wander | but you will notice on that da ‘,’:"",',’:.':“'”;"b"f’;:';:‘fr"““‘,’lfi‘f‘“,“““ they were not designed to do harm.| mpg anpouncement is made that the Shot the Original and Mh.. The Shetucket Harness Cfl., for pleasure. 1t s when the blood | ther does mot do the cooking, -y Y tree. This is 2|71 worst falsehoods can be mot and| - L I L e et e Sy piacein ‘it oet 400 | overcue, while the smallest (rutng | Cunard compeny intends to supple- 321 Main Street s : ce in the spring and his : i ite N e » #pring odors, the trees full of blossoms| It 15 estimated that wealthy Amer- | Dacutiamitios ond Fortr ”VE‘:M" s | are supreme—a thousand lies camnot| ment its New York mall service by a and the woods ringing with the songs of birds. that man is moved to action of every sort—is moved explojt every field of dis & The spring fever and the hookworm, with poor thinkers. asso- rvery have been Mexico as Diaz does. We have established Moth 's day, icans will spend thirty-five millio} in London during coronation week. The street cars at Ann Arbor, Mich. get their power from gasoline and are sald 1o be efficient and ecomomical. we thought we heard his familiar voice: Bt it was the Afth of May that we wera made confldent of his presence more popular names than any other bird' we are familiar with, for to some he is the fire-bird, 10 others the hang- bird, because of the way in which he hangs his nest. and te still more the golden robin, becaise of the rich yel- low of \his plumage contrasted with were learned by him as other people learned of them. Great men are very willing to father many of the amu ing anecdotes told of them because make them look fals SUNDAYISMS. You are large; or small according to where you are. Some are fit only to help make up a egraph news.—Rev. Willlam Sunday at Toledo. : A New Ocean Liner. new steamer to be named the Aquitania. 1t is reported that this vessel will cost about $9,720,000 and will be 385 feet in length. 95.6 in breadth, with a ton- nage of 50,000, and a speed of 23 knots. It will accomnrodat: 630 first, 740 sec- ond, and 2,400 third class. passengers. [ HORLIGK’S MALTED MILK “The Food-drink for All Ages. This is the time to buy. Think it over and see if you cannot use one. WM. C. EODE, Prop. health ‘ne good, . and ing Ale, Sterling Bitter Ale, Anheuser; Budweiser, Schlitz and Pabst. A. A. ADAM, Norwich Town. Telephone 447-12. DONT WORRY It Makes Wrinkles Worry over fll-bealth does your wrinkles, that make you look elder Latest Novelties The mayors of Canadian cities feel rather hurt since they realize that they are not of such special Import- amce as t0 have an invitation and remerved placa at the coronation exer- «l in London Kansas has a new whiskey, but if it will not kill at forty rods it is not likely to knock out the old and pap- ular brand: A near-philosopher says “a man never works over time to make his wife hap; which is doubtless cor- rect. It seems to be a masculine de- lusion that the wife always has the soft-snap ir this world: and too few I feel sorry:for the boy who is go- ing to inherit meney You can tell a man's size by what he is overcoming. You don’t have to be in a big place | to do big things. War < Washington Post. In No Gombine or Trust, «__for the New Coiffures Gison Tolel G clted together as twins in cause and S e e deep black. His sheiil and distinctive | crowd Turkish and electric baths, a swim- | Forlnfants, Invalids,and children. | than you are, 3 At but laziness is not the domi- |, [NPVY TOUEDE for todayl Thefe potes, too, call iMfefitlon to him. Sen-| (o with people Bleger than you are.| TUDE Bond and o theater ere to be | b Neriide up buildugthewholebody: | Gltivon nee akis. daite svincy; Tab nant spri fction, 1 e more is world | timentally he has bee o s % % X vided. 8 X = 1o v':l:' :'.'.«'fl.‘lnr"l“...fi'.: .m‘?m‘;n,:‘,;,', than great ones, and the same may be | “a gleam of ',u,,.m,,;»“.,‘f;‘?f;"n;;‘; 23| You have got to have a desire to e Invigoratesthe nursing motherandthe aged. > this we dpeat the words of thousands 4 has mever been In the habit of loafing | TOthully said of the men. fire.” "The two most brilliantly plu- | STOW- Habson’s Speeches. Rich milk, malted grain, in powder form. | Chl non uffs || or ot ormer Suterers trom wom- nd invith his soul in th 3 ————— maged local ds are the orioles and The plow-horse covers more ground Captain Hobso navi PN Ly — e | l",’ 3 yours, when T3 then Mo has scored hin evemiet| ., When Ohio pays her legistators|the scarlet tanager. the last named|in a year than the fastest raco horse.| Captain Hobson ntaving returned | s quicl fumch prepared in a finute. : h e onen e has. scored his. greatest| 500 a year sulary she ought to have|Beins Shy and reliring, hence Vory| Yeur size depends on mind, not mus- | nopian e At e It i o Take no substitute. Askfor HORLICK'S. | l ey : & something that looks worth the mon- | MUCh less familiar to people. cle; on brains, not bulk tion by printing his speeches in The ! uster Lur S: a e It is a wonderful female remedy, as you =vill admit If you try it. Directions for its uss are printed in six langubges 7ih ovary bottie. Price 1. at-druggists. B BT W o men are really conacious of the debe| Be like the itch. Make evervbody FRANCO-GERMAN CHEMICAL CO. The recent cenflict in Mexico has| One of the best advertisements for ;}:::r“"k:; t'-hh;ul wives ‘who have | Scratch that S“‘) "*“‘{«""“» i 106 West 129th Street. New York. attracted attention to the fact that|any city is to have well lighted streets | De¥er asl or short hours or for a| There is more hope:for a fool than O Ou E this country needs a bullet-proof fron- | at night. It is inviting to decent peo- | mun. oo - ot noye ST Mout|the man whose head is full of con 67 Broadway. 'Phone 505 H. COOPER ::;fl:::;-onyeu please order one| ple and a stay to rogues. hour ~wife; and if he did he| 1f vou do your best, you will not be Denver is now within talking dis- would not know how to make sat- isfactory balances. If more men used wearing out sheeleather looking for a job. Need Printing ? The Gaodwin Gorse! | — UPHOLSTERER — Ficst Class Mattress Maker. Furmie The five councilmen of IHunnewell,| tance of New York. Some human |3°me of their overtime to reliave the t build and leave Christ lurerre alred. Matiresses made to ore Kan, ake no assistance to the woman | yoices sound better two - thousand| maejioh ‘g iVe her a part of the| XOU SAmNOL B D Who vou are. Jep: SRplmade Oven mayor in nafling down the 1id ‘tight. - privileges they enjoy, life would be|out. I don 4 8 100 W. Malu St. Nerwieh, Ct - alm appetrs to be o nail dewy | Tiles away than clase to. more Worth iiving to both. 1 have| This is the difference between man the mayor. The day is believed to be coming when the stories of big trout catches will bear inspection, if they do not hang together, that they were of the people, -Jln‘tw ot hut An old proverb says: “He who hes a single enemy has more than enough.” This is where the supply is alwa: likely to exceed the. demand. never wondered that some of the hard Wworkod wives with devout minds have formed the habit of lioking towara sunset land at evening and hoping the Lord would come; or that in their weary moments they are caught ask- ing:: “Lord, how long?" The short day effective way of protecting the mne- cent - do not beeome the most helpful, sym- pathetic of husbands is not s read- ily to be explained. If the h-Mya re- the tine the acorn and and and monkey and GOne wants to grow does noi. . other You can't look up to a runt unless you are married to one and are forced by law. g God likes the fellow who can hit the An Indiana judge sentenced a map|f0r ¥omAn i Just as important us the | .S nars and bates the fellow Whose i v chy X B ; 3 NEWMARKET HOTEL, The plesident molitely called the | who criminally assaulted four little | Short day for man: and why the bat- batting sverase is]2. 64-66 F 2 sitention of the sramgers to the fact| ®irls o Drison for life. This is an | LTS, for bigEPr pay and shorter~hours H ranklin. Street 715 Boswnil Ave. ‘, He'll win if he has red blood in his veins and not pink tea and ice water. A good many of the world’s most 35-6 The - BULLETIN Co. MCOELS FOR EVERY FIGURE. Eiret-clase Wines, Liguors wad CORSETS ALTERED AND REPAIRZ). and Welch Rarebit order,: JOM- Tuekis Frok and Lingerie Clrl‘l Mail orders will receive prompt ate 4 | tention. Telephone 55: Face and Senip Man- snge. Corms removed witheut patw.