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i W T ; o WHO TALKS ."“ & : we ex-| .y »og;ei: wonder just Bow it s «(Written m m.. nuw) e ; A 4 L o) 3 : WATINEE - DAILY mud Ganfisd | IS sk S e | Tl e {0 i, Fhojurs siwaYs | one of the Baglish pecta exprossed ’ ' = : Evenings at ¢ 900, sver tixce millioR pairs. 48 105, - limhtly. . Bermere . pou heve inows|™® ion"of November a3 h 3 venings at 115 YEARS LD. over sive million pairs; in 1910, over real good people who have thought it 3 & 2 = hecessary 1o live for a future world | Ny memaae oo seven miilion pairs, and in the calen- | pr =y 1 o i instead of for the present—who in Seacription peice. 13 o 58 adar ycar which ends with next month | MSeRd of for the presentTwho in e the o y on . . = A8 bumber ‘will excoed Wieht BIMIH| Cetven the ‘laca that God created mad | No ‘shade, mo’ hifie no hutsectiad. W8 The Poli Players Will Present Belasco and DeMille's peirs, to gay nothing of the one million | (o be damned Instead of Lo be blessed: pairs going to Porto Rico and Ha-{und that a llfo of bosecchment for\His | xo frupte’ - i wail. These fzurcs relate to boots and | mercy s what this transitory cohai- |0 Fhis no flowers, na leaves, 10| ung s Y Clever Society Drama Busines shoes of leather: while if to this we | tion really is, when. in fact, God's | N g i ? Editesi add those of india-rubber, we get an ;:l;:hm":to l}g\'e begn !h!‘: men, o!l:h;: % 9 lf'U ‘MIL:“-"V{ -’ i 3 Y ulletin additional three million, bringing the j shew CERNLE B DOSVED. < ‘We will forgive him his ignorance of fru ® this country, 4 N gi— Willimantle Office. Meem 3 Mumrer |iotel rumber of American-made boots | IS the empty and frivolous life witich | November, for eX mever lmew the | ST & Raeec RAME St many. prc_ | S—— Ny Builaing. Teiephone 210. 2nd shoes passing out of continental | 5 ot L4 g ut a life | month as it appears in New England. | Uries. agine boys In hig.time aid ) ilM 1 ——— of unselishness which is productive of | I am not sure that b Tt our- | Mot go to school munching apples on| . o T8 1917 | Urited States in 1911 up to an aver- | good works and good humor. H = we know It our- | 1ol &2 1 i - Saturday, Nov. 18, 1911. o 7 o 0 n i selves with any exactness. November 3 - 1 - — age of a million i pairs per month, | face as a symbol of piety s a carica- | i decidedly & puzle to many. Who! No flowers,” he laments. e must against abowt a half-million per an- | ture of something holy The way to | ) . | have forgotten the chrysanthemums, | STATE OF CONNBUTICUT. ot oy oo ot e 18 o put jouinty hcan predict ifs weather? Do the weath- | I5Y<,, [OTENU SR jthe chaysintieruiin m o vears ago. No o chiosoform Souvenirs of MISS FAY BAKER Gi he Ladies By His Excellener, s o 4 R aod The way to et misers in to | °F Prophets predict a severe, cald sea- | 13 'Y R OCTRd, B CRERTE WO Tae uvenirs o AY B iven to the Ladie 2 s dais- Colds SIMEON E. BALDWIN The TUnited Kingdom is the chief (i 808 the oy to el misery 1 10 |son to set in early in the month, the | {03 WEIS KAaWR a5 Atchacimes S0 mwm‘ : ] | Monday Afternoon and Night. rival of the United States in suppIYINg | majce them practical. The fact is, life Fjo umewns brightly, the summer heat! py,; "Hood was in a low state of mind | z L Governo A Procimmation. boots and shoes to_the world Her jg%aservice! and the man Who (rulY | selves wnrn. snargh in ent attive, | When he wrote his screed about No- .18¢, 28c, 3bc, 50« | vember. and we can take a more Night Prices . to @ vemerable custom,|eXports of boots and shoes are still|serves his f-ilowmen is serving God— ‘i 2, 2830, "Gie firet Yearof | greater both in total number of pairs | fhe man who is triie to (he laws of his e I e O N omte, | heerful view of the month, 1 am sure. | a tiny.flame a great conflagration may (8 procin o 10c. 18c. 98 of this commonwealth, I{.nd total valie than those of the Unit- | heing is long-lived and happy. The | papci Ot OUr, fuis aRe OVErCEiih |~ Greet it with smiles, and it Wil result. A cow has but to kick over a ICO8 ..., Oc, 16c, 25¢ ":‘3-}—"::' 30th day of| ;' ciutes, but the growth in her case i:m Iiiie should be lri\'ed here, ‘.na |'of their eder. Of moth_balis, and. take | :mlladln ‘:':;llrn. Be thankful, for P.nlrrn to burn up l?hlrngz. Au:‘v-:-: RO i o - | that gives assurance of a betier after < o spreads flore us generous returns | from o locomotive can devastate 5 KSGIVING is far less rapid than that of this coun- | 1hat 1D the pepec: anin. tp b 114 Jry. | SSSSAY - Detery. Uk Fenesgne el | from o Jocomotlve ekn UdeTaseiSly THANKSGIVING «op Stranger in a Strange Land’ Almight. }d for the blessings of The number of pairs exported RS weather report that on this particular | Hew mueh It o ore is lkewise in any mesn. little o gt AN the United States in 1895 was| If you wake up some day and are | ‘il 1% 50 be Talr and wermer. Tead oF Tecard Retwe G aun” ana | stary careloesty’ sot EOie:/ 16 HAY\In e e e e Eeat bt | 967,19, and in 1910, 7,810,903; the num- | inclined to he suspicious, Just curb | baing dome sueccesfully, jawns are be. | Wheat. Then we have our great an-| crease as does a brush fire, gathering AT atl o Wi 0t adche' S04 imer | ber of pairs exporied from the United | yourseif—call “vourselr (o ordér—for | ing gradca, and crosswalk Iaid in the | DUSL feast of Thankegiving, to which | headway Ul it ng that war jnvolves. Sl 13nd | Kingam in 1855 was 8,095,440; and in | if vou do ot know It you may Tearn | iireeta: amd ho froet has yet come o v families look forward s the | vk b sk been in perfect peace. For this: | orES 0 NI R age of gain | hat it ls Dossible for & Dersom 0 | interfere. serlousts with the presress|oNe reunion of the year. Even the in triumph seizes upon the boughs strong foundations of civil gov: et ntertain more kinds of suspicion than | ob e womks B WOt meny Seirs Sinee | POOTest in our midst ave sure of kind- | And reigns upon the throne of pine ernment at our fathers laid: for the {in the ca of the United XKingdom H e R T g R R S 7 o M anvbody can find I an unabridged - ©° | Iy assistance at that time. Already no- tree tops £ lite of republican inxituc being ol per cont, end in the case of | dictionary. Man was given Dower 10 | Balntar ihat. November. was o fine| Lise Bas heen given to that effect, and | And wraps the forest in & robe of pal 2 flame. Uedmectiout as colony and state: amd 5 E g or free America. I recommend that on | the United States nearly 710 per cent.|become skilled at anything he cher- | Nionth in which to paint his house, He | % many a household anticipation is | ationed onr people | The value of leather boots and shoes | ishes; and he can become as expert in | triag it, only to find that rain, snow CTeating an appetite in readiness for | g oir homes and churcies 1o ]exporicd from the United States, how- | doing evil as in doing good works: but | ana slect left him very few duyg for the €00d things to be provided. | ,One mark of a genuine Christian Vot Al Geet = ever, is more nearly identical with that | eXpertness in one Wav becomes the | \iork and mo matter which side of the FOF & short month, November is|character is the charity that sufferet] under m> ceal of | of like exports from the United King- | evidence of our villainy while in the | nouss had the latest coat of paint, | crowded full of events. ' Politicians are | lonk and s kind. =~ A right-minded At the capitel i Hartford. | go ) SR O e calendar vear | Other it is the witness of our virtue, |that was tke side @gainst which the 3lert to- see that elections Ip this man will never add fuel to an irc first day of November. in the year j dom, having s s t Man is heir to a great deal of freedom ind month go right, which means that the responsible flame. He will stamp it sur Lord one thousand nine hundred | 1910 $13,216,287. against $14,744,989 for {50 ° "ot t0 @ Greey: Lee of frocto™ | wind sent the storm, so thar the em- | 4 uiey “ghall g0 in a way ta suit| out, rather, if he can. No better ser- eleven. and independence of the { the United Kingdom, the average price | ag, » - | tire month was consumed in complet- | ¢ iy B I O s 1) Toiy 1B e e T s s | adept at making the best use of it. He |in: n poorly fnished piece of work ' (10 personal or party preferences. a n s per pair of these exported from the | gets freedom and license all mixed uD | which should have been well done in a | Those defeated are placidly thankful hecking the progress of wome tafe SIMEON E BALDWIN. |United States having been $1.69,|and makes trouble for himself in his | eek's time. t is no worse, and look forward to|that, started in ignorance or mallce, in encs s command: ageinst 5113 for those exported from jcorfusion which he cannot understand. better luck mext time. The worst de- | sWirching the reputation of another. MATTHEW H. ROGERS, the Uuited. Kingdow. | When old Suspicion takes a person by . .| feat will not prevent one from enjoy- — Secretary. T the arm he leads him away from no- | If variety is the spice of life, No-|ing the Thanksgiving feast.and the| Ag regards the gossip directed COAL STRIKE BOOKED FOR 1912 bility into the dark avenues of Time, | vVember is a spicy period. It is the gathering of happy faces surrounding ' szainst ourselves, it is not wise t = and he ineculates him iwith the poison | unexpected that happens in all things | the table at that time. To the depths | make too much of it. “Let them s An _anthracite coal strike is some-which kills faith and love \and holi- | pertaining to.the weather during this! of oblivien are consigned all thoughts is a pretty good rule to follow. F BREED THEATRE FEATURE PICTURE TODAY The Gambler's Influence Powerful Western Story SIGNS OF CHRISTMAS. Aithough Thanksgiving s almost {thing the public dreads and something | ness. It is not necessary to seek evil |hort month of thirty daya. A fore-|of stuffed ballot boxes. What are they | cept in cases where silench would MONDAY 4 TUESDA weeks iwav, evidences of a mer-|which has been aveided for nine years companions, for imagination can fur- |taste of winter, dreary and cold, then compared with stuffed turkey! | seem to admit seme moral fault, one n 2] b nish some of the worst—man can be | clear, bright days of bracing _cool —— - | not take up arms against the a Y ONLY % Christmas are everswhere visible. The imported toys which are arriv- g at New York indicate what there inder the C jon which Presi- 1 e ot 1o o | Belf-polluting as well s 4 corrupter | breczes recalling Helen Hunts “Octo- | Championship in seme branches® of [(lc tiics of mossipers. One of the L de ap- ot othera. ber’s bright blue weather,” then a spell | college sports is decided during No- | most widely known and respected of pears as if he conditions are ripe for of warm weather, during which we | vember, and = thousands attend the American public men has sald that “Auld Lang Syne” b in store for Young America. On ong |n more disturbing strife in the coal| As architects of eur own days we [mwelier in thick olothing, reminding us | games. ' while thousands more wateh|for 0 years he has nol taken the merican liner the other day el lelds of the country in 1912 than ever | show a great diversity of talent. When | of what we shoul ave had in June. | eagerly for the returns to be an- | trou to correct the misrepresenta- : b jwe thousand toms of toys which pay | before. we'take time tc look ihem over we | Hood whose lines I repeated at the nounced. Many an earnest business | ticns of ‘his’ critics he result has A Superb Scenic Spectacle of the Scotch Hills Beavy duties and are then cheap ince 1902 the commissioners have|d0 not have many to be proud of.|beginning o s scrawl, never could | man, many a brilliant member of all| heen that each wrong report has died AR . 2l “ yaough in price ts compete in the Am- | given the mine workers an advance of | There are too many just orinary |have known the hunter's moon, St |our leading professions, many a poli- | of inanition. The Son of Man in the The world-wide Poetical Idyile, which has no equ: Tl e e T e o ror | iumdrum days among them which are | Martin's summér of Al Saints. Of | tician is as solicitous over the results | jresence of His cnemics, “when JHe ;" 3 S B ne A 5 below a record standard. We ought | course, being debarred the privilege of | of these games as he eould possibly was revil reviled not again. He LA a8t mow there are a surprising num- | ten to nine hours in the length of the | "joaun something new every day: but { birth in New England, he cculd know | be if his own capital or reputation was | would not dignify the assaults on Him MATINEES 5¢ EVENINGS 10c¢ Ber of excursiomists who journer 1o |working day and the privilege of hav- d5 not. The fow who begin this |nothing of our squaw winter, or In- | at_stake. by resistas A good and sincere life Perf the Scandinavian countries to spend {ing their own representatives inspect it earls and die jate are often |dian summer, and being accustomed| Yes, November is certainly a closely | is its own best defe and afe erformances, 2.30—7—8.15 p. m. the Christmas holidaws. Here is strik- | the weighing and measuring of coal to | Ly made en:inent. Just a common |to London fogs, he took a sombre | filled menth, even if it be & short one, | from harm whatever “they say. is like any other common thing, |View of the month. and from taxes to turkey it deals ouf | THE PAR; not so very bad but about what you'd | “No sum, no moon,” forsooth! with!to mast of us plenty to occupy our 3 8 | | | ing ewdence not aleme of the prosper- | gee that fair treatment was accorded. Mty of these peoples, but their love for | Furthermore, the commission estab- ; & o 1 expect. it is the unexpected that |the full round moon of a few nights|time and empty our. purses. ihe fatheriand. The pofix xs‘. 1ty 4 n‘;g- lished a sliding scale, a profit-sharing | .,unis in iife both for better and for | Since shining bright and clear and as| Thankful we should be if our strength Mon., Tues. " trip le common to ail classes. To |device, under which the wages of the|yworse. Of course, there is nothing | large as a cart wheel at its rising! No [ be equal to the cialms of strenuous ex- Bible Question Box w‘ d ¥ EXTRA ed. meet this demand, special excursionsiminers are automatically increased by | startling about regular pursuits, but | month in the year has given us a more | ertion, and our digestion be sufficient have been arranged by the Hamburg- |a percentage every time the price of | (nere is Something meritorious in a |beautiful mcon We miss the leafy|to the demands made upon -it. FOR MONDAY AND TUESDAY ONLY American line. including all hote! ex- | coal at tidewater rises above four dol- | level-best endeavor. Any man about shade of the trees, it is true, and the AN IDLI] \'::‘" Pamsos and raliway tiokets, to do away |lars and a half a ton. Fo. example, | lis business shouid feel like a master i en OFFICIAL U. S. GOVERNMENT PICTURES OF BT the inconvemience of ordinary |ihe Unmited States commissioner of | N9t I moper.. Wearing days out T Vaiior P e o o | Thase tovalbts miy lssve Now |ishor, whoss Oikotion it is to! gatnar [ S9F what there is In them for us, ve: |Alnighly. |/ Mew' we slways been |behind shadowy Anf: impersnal spon- Mobilization of the Fleet i er 12t s 1 e & SR st g - | hol in s spect, X : ork ? }Ile‘ as nfl.i:nihnrgoodh v?::: \‘r{::r::!m;muflfil! J“::-L“?";fi':l: ’_l‘::e El\)yer. u}l:ol the way ml m.mmsu; up = daring’ today in this direction as — Q.—What will become of the heath- Hudson River on November 2. A Big Feature [ heir destinal av e e, - | brown. The reason we shou o our |he ever has been. It does mot even p» el # — 5 e Chnistiins Bettdeva tice that the miners are lo receive a|best today is because we are dead io |sfock us to catch him doing it and G S h et dedithe” & 2T Peall, dhere - Will they be saved because of Return Engagement, by request, of e bonus of eight per cent. for September, | ¥¢sterduy and not born to tomorrow. |some of us think it to be rather bright. |y ST ;s e Teage eir ignerance | A PERTINENT QUEGTION. |ooin of okt Ber cont. for Sontamber | ey well ved and rebaics is i | Eerhape (here miny. Do fost s much |sthels” dnformation. “Tnizs mow ail |07 WL e o asie “ALFREDO?>» . The Hariferd Post asks its readers: | Was $4.91. that mskes the greatost life, evidence thut tobacco was the third |come io, why they left the place they | 07 salvation, then all 1ld-hiave* bien THAT PHENOMENAL VIOLINIST. | “In cage wour house caught fire, what | The miners say this arrangement 18| The blessing of good health is found- k‘:;‘?iJ’,’,";‘;’il.;“‘smi:“'h-#?r““-‘x’s';v‘*.‘i s EoR. e oowisia of fhelr | lett tn iEneren na 1 ae b eatnen = — | would yeu do>” Comid vou fnd the | Worn out and they want the board of fed upon & knowledge of how (o keep |to the orde= of oreation, and there | s s frer aieaBmointe e o vk 1N | hes Saved through igne: ance then 4150 OTHER FEATURE ACTS AND PICTURES i pearest fire alscm box, and could vou | conciliztion abolished as unsatisfactory [ well. [ nave noticed what we call |appears to be little prospect that they |avory of Mre TAcs honueksening onc ! Il of the bubes and children who have furm in an alarm? because it was slow in the disposition | blessings are not always special fa- (will cver agree upon this SUBJECL. | travagance. Believing with Fabe t1at|dicd before attaining vears of dis- | S e — Thought upon such questions is most | Of cases. The mine operators say the|YOrs from heaven; but just the ri- |Some scholars thini that before man | the proper study of mankind ‘,'; man.” | cretion and knowledge, and therefore | ... . 3 | srafitable when there s mo call for |record of the conciliation board has|P°med fruit of common sense. Some |was created mcans for his 1iving bad | ey ‘secm to Nhow mearly everything |in iEnorance—inese lkewise shoutd be [ DUl O O e Baver dovelorive 101 Geand Poultry Show | Pten Bosauae it makes one reads to|been good, that it has Kept peace in | TISH Bere more health than others be- [to be provided and herbs and fruits fatout rriends and aquainiamces and | saved. What a sreat missionary Herod [ JLULIE Ve clivtion, for eternal jife e i af ot Fiihs 3 e rasl Malds nd done more thaee an|cause they know more about sanitary and animals preceded him, while able | {5 he perfectly willing to spread the | must have been when he siew so many | b7 10 Da given to those only who. exer Tuesdny, Wednesdny nnd " e ' f ati aier on thing 05 fea the 1tatey ol ot o il profectlon, oF plstists Wre - GCHSE . e SRISK Ui [ Intienistion Srondatyl ot the infants of Hethlehem, fOr Of | vimel taitn wod- abadtence. mhove: who Nov, 21, 28, 3 The Pt pursuds its questions thus: | otber one fhing ©b froe the mustry {are mere temperatc in all they 4o, | provision umnecesary. sinee in ihe| “Tme grievous thing about it is that |course vere all saved fo King- obey, after {ull opportunity has heen LAWRENCE MAY “Suppese you wase at the top of the e urbances ich formerly | Intemperate action in ail sorts of |early davs manna rained from Heaven | cryel damage is often done in this ir- | dom zlory And what a pity we did |} coaived, shall die the “secomd: dewih s with escape cut off, how would | brought distress on both workers and|Ways brings human beings to grief. |and one's living readily coulé be raked onsible v rot all die as infants! Ieaven would | i house pe . hoy ould s 0 i s e b & y could be raked | responsible fashion. If we: vould run |not ull nlan 1 ‘ about taking care of yourself | owners. 2 1 n. saving re {up. Do not_expect me to dec . lmany @ rumor to the ground, we |be a delightful place filled with heath- | == - = N :r.‘h;lz'.lmn to p(‘er!" What pro-| In the last three weeks each of the|PeoPle eat themselves into misery |for 1 am willing to own up I do not|should find that it had T o nts! We are informed in | b S Ras o de in th 2 | throe anthravite Sistricts of the Lnitoc | tP&R drink themselves into the srave. | kmow anything about it: but am in- |nothing. We, and our frionds, 100, are the heathen's trial P D - B R i s - + 1t has been demonstrated that a well- |clined to think fabricating statements ' needlessly hurt by stories that a lit- will be after the | - . P’ Ere escapes _ /| Mine Workers has held its convention, | buianced ration weighing a pound Will, or acts and atcributing them to God tle investigation would prove 1o be wur Lord Jesus Fine Heavy, Sterling Silver “There are seme tenement houses in |and a few davs ago the three together | if taken daily, keep a man alive and |is the very .orst form of lying. akogether distorted or fo have mno when not only the heathen but v jmis city which have rooms on the |held what is called the tri-district|Wwell. The intemperance at table va- 3 foundation whatever in fact. ~They” world of mankind shall be ful Cl arette Case Huird fioer which bave only one means | convention. The scale committee's re- | FIes from eating all the way up to an |\ oovo P o0ty that it re- | Pave been keeping in circulation a |l enlightencd as (o the way of salva- ¢ exit—by a back stairway. If that [port, which was adopted, called for a | VeTage of four pounds a dav, which | WESEERCION I3 3 Sounds of water | Practical untruth. tion: when the way is so plain that a is fthe gverage restawrant calculation |duires thice hundred PORCE of TRST| "It is impressive to reflect from what | wayfaring man. though unlearned. $7.50 person whe is taking means of agress should be cut off there | twenty per cent. increase in wages, an (= . 4 Sr&C would be met only one ether possible |eight-hour day, recognition of the|mora food daily tham can be assim. |corn: and any falling away from this third story win-|United Mine Workers, and other ad- | ilatcd, or disposed of, Is clogging up {amount lessens the aquality. Viewed in one of these | vantages which were asked in vain of | the machinery, and clogged machinery | {rom this scientific fact, what a large | heuses. Waai would vou do if vou|the strike commission nine vears ago.|is Steadily loSing its cfficiency until jamount of water the average corm Coop | were trapped in such a room?” The terms of the last award will ex- |t breaks down altogether. Natural |Must abiord. =~ Waler Blavs O G We are showing a fine line of Sterling Silver CIGARETTE CASES, MATCH BOXES, MUSIC F. C. OEER There §s an opportunity for medita- | pire on March 31st, and the agreements | 'UNSer can get lost, and an unnatural j Past '8 e | veloper. It is as | on upon these questions, and wise |of the hard and soft eoal MINers NOW | olbericn ot 1is viote UG o0 b de- s b o By o g g - ' VANITY CASES, TUNER cenclusions mey save both life and [close at the same time, and the Dro- | reasonable action on the part of His |fruits. It must take nearly as many | RURSES, | 122 Prosncet Bt property when fire menaces both. Pre- | voking of a general strike would be|sons if they expect to be blessed. | pounds of water to develop a large | 3 EYEGLASS CASES, ETC. SO TN paredness through (hought prevents |harder upon the industries and the | . |gahlia or a big chrysanthemum as an | > .~ 2 . 81, srwlen Gn onfusion and delay Deople than ever before in the history} Many men live long lives and die |ear of sweet corn, to ;u D‘v?rr.‘e:. illl . ur prices the lowest. - el Shut the fire up wherever it is, for |of these contests. { without cver. geiting a clear vision of | carries mineral supplies ~WEIER it | e no dratts through open doors or win- | The reduction in the hours and the | oW (horoughly they have been gov- |comes to ImEcriance WAter, ang, i NORWICH, CONN. - P dows should be permitted to increase |advance demanded would equal an ad- | Sovernment mewey Koverns the meople them the world would have continued H m' the fury and speed of the flames. vance of about 31 per cent. in the cost | moat and. there 18 o eccai s . ite (o have been a bare rock in space. It 0l 80, Il DHSS. ROV of coal at the mines, jsway. The avernce men bas little to | W lhled rain \:‘i“dsr::e l;:a}[:";};:“yng(— Are all ‘In ‘A y i d o ot s in - is vor! 43 mpect grade u THE SOURCE OF FERTILIZING do_ with istaia i n ce-iihie cin mHl g O . spection. * All idin general pa now recel COAL. AND LUMBER. EDITORIAL® 3 i “und the adminis - - SALTS. & L NOTER B I o fennd the adminlsterers | fensation made the ancient seas fit to Old topers are supposed to have &y gor him except the support ithey | Gevelop and sustain the first life on apl a s y The recent announcement by the de- | Uld OPS = . sober theught once In & while! can win from him about clection time, | the =lobe; and doesn't the salt in the ing we Partme: of agriculture and from other e - - oephiyn g - St o SR - (o thares o menceal henciit irem |nea-water and ihe agitation which | suppiies of potash in the United States | NOvember is putting up a stiff front. | the order and protection which or- | Keeps it uextfl]a:‘: a‘:;ellh gt tng, deco and | P N At ized communities secure for ail | SUDDOrting Tev ¥ . om | ol et s Susicient ropdred e lone cnld wave s preterale to| Sl (ompuni e SO, I8 | oA Srationt power”oF S Uver s | by the bufean of statistics, depart- 5 - S et tha el ® Stameel ¢4l |\Water is constantly playing a power- , - 4 A g = 1 ment of commerce and labor, showing = : R ot nay B0 | rul, pavt in e Vexlar siljas efter bidsta kurs pi de fornimsta Thie 2 P. F. MURTAGH that the importation of potash salts is | Tilinois fPe‘Bdl*‘mnkf\:‘ it has but one|we shall be n for labor and prod- ey Fail Teleph w2 91 W now running at ihe rate of over a mil- | lorimer scandal, and pravs it may|uce; and what we shall pay for every- | To some people a bare tree in the - . . ol | o hone. 92 anc o ave: and withi the calars | winser winds 1o an GREIENCY thing; but banker i Sverige, Norge, Danmark och Finland. A Fuzzy Fa lion deliars a month and has aggre- (Never have another to me mare won ion dollars. While these | Happs thought for today: / Those|{leBends upon how we are educated |derful iu winter than in summer. as Kot b Lop —doa’ Saxler Fednss Looks Like a Long, cl ISB y! Col inter. Y . Potash salis enter the country in var. | who read the obituaries must think Rt i = 3 - v z i & 5 S0 quietly and regulates all of our |hoiding its chiliren in its arms while ous forms and thus under various ti- | only good people die. concerns without elections or mwich |it battles witi the wirds and the ice. ties, including muriate of potash, sul- i .gitation, that we often get a notion |'The buds on these trees hold next Fuzzy. hats and conts for: Luth sexek, Keayi DUNN'S CATHART vhate of potash, carbonate of potash,| Professor Lowell reports frost on[that we do it all instead of the real [vear's foliage nearly developed, care- g, fuzzy conts belng put on by | pILLS it W kainit etc. their aggregete import | Mars: but nothing is said of the size|¥overnors of life. Mones is the gov- |fuliy folded up and warm, ready when st 0 u winter bustness, | ' . B 3 i, Blne AGHG Eatkil Sith | of the pambkis: dap, ernor. which all governments ackuowl- | the temperature harmonizes with the 1 think of Coul and The Chap I = x - e B g 6 oaim 5 cage sraciously and do special favors {law of its being to snap the bonds and e JEREeEs IS e s HTam 5 for. Since we cannot get along with- |to put every stalk and leaf in its | ——— 7 ollars, against about 7 million in the | Levi P. Morton, who is 88 vears old | out money it looks as if Old Money- |place and to work at short notice. N \ ™ corresponding months of 119, and a land out of politics, has gone (o Wash- | bags would be Tuler until the end of | Without these Teady leaves to hegin CHAPPELL (0. hey're 130 a be istle over 5 million in the correapend- |ington, D. C., to live. {im wor earlty in spring, noxt . P 1 3 . img monthe of 1909, thus indicating a p —_— e Years waod could mot be well Central Wharf and 120 Main street | DUNN’S PHARNMA steady and rapid grewth in the im-| The man with a wrinkly, snarled-up| Do You believe this: “God first [made, and the strength of the Totophones: e made man and then He made woman; |iree would be impaired. The tree nude §0 Main Street portatien of this ciass of products. | o o o | American farms abworh a Iarge Pro- | does Hhe to 1o taien ror pier, i Be | and then He felt sorry for him and |is no less glorious than the ~tree Eiien of the Imperted. motdsh kalt . 0 taken Yur Blo: “iade tohaccal” Perhaps this cxplains |Aressed when one comes (o realize its ooy . v 115 g il £ why tobacco was finally named ‘So- (Teserved power and resolute purpose. mest of which are valusble as fertil- | ' Ay (ho next presidential election a | lace.” But this Is not funny or sensi- | The ieaves are the wood makers and izers b reamon of their large content | haic-million women will vote; and the|ble, yet it shows how daring man is |fruit perfecters and it is the root sap of potash. This is especially true of [numuer is not likely to zrow less, attributing acts o the lcoming up and running through their katni¢, muriate of patash, and the sul- B g {littie veins that gets chansed by action Phats of potash. o b —— | of the sun and flows back as leaf sap Germany eh e 4 | making age rings in the wood as it is the chief source of kain- |gins jts next campaign the morn- Boes thus writing the tree's own his- LUMBER - """ a hobble . Fur and feathers ap- it amd, indeed, of all the imported pot- bt ¢ 2 " | pear to be more plenty than fabrics. | fore cor future fore: t6 dead. . Wo ash salts except crude. saltpeter. Of |\"§ 8fter election is the soclalist party. | i o e, e e ) AR s tines | Let Racceo t the murtate imported in 1911, 431 m SO R G e The man who declared that the St |5 gee wonders rsally loss wonderful Free Burning Kinas and Leh'gy 2500000 el armep Lined Coat o A D. LATHROP, ‘ cor Market an:n’ v‘,l».e’wnhn Gts ’l‘“h i“ I‘. ‘“"'Wl ‘ N (D TPelephione 12, 14 Bath Streat Efl[AMfiE [}nfi_ AMERICAN HOUSE, Facrsll & Sandor [ It burus cp clean. SPECIAL RATES 1o 1h Traveling Men, ] Well Seasoned Wood g s T G. H. WASKELL. |Buy the “BIG BEN " Atarm The republican party is not going to | James' version of the Bible was good |(han the natural objects near _our have two presidential candidates next|enough for him if it was for St. Paul |doors of which we know so little, Man year. It will have one and accept|was orthodox, if a little short-sighted. never invented anything half as won- him. e derful as these trees which stand out bare and Dbleak against the winter sKy. len pounds, Germany supplicd all ex- cept 3 1-4 milllon pounds received from Beigium and 1 1-2 million pounds from the Tnited Kingdom, most of which was, in each case, presumabnly, of Ger- man origin. Prasticallv all the im- poris of sulphate of potash are from Germany, and of the =3 million pounds of carbonate of potash imported in the | hurt. = - last fiscal vear, German: is credited R s th 16 million geunds. compared with | One American regiment to keep the | D Wiley thinks if girls understood B s it s Bor e oh oot |y apen Trom Bekin g5 thet Soket | the Kitchen Tangs as they do the plkno R T Lo e | Tooks Tixe s stmall force for ‘5onap |1t wonld he hetter for the country. He nitrate of potash, or rrude salteter, |Stunt. Weatigr the. il g0ad; old-Sealion however, British India is the crief 1A o et A On the walls of an ancient Scottish sowrce. that coumtry being credited | The railroads of the country are pre- | In Onio, the Taw allows omly twelve | vniversity hall 18 am inscription that future business. They have b bl oo gl S B If there is anything von want first- class it is the pocket knife that is with you 16 hours a day and in use a dozen times each day. If you want a knife that looks well, that is keen and sharp ‘when you buy it and will seldom, if ever, require sharpes- it NEEN KUTTER KEEN pocket knives represent the very best that can be in_point of quality of steel and work- Offi e = No one would have believed a few Aviator Rodgers gives 1s a new |Years ago that paper bags would be- . It was “aerial somnopathy” | cOme cooking utemsils. The day may which occasioned him to fall and get | Some when the used dishes will be fine for kindling a fire. SUNDAY MORNING TALK manship. Every knife is as keen as a razor when you buy it and every time you pull it out of your pecket you will be glad you bought it. There are mauy different styles of 3 ket knives but only one quality. ~What THE BANE OF CARELESS TALKING with ever $ million pounds out of a |paring f BRI Anek des 10 the “open mey 3 \ - * tetal importation ©f 9 1-4 million |orders in for 17,000 new box cars and | and the gunner is just s wpt to met | 1-et them siy ever style of knife you buy under this brand you may know s Io. the: ool yéar. Which gnasd | 150,000 tebs of steet railw Themn, Tti1s Bt e o Eot] T nave never.heatd the case of gok- that you are getting the best steel that can be made. L erts o Jome 30, 1311 E = cover a stolen umbrell i P e et : ali A Clock of i i 2 mbrel T am goinz to bear this sug- KEEN MUTTER stauds for quality. % fvigas e a i 0¢ ose who are most anxious to —— 4 Sestion in mind ihe next tme an 1i- A. MORGAN & SON. | FRISWELIL The Bqual Franchise seciety is learn- |amend the Sherman act are doubtless| Mavor Mahan of New london must | responsible rumor comes to my ears. B Silatuing about Eenitle. cost | those who would like te pull what|be the most magnetic man in the | When some vague story floats throush mmunity it s senerally repeated 1 $ #0¢ to promete a stitutional | teeth there are in.the law out, state. He is to he 25-27 Franklin Stre = 3 Ay : ot the authority of “They say.” We i 3 Coal and Lumber ST amendment in the New York legisia- TR S I 98 S, Shomming - 26) rarely find out just who “the: ¥ i i 3 {1 . ) b1 'y i e adver - The small jwoman with a big hat| New Londoners along tie T L e Yo 84 Franklin Strest Ry ) ORTR M B and a gastodonlc mufl looks funny in ' ress vouch for the stery, so it must hide i 4 eiepiiona 54, Central Whart bietin (ar busine erilip B