Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 17, 1911, Page 4

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Borwich Zulletin and Goufief. —_—er 115 YEARS OLD. monthe; $0.00" Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Conn.. as wecond-class matter. Telrphone Calls: Bulletin Business Office, 43 ulletin Editorial Rooms. 35-3. Builetin Job Office, $5-8. Willimantic Office, Room 3 Marray Building. Teiephone 210. price, 1Ze m week; 50c & year. Norwich, Saturday, June 17, 1911, The Butletin. The Bulletin has the largest eir- ewlation of any paper In Easters Commecticut, and from three te four larger than that of amy iu It is delivered to over he 4,058 houses in Nor- and read by nimety-three per the people. In Windbam to over 500 mouses, Danlelsen to ever and in all of these places It eonsidered the local datly. Eastern Commecticut has forty- ime towus, ome humdred sad sixty- five posteffice districts, amd forty- ome rural free delivery rowtes. The Bullctin is sold im every tewn amd om all of the R. F. D. Week ending June 10.... STANDING WITH THE PEOPLE. Senator Mecl.ean is right when he savs: “The government can endure the election of semators by the people, ‘NOT A COFFIN-NAIL FOR ALL. “The little cigarette is not a coffin- nail for all concerned because it is a support for thousands and the creator of millionaires. James B. Duke.of New Jersey .fur- nishes a large part of the seven bil- lions of cigarettes smoked in this country every vear, and he has mil- lions of dollars to his credit; and just now he is improving his Jersey estate in a way few men would feel able to. He desires to have a view of the Watchtung mountains from the windows of his home near Somerville, N. J. so he is engaged in building a hill of sufficient size and height to put his new mansion in view of them. He has a Working railroad laid into his grounds and trains running and hun- dreds of -men working to make the hill he needs, since nature failed to make it for him. He is willing the cigarette should lay others out so long as it elevates him. He naturally likes to see others smoking it. An exchange says: “This magnifi- cent enterprise will show what a tri- umph there was of mind over matter when inventive genius ' devised ma- chinery which could make seven ciga- rettes grow where only one grew be- fore: that is to say, make a reduc- tion in the cost of manufacture frem a doliar a thousand to seven cents. But most of all the devotees of the cigarette should visit the temple of the man who has outdone Mohammed. There the red necktie brigade may see what the cigarette will do for a feliow, how it will elevate him in the world, how it can be made to put at his command the labor of thousands of men to gratify his lightest fancy. There they may learn that great is the cigarette if you keep at the right end of it—which, by the way, is net the smoker’s end.” AN CROP. The record breaking wheat crop forecasted in the government's reports also holds good in Canada, according to reports to the hoard of trade houses, and in western provinces in acreage is even sreater than that in the Unit- ed States. The prediction of a crop of 764.921,- 257 bushels of spring and winter wheat is based upon an increase of 9 per cent. in acreage, the better conditions making the prospect per cent. more than last year and 17 per cent. more but it cannet endure the loss of the anfidence of the people. Confidence an¥ natural advanfages have brought|py D. B Hanna, vice president of the prosperidy to this counmtry to a very iarga extent in spite.of congress. Con- fdence has colned mowe doMars for cent. greater than in 1910, owing to the A_.l:d\r‘-n people fhan all her|ihe phenomenal influx of new set- minte. tlers who have broken up virgin prai- Senator MeLean is sive and he @Goes not misrepres or "Mew Emgiand sentiment when he voses for opening Larimer, for eleching the senators by popular vets and will vete for the|pgve been ideal up to the present time, ratifiention of the treaty of.recipwocity with Canada. He declares “Fhe Con- necticut farmer has nothing to fear|have over 150.000,000 bushels of wheat frou this competition.” e senator probably has no fear the parcels post will ba a wicked interfer- enoe with trade instead of a benefit to the people. to meny bughears. SHOULDN'T WE RESPECT THE|sicient to bring the crop well along, KICKER? nuisemce helper. The evidence is that it does not pay to bear jmposition or injustice | Acreage, there is also an increase in of any sort with patience. not. He has He does the rattlesnake motto: Don't Tread on Me!"” and fhose who |@n increase in bariey of about 250,000 venture feel his fangs. The kicker reguiates the trolley sery- ice, knookts out the high car step, aMows no meglect of crosswalls un- 1 his hew! is heard: and while we peaceful souls walked up to the water office after the mear-famine and paid the biil for water we never had with- out a murmur, didn't you netice that|and ample the kickers reduced the receipts by some cleven thowsand dolars” We do net think it pays to kick; but do not laugh at the kickers beeause they de. The neighberhood of hest kickers have the finest streets and the bright- est iuminatien at night in all the cities. Both greed and audacity like the ent and long-suffering citizen becadiss e whispers his grievances to himaself instead of getting up and howlng so that tharee neighborhoods are made aware of them at ence. Those who impose upen ethers al- ways appear to be afraid of those whe | first said, -Silence is zolden.” ery aloud and agitate fe dftions. Better con- Instead of less kickers the needs more of them. Those who can- net he esniweiled by love need be moved by Tear. ors make unnece: Do not think the kick- v neises—it is the steam whisiles and lecomotiveo thaf do that. Pheir oppressorsséinic th make unnecessary noise: but since the; concessions to them, there is no doubt it is profitable. If you want things different just kick for better things and you will get them. Rewards do not ge to theose who sit in silence amd in tears. If you do mnot think this is se, open veur weather eye and watgh out. EXCEPTIONALLY SENSIBLE. The graduating ct of 1911 of the Meriden high scheel is made up of pupils of reselution and spimt. They have dethromed style awd put common sense in its place. The Meriden girls have decticd not te hire carriages for graduatien, a custom that has been galning growmd the past few ars, Girls’ gra@uarion gewns are made with a view te other wear than this—for strest wear, church wear, etc., and why it has become necesamry te pay cad hire when appearing in the sraduation ZoWn at commencement is semething to be explained. They think if a girl cises in it Men's association of Cennecticut will The Meriden Journal savs: “It is]be able to compute the value of the 4 fine thing te see these young people | pledge of a candidate. working together for the common good e and doing all they can to prevent| The price of mackerel at Boston heartaches on the part of these who | drepped fifty per cent. last week be- would suffer if all the usual expenses were aliowed.™ Th young women are attracting wide attention to {hemselve and their splendid example will make a record they may abways feel proud of. Judge Gary inferms the wublic that the money vaid J. P. Morgan & Co. by the United States $teel trust w: iy $129,000,600, with annual amonating to abeut $7,600,000, not in- luding vidends amnd interest on stocks and bonds owned. —_— At any rate the Standard Oil does The Bosten Transcr saps: “The | not agree with Col Roomevelt that the president's um 1y easly anneunce | SUPreme court justices are fossilized of @ mant of the dutedlor Thankseiving witl | ™0 N e x've Uncle Wpsaae Vose time te make| The 35 mortgage hanks in Germany s prepal for the White house| have now meore than table accordingdy.” mecticut | which Edmenton is the center. the case against| nger crop to wheat alone in western Seifish interests givefbirth | ever sown under better conditions than me people think the kicker is a|T&in in June, which ; amd some think he is a|month world | wind become: are quick to stop it by making |and the fly must be dues | This secms u than for the five-year average. The prediction for western Canada, made Canadian Northern railway, is based on an acreage much more than 9 per r.ie particularly in the great region of “There are about 11.000,000 acres Canads,” he said, “and all conditions If we only get the average vield per acre of the past five years, we shali for export after supplving all the needs for home consumption and next vear's seedin, “I do net think that the crop was prevailed this vear. Since sown we have had snow and rain suf- it was and it is reasonable to look for more s our rainy “In addition to the increased wheat the acreaze sown to oats of at least 250,000, making a total of 4,574,000: acres, making a total of 1,262,000, and an inerease in flax acreage of from 320,000 to 330,000, making a total of 770,000 acres.’ EDITORIAL NOTES. Fortunate the heaith officer who knows that his political reward is sure Notice is given that the Boston Na- tionais is not the name of a ball team, but the title of a joke. Happy thought for toda pwho knows himself says abeut other The man s careful what he folks. A Jap who was a bellbey in a Bos- ton hotel is now a professor of phil- osophy in a Tokio college. The inquiry is being made in Chica- go if the auctioneer was the man who Even in Portland, Me., an easterly rather monotonous aft- er it has persisted for a week. Tt is noticed that the fat men are the ones who appear to take to flannel suits and white shoes this year. The war upon the fly is persistent; given credit for and unbroken maintaining a beld front. When summer is officially announeed it will find the summer resort man with everything ready to entertain the public. The public pressure for a parcels post is very many thousand pounds greater to the pound than the pressure against if. An Tndiana judge who has decided that a pig becomes a hog when his tail curls, has attracted wide attention to himself. When it comes to straightening out the finances Mexico will realize that all the fun in war is net to he had in the field. One man claims that his taste for awberries has been affected by the of the man who hawks them ery can walk out in her graduation gown! ahout the street, an hour after the exercises, she might as well walk to the zraduation exer- is all When it over, the RBusiness cause the new catches were just over- whelming to the market. The king would net know what to say at the coronation ceremonies if the head of the Church of England did net ceach him so it will be just right Making a Horse Laugh. The mavor of Boston his wppointed & velerinarian to the board of health, wost eneugh to make a Lorse laugh.—Providence Journal. Disagrees With Teddy Again. $2.618,000,000 l leaned out on mertgages, o s e —— The real butterfly lifs, and the but- | terfly life of society, which is the but- terfly life of the novels, are very dif- ferent. It used to be thought before true butterfly life was studied that it was frec and gay—devoid of tribula- tions. As the Tiger or Monarch but- terfly flutter about the garden sippins honey from the flowers and shining in their vari-colored plumage, they look as if they did not have a care or « peril in the world: but when the lurk- ing spider springs over the edge of a flower and sets his poisonous fangs into one of them, and you see him go fluttering to the grass in a dazed con- dition and then see him fight for life whem there is no hopsz, vou will real- ize that the tragedies in butterfivdom are something approaching the trage- dies in our own spheres of life. There is no immunity from peril anywhere, for does not the strong vine often run up the young and handsome sapling and strangle it to death” The ways ¢! Nature are readily observed, but not easily understood. I noticed that the Sisters of the So- cial Corner in recent discussions of True Friendship and the disturbers of it, sezemed to think that resentment was necessary wherever there was slander or friction. There is more need of calmness under such ' trials than of bristling hair and a mind to pay back in kind. rather than to abide in silence.. Resentment is as inful as the interference. whatever it may be, and it affects the resenter worse than the offending party. Some schol- ars have regardcd resentment as a divine gift for defense: but I long ago found out that it was first cousin to hatred and a disturber of the peace of the wrong mind. Resentment causes us to call the person who calis us an ass. a feool, or something worse; or to just descend to his level and put our- selves in his class: and there doesn’'t seem to be anything to be proud of in that. 8il re under such circum- stances is dignified, and makes for peace instead of morz trouble. Try it Our todays and yesterdays are ail that belong to- us, although most of us aet as if we had a first mortgage upon an endless lot of tomorrows, when a we really are sure of possessing is to day. Yesterday is our today with its concretsd or indellible record: and those are pesky vesterdays which we find no pleasure in looking back to. although these should prove to be the incentive to the making of better day- in future. Tomorrow is just the will- o'-the-wisp Time has set in front of us | for dreaming purposes: but when we get there it is today. and tomorrow i always just within our hope and be- yond our vision. We all count upon what w ire going to do tomorrow ist as it really materialized; but it never does. Tomorrow has been just over the horizon line of man’ vision ever since time began, and it designed to there stay. We are work- ing in and on teday. and we have our little today and the world has its big today, and none of them- are perfect. It is a mighty perilous thing to e too conscious of your pedigree, because it leads to a state in which no other pedigres is of much account, and to a personal pride which is_foolishness The pedigres is all right if an attempt is not made to make too much of it. A person’s pedigree is of very much le account than his character or personal accomplishments, although it is in way supposed to be a help to both: but | of which there is no absolute proof. Padigrees start usually with some dis tinguished member of the tribe who did not know he had a pedigree, but who knew how to accomplish things ané made himself famous. ~ A good pedigree has started in a biacksmith shop and in a_jail. The pedigree of animals and stock, of which w2 make more accous than we do of human pedigrees, ha its start with the unpedigreed. It Detter to be the siarter of u pedigree than to be a victim of it. No man is great because his forbzars were great. but because he has the ability to achieve wealth or fame, and to make his family distinguished. If they are worthy of him they will not become stars of the twelfth magnitud: who boast of his brightness instead of their own. Tt more meritorions to be looked up to because of one’s own merits than to be looked at curiousls as a descendant of greatness. That old maxim, “Every cloud has a | silver lining,” is all right. if we have the mind to comprehend, or the eve to | diztinguish it. Pover always thought of as an affliction and seldom as a protection: but poverty wards off the gout, and this is the silver lining that cloud. The brooding mind whose crop of misery is without stint alwavs recognizes the bright side of a dollar: but gloom cannot be brightened up with tinfoil. The man who earns sma'l wages and is forced to live piain usuai- Iy lives twice as long as the man of leisure who lives high. and is 2 stran- ger to dvspepsia and many other stomach diseases: and here we get a glimpsz of the silver lining of another cloud. The average man does not know the trials and the cost of fame, hence he sometimes envies the famous instead of thanking God that he small enough to be left to his pareon' comfort and joy—all sorts of condi- tions seem to have their compensa- tions, and this is where we may find the =ilver lining of many clouds. There more honey than gall in life if we just cultivate th habit of looking for it. A near-philosophe; of vocel music says “A teacher heips to cultivate yvour veice, and if net good he helps cultivate your imagination.” This is @uite likely true in the realn of music, it but it is not contined there. The mer- cenary spirit is one of the strongest forees which promots man to turn things to his personal profit: and he is doing it in all the callings of life. It does not take a ighted eve to note this any in the week IfTow easy it 1s for lawyer to find there is no case where there is mno meney. Merit may have the puli in this life; but money has the push. The little green trading stamp is the il- lusion on the side. And it is all busi- ness. ana included in the schedule. Doubtless vou and 1 have had our imaginatien worked upen by the hyp- netist or the salesman, and if they did not make it too prefitable to them- selves it proved beneficial to us. If we imagine we are it, there are plenty of peomle to tell us we are net, be- cause it is their bounden duty not to let us be deceived. Life is so full of balances that it is not easy for a level- headed person te get unbalanced. There is pleasure in knowing the plants and the ds by name. A live interest in Ge creatures, great and small, makes old friends of them all Wky not know the birds in the city garden as well as the flowers; nd, also, the birds th fly over. ‘Why | California_ correspondent the othe: | day, a part of which I think the read- R ol | ers’ of this column will enjoy. He |Two wedded from the portals stept, wrote. “The roses in my garden nev- | The bells made happy carolings. er looked finer. They are all in mag- | The air was soft as fanning wings, nificent bloom. 1 have 150 bushes in | White petals on the pathway slept 100 -ties in all colors and tints; Oh, fair-eyed bride! and 1 have a double dark magenta Oh, tender pride! “hours spent under his instruction and within his influence. Under his guid- ‘ance we spent the day. A merry party of young folks we were, ready to en- joy anything offered us in way of tertainment. Nowadays cur programme would seem very tame to a similar gathering, for such a group would Know ‘beforehand so much more than we did of the attractions of such a city, and. would probably announce at the putset what they wished to see ang where they meant to go. We were legs wise and more docile, (Written Specially for The Bulletin.) The seventeenth of June, how much it means to us all, and how little it is noticed outside of the immediate vi- cinity of Bunker Hill. True Boston- jans remember the day with proper reverence ‘and respect. Nothing is | omitted which can make the occasion | notable. The children have a holiday from school work, and jellification i the rule of the day. Processions add to the brave show and a general dis- play of flags crowns the expression of the patriotism which swells the hear’s of all the people. A fine lesson it must furnish to the newcomers from all other lands to sce these dignified Bos- tonians celebrating with so much en- thusiasm an event, of which they prob- ably knew nothing till they reached our shore: They notice with how much pride Bostonians point to the unpretentious | menument which marks the spot so famous in our historic annals. Many less important events are commemo- rated by more expensive and more or- nate memorials, but its simple dignity appezals to us as a more elaborate re- minder would fail to do,. and is more in accord with our opinion of the manners and people of those times. Plain and sturdy were the men of those days, but brave and patriotic. They came together to fight for their rights and with a determiration to obtain them even at the risk of their lives, and in the end they succeeded. Leaving Norwich on a veory early | train, we reached Boston in-the fresh- ness of a bright June morning, and be- gan the day by going through the market. What do you say to fhat! We enjoved it and were greeted with cheerful smiles and words from those employed there. “Bless their pretty bright faces!” cried one friendly voice, and we felt it to be a good beginning for the day’s outing. Our breakfast we had carried wilh us, and ate. if, picnic fashion, on the Common, Space would fail were 1 to tell of all we saw and did on that memora- ble day, but we went to Bunker Hill, among the test, and climoea all the tairs to the top of the monument, and wrote our names on every- available space we could find, and felt that we were honored in sc Going: and I'm Lot | sure but we felt the edifice was hon- | ored, too. XNot many remain of_that eroup, and of those, few will probably read these lines; but I am sure we ali felt a greater impulse of patriotism because of that day’s journey, and Bunker Hill meant moré to us than ever before. In the end: but how many had fall- en before that =nd was attained! Bum- ker Hill, in itself, was not a victory, but one of the many instances on rec- ord where defeat at first became vic- tors#at the last. Longfellow tells u that we can make our failures and mistakes into ladders by. which to climb to success, and so it proved in Revolutionary times, as it has in all | have been glad to read of a simiiar excursion recently made under the guidance of their teacher to points /ot interest in our own capital and its sur- roundings. it would be a fine thing if Baid o ks i ten avery class could have a similar op- s arder sl for those whe | POTtunity, and would certainly prove o o and harder still for, those WO | of great value to them. When eves as never returned, for in those days, un- | Well as ears are employed, the chances { | by | | | of gaining knowledge are doubled, and for | when to this th iy n prolonged agx i day’s experiences are e e el 1 o<t |Joined as a factor, the mind is stored S oine acno e Then o5 ‘mow | still more completely with somethiug the women and children leff at home | of iasting interest, as witness my long- the most trying ordeal, after afl. | 259 trip to Bunker Hill heir hearts must have been as EE - Ehimy ; strong_and sturdy s, those who defi | WhSt S it wors aut o “iamous vic- home in their defence, and many a | torY o151 meer ops: Aataiie 1y Blc brave decd s fold of our Ereat srand. | Which w2 must turn Into success as | life goes on. No one can afford to be share in helping the nobl e bt oot s P1e | cast down because of one failure. The Ganae G Lo d(.!" S¥pERC Srana “_h_) {future must replace the ground lost most often carried news to headguar- e concerning the approach. of the | #nd g0 bevond it to something finer. emy? The brave women and girls | Stignsetandpetter. = . the countryside. Who frequently | , o/ ¢ @ “2aTR BY ek e At I formaton Ty | child learns from experience to avoid Fritish only to transmit it to the op. | CEFtain practices and venture stifl fur- | ther in his search for knowledge. The po party? Who else than the € gt ond 45 : 3 whose enticing smiles wrested many a | fo¥ of & Tetle mobin that stubbed He ret from the gallant redcoats. Often 4 Brscioreh ’ | he give up? Not he! Before many was the generous hospitality of the | jays he could brace himself and pull matron of the household used to the | 127% he could brace Bimself and puil antage of the brave men at the | UP MI. Ansie &9 5 i skill of an old bird, and now I am sure he knows very well where the cherriss are ripening for him and though ne has never tasted one he is sure they are very good. Most peoplz encounter such happen- for whose sake she served her with a smiling face, but a eye angd listening ear. Oh, | much praise must be given to the ves loyal matrons and maids of those early times, who their full share of serv- ice, thoush not In the field of battle. | 1188 In this worlds experience, and : | Bunker Hill in their start in life, let , Bunker Hill monument is connected | inom press on in the strife, and the in my mind with a most delightful day ; o™ Press on 1n the strife, and the spent in Boston and its vicinity. Away | Xover let anyone be discouraged if back in my Academy days it Dap-igrot resuits are not quite what one pened that a party of us boys and girls of the N. . A. & deveted teacher and |l jonificant and are often completely g Dwellers in Boston would, i'gorgotien or remembered omly as a doubtiess. reverse those terms, but to | fOrEOtten oF remembered me the teacher will remain in_my | : S e mind as a delightfu! memory. Dear i ) SN LoLwr: old Professor Smith, I am sure h e T T R R SR | sunpAY MORNING TALK name will always recall to very many in this town, thoughts of the happy = | climbing rose on the south end of m house that is thirty feet high and six to ten feet wide, its hundreds of blos- soms making it a beautiful mass of color. I have two running roses on my barn and woodshed, one white and the other yellow. and they are forty George Eliot. | Nothing in the circle of the year is| sweeter or more significant than a | June wedding. The prodigality of na- | ture expressed in sunshine and flowers | the freshness and richness of the life of | summer untouched by the withering feet wide and run full forty feet to |droughts of August, the good will of | the peak of the barn. and they are a | kindred and friends evidenced in at mass of silver and gold when ir fhundred tangible and intengible ways. bleom. This is a nice floral picture | The merriment and banter at the wed- from the Pacific slope, and we shoild | ding feast, even the genuine interest of all enj seeing these wonderful | the mere looker-on, who bestows a climbe 1 do, not t k our New | kind glance upon the bride and bride- England rosecs quite come up to [ho.\’e’;""mrn as they roll away in a deco-| on the western ceast of the continent, | rated vehicle: all combine to make thousands of noble run- | one of the fairest pictures upon “'hh:?.‘ es which will be in bloom in | the world ever gazes. during June. And as for the ahief participantr The Ladies’ Specialty Co. | Our Special Offering Today, Saturday, WILL BE A VERY PRETTY LINE OF Dresses FOR LADIES, MISSES AND JUNIORS. of the latest Parisiarl productions, and the mest attrac- that have been shown th These are especially and we Inow they are style, coloring and fab- We invite an inspection of these dainty novelties, They ar tive model; made for us. x ason. right in REMEMBER THE LITTLE STORE. The Ladies’ Specialty Co. 248 Main Street, Norwich, Cenn. | ing and resentment Feature Picture. “Indian Justice” MiSSs BE.SS|€ MACK, Soprano. themselves who can measure their feli- Music. city, when having walked proudly to the altar and having responded to the words that proclaim them man and wife and having torn themselves from the detaining embrace of adoring rela- tives and classmates, they enter at last into the deep and solemn meaning of | their troth to one another. The su- | preme moment of the vears have ar- | rived. - Henceforth life has a new di- | rection, a new motive and a new goal. Only & grumpy old codger would res- | train the emm]m..sm of I«he moment | by long and tedious moralizing on the - perils of the married estate. Mos WHITE, THE TUNER, voung people are quite ready to con- 48 South A St., Taftville. front them and consider them i erior | m——————— r.coeEm . TUNER 122 Proapect St. Tel. B11. Norwish, Ca IF YOU WANT A FIRST CLASS PIANO, get a SHONINGER through to the perils and privations that go ™ 2 L with what is called ngle blessed- Learn Piano in 10 Minutes ness.” To play beautiful chords send 150 foy regisiered chart. Nevertheless it may not be altogether | WilITTAKER, Box 18, Voluntown, Cona ungracious to whisper in the ears ot mayljd our particular John and Mary the re- — minder that many 4 marriage auspiciously begun as theirs, with just | as many gifts and congratulations, with just as much apparent warmth ot coaAL AND LUMBER. feeling on_the part of husband and wife. furnished in the course of the ars grist for the divorce mill. And| Why? A wise judge who handies year- | i 5 Iy hundreds of divorce cases revealed the reason when he observed recentl “If a man and woman would spend o | “HE ALWAYS ORDERED #HIS COAL IN JUNE” MIGHT BE A PART much time and’take as much pains 10| oF THE HISTORICAL RECORD OF retain after marriage each other's af- fections as they did before marriage| MANY A BIG MAN. to win the love of the other, divorce It's one of those underiying princis courts could go out of busginess. _| ples that go to makz up big characters, F bt il "’fl”.’“ et | Other hapits of thrift foilowed :t, a sdom on spe ject. od Tt tres Miny @ man who.at wreat expgniiture DU HiS 18 gnie/ Of flig Teattres of TRERY successful lives. of effort and self-sacrifice has at last won the love of the maiden- whom he esteems the fairest and noblest of her ~ sex rests content with his victory and | LHAPPELL CO relaxes and perhaps in time abandons b earnest endeavor to retain what he Wharf and 150 Main Strests Central now possesses. And she? Well, a popular novelist in his latest story pictures a slowly’| growing estrangement between a hus- band and wife. The man is repre- sented as a commuter who has to take an early train for the city each morn- ing, “Af first,” says the novelist, “she appeared in a dainty gown at the reakfast table, poured his coffee ana | bade him an affectionate good-by at the door. Next she got down just in time to kiss him, next she stood at the head of the stairs in her kimono and waved to him and finally from her own chamber she called a sleepy fare- well” Telephones. LUMBER GOAL Free Burning Kinds and Leighh ALWAYS IN STOCK. A. D. LATHROP, Office—cor- Market and Shetucket Stm Telephone 163-12. CALAMITE COAL “It burns up clean.” Well Seasoned Wood G. H. HASKELL. The only sareguard against a reac- tion of feeling against the coming in of suspicion, jealousy, understand- s the systematic, determined effort not to let all the pre- honevmoon courtesies and attentions g0 by the boards. Do vou remember, Mary, the night vou stood before the mirror a half hour matching up vour different ribbons with your gloves in the hope of choosing the one that| would please John most? And John, | do you remember that dark, snowy night when you tramped half an hour | out of your way to get Mary a bunch of her favorite violets? sAnd do both of you remember how, when you were | | being drawn toward each other by those subtle threads which only lovers 402 — "Phones — 489 and mystics know, how careful youl were of vour speech, how all sting and biting sarcasm were put one side, how deferential you were to one another's opinion even if your respective view- points were not identicaliy the in short how considerate and you were in every particular? | JOHN A. MORGAN & SON, ' Coal and Lumber Central Whart Oh, why will not husband and wife | Teiephone 884. car! over into the gray monotonous | hard-pulling days and months and | | vears that follow the wedding the same | ASTER, SALVIA, CABBAGE, LET« chivalrous, self-denying, magnanimous spirit which made courting days so| TUCE, PEPPER AND TOMATQ rich and beautiful? PLANTS What makes mother love the s‘v‘\— g bol in literature of all that is noble | i and sacrificial? Its persistence, its | CARDWELL'S, eternal vigilance, its perpetual offering the aitar of service. What 3 to 9 Market Street. s 200d Wife of self makes on 2 good husband or The determination to hold at any cost 1647 | the love already won And that is the kind of husband we 2 expect you to be, John, und the kind Ad T of 'a wile we expect you to be, Ma am's iavern through all the long vears that stretch | so invitingly before you. THE 1861 PARSON. offer to the public the finest standard brands of Beer of Europe and America, . 2 Bolemian, Pils Culmbach Bavarian | Beer, Pale and Burton, Mugir's | Scotch Ale, Guinness’ Dublin Stout, | C. & C. imporied Ginger Ale, Bunker Hil P. B. Ale, Frank Jones' Nourish- ing Ale, Sterling Biiter Ale, Anheuser; Budweicer, Schiitz and Pabst. GOLD WATCHES LOCKETS e RINGS PENDANTS GOLD BEADS M H'HING Al”“ B“- Gt bR | Agent for Pope Hartiord SUITABLE GIFTS and Overland Cars for New Londen County. New cars for immediate delivery. K. A. ADAM, Norwich Town. Telephone 447-12. INVESTMENT For Good People. Something solid Something they can see. Something they can walk on. Something they can live on. Something they can see zrow. to 30 per cent. vearly for sever- al years should eur interest stop with the rob- ins. the sparrows, the wrens, gold- finches, woodpeckers. nut-hatches, orioles. zrosbeaks, vellow v lers. cathirds and ruby-throated hum- ming-birds in the yard. when the geese and crows, and swifts and swallow and red-winzed blackbirds and cedar " Lirds fly ever withent our eve discern- ing *hem or our heart finquiring “Whither, away?’ I like to take in the whele population and know wh are feathered neighbors and the birds of passage. | enjoy the confi dence of the bird in the y as if he knew he was weicome and entitled to whatever he might glean in the garden, whether it is insect life rd who acts or fruit. If the Jaborer is worthy of his hire, why is not the useful hird worthy of hix toll? Man ought to be ashamed to he mean to his feathered friends. | had a letter from an esteemed Restricted as to Nationality. Better than any Gold Bond. Cannet be stolen er run away. Semething where other people’s investing makes vou money. Nothing safer or better on Barth. Absoiutely certain, no risk whatever. Al this refers to Groton Long Poin. Beach Plots, 6 miles east of New Lon- don, Conn. Prices $195.06 upward. $1.00 week. $300.06 Bungalows can be built and miss paying on plots 2 or 3 years. Tents can be used. Every Bungalow built increasss values. A Trolley passes the property. A Club House for owners. 7 be dug anywhere: the Company are building 2 water plants fo: and rich people. This is the last property between Mew York City and Narragansett Pier. suftable for an investment, where You can get in on the ground floor Fine lots in Ocean Beach. New London, and Watch Hill, R. T.. advanced from a few hundred (o $2.000:08 and $20.800.06 ca other good Béaches inereased propoertionally Send for hookiet. JAS. JAY SMITH CO., 50 State St., New London, Conn. Norwick Office, 227 Main St., L. A. Connor, Mgr, Ferguson & Charbonneau, | FRARKLIN SQUARE. | A FEW USED CARS CHEAP One Overland Touring Car, one Run- about (little used), one Maxwell (45 | H. P.), one Maxwell (22 H. P.) Br.F. W. HOLMS, Denlist One Tedm Wagen. Shannon Building Annex. Room A.| One Peddiér Wagon. Telephone 522 oct10a A complete line of new and seconds hand Wagons at reduced price: M. B. RING.—Chesmm Street THE RODERICK BOWLING ALLEYS reopen Saturday Evening with full size regulation. Your patronags is solicite JOSEPH T. DONOVAN, Proo. DENTIST DR. E. J. JONES Suite 46, Snaznon Building Take elevator Shetucket strest em- trance. ‘Phona THERE 1= no advertising medium 18 Eastern Cennecticul equal to The Bus- lelin for business results. Cut Flowers Floral Designs| GEDULDIG Tel. 868 77 Cedar Street "F. C. ATCHISON, M. D., PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Room 1, Second Ki or, Shannon Bldg. Night "phone 1083. Face and Scalp Mas- ge. Corns removed witheut pain. UNDERWOOD, 1 Broadway. MRS. T. 553-4 s. Tel. THERE 1s no aaverusing medium in Fasierr, Cannecticur equal to The Bul~ letin for business resuits

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