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of life, and Millle junior was delighted to call her friend Uncle Henry, and go 1o live in his eity home, AN IDLER. Iy course I will,” beambd child. can write, you know, ‘and Aunt Millie will help me, won't you, Auntie?” P “ Oh, you must not expect a.busy man like Mr. Waterman to find time for many letters.” But the | LEARNING TO SAVE. Tt is gratifying to note that school banks have been inaugurated in Nor- wich—that a movement is on foot to teach the boys to save money, which means the making of thrifty and eco- THE MAN WBO TALKS The Judge Was Right. That Brooklyn judge who would not Borwich Bulletin o e 1 uired the price of the wreaths, and Forget yvesterday, think not of to-| (Written Specially for the Bulletin.) |qu Belng: tohd minde’ & purchase’ rof ters were frequent, and & e el i bt R £ B s | morron and get a grip upon today, for | As Christmas approached, the bRUST| several of the plainest ones. No, 1o (ne following summer found them all|annul a marringe because the hrida- - ~ It reauires training to use money |in today lies all there s in Mfe for| Poriily Gisplayed for sale, and. one |didn't want any holly leaves and bei | together again, reviving old memories. | groom was forced at a pistol point to YEARS OLD, tighf GHA the larger the dec Genit of (00, Thn Soemd A8 AGW ave ined | e e eation Saughy the cye of Hen. (Tles in them, just the plain running | Fenry finally persunded Milie sentor | marry seems to have based his de g e the citizens who learn this. the more | the habit of getting the best there is|TueSrft Po I SSUECE IO Y5 “ay | vine, and, yes. -he would take them|thatthey needed each other's compan- | cision on general etiquette he 5 = == | wealthy and enterprising the commun- | OU¢ of today, vou have achieved the| % CT CEmCe, B8 19 ‘day's work, | With his. ' “I don’t know but I ougbtljonship in crossing the stepping-stones | surely was right.—Boston Transcript tlom price. 1Zc & weeks 50s m [ VAN SN entaPRrSIE (he CoF art of getting the best there is out of | homen tha they “wore. —heaped | to ask more for this one” comment uonthe. 06 a year. iy e in 5 Y - all days—the best there is out of life. | Simple wrea Y AN the jovial proprietor of the store. r———— Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Conn., as wecond-class matter. Bulletin Business Office, 48! Bulletin Editorial Rooms. 35-8. Bulletin Job Office. 35-6. Williman: Office, Room 3 Murray tlding. Telephone 210. - ———— e — Norwich, Saturday, Dec. 23, 1911. THE PRISON PAROLE SYSTEM. California has paroled her convicts ord in its favor. Of the total number succeeded in escaping. On the other hand, the two penitentiaries are Keep- ing watch over paroled comvicts. Since they have been given their con- ditional freedom they have worked in- dustriously, earning in one month 515,600, The savings of prisoners dur- The following from Frank Crane upon this theme in the Woman's World is worth impressing upon young minds: “Do not over-estimate money. “Learn to appreciate money for its real worth toward human happiness. “Do mot buy anything until you have the money to pay for it. “Never borrow. “Never lend. unless you can afford lose the sum you lend. “Never go on any one's note. “Be generous, but not a spend- to “Never join a company in having a when you join it be sure to pay your share. “Do not accept gifts as a rule un- less you are able to return their equivalent. “Be siraight, scrupulously exact and honest, in all money matte He was a near philosopher who discov- cred that “today stands crucified be- tween two thieves, vesterday and to- morrow.” Too many people are eruci- fying today Instead of taking from it the wisdom and the joy which lends power for the acquirement of the best there is in other days. Awaken to the fact that now Is the moment of prom ise and the only moment of that char- acter—now is the inspirer of the soul and the prompter to achievement. To know and feel this Is more than a Christmas gift—it seems like a gift from heaven, instead of full-fledged souls aimost ready to enter into the glory of their sea—the everlasting eddy of a windless area of ocean—to drift and watersoak and disappear. This s belng over- shadowed by the vempire of gloom who has shut out the light of the star of hope. Life properly lived ought to give to age a glimpse of immortality. Madame Swelchine was right when she high in the shop window, but they car- ried his thoughts back to a little ham- “There’s a name attached to it, 1 see, Millie Saunders, the little girl who let In one of our New England states, and started a train of memorles quite unusual with him. A prosperous banker now in Albany, his mind sel dom strayed away from business de- tails and the reputation he had gain- ed as financial authority was well deserved. Thoroughly upright in his methods, he was reputed to be a sound adviser and stood high in the esteem of all who know him. No one, however, expected much of him aside from business affairs. He had formed no family ties, seidom ap- made them, I suppose. Well, they are yours, name and all and a ‘Merry Christmas’ to you with them.” Millie Saunders! “He used to know a little girl of that name years ago, in anaether world it almost seemed, 50 different were his associations now. “Could it be?” he mused, and then laughed at himself as he remembered that Millie Saunders must have reach- ed middle life as he had himself. She was a chubby, little, rosy-cheeked girl when he knew her, always sweet-tem- pered and happy. How she used to for the past fifteen years, and in his RIS P Nt recent report the warden of the pen- | thrift. Some aged people come to feel that | 25ared in society, and, apparently 1ov- | Giing trustingly to his hand as they tentiaries showed up a wonderful rec- “Be careful, but not stingy. they are derelicts on the sea of time was the last to be suspected of senti- crossed the W';.dhfi brook .On lh;r:::g; eres was @ ment in any direction, yet here he ping-stones! road to the little old schoolhouse, but tent—it is a wise thing to be calculat- ing—It is a dependable thing to have @ balance; but the under dog who gets no steady work and small pay seems capable of neither. It is like preach- ing economy to deaf mutes to talk of prisoners paroled—1,396—only 210 | good time, going to an entertainment t Iingered before a vwAndow filled with > t have broken their paroles, or 16 per| or on an excursion, without knowing ":f;;‘:;;; ;’::I’a’;"fa R e B o Curianak wmme.d and designs. = ;:g:;d"‘m'h;o“‘:fohb'flfé‘!‘: ;r’.’::g,?: o cent, and only 5 per cent., or 77, have | first that you can afford it And [ PeeRRiRE fReling 1o Chink OF opes ST At last he enter e store and s B s S ] sunning-vine they called it, and they gathered it In those days to trim the schoolroom on festive occasions. On their way, too, they found win- tergreen to nibble and birch bark, and nuts and berries in their season, while many a bunch of wild flowers found its way from moist little hands to the The Maurice ample Sho 194 Main Stréet, i b kK “ g V] ly one ing the period of parole the law has Start a bank account. sald: “Age does not make sages; it | SCONOmY to men who earn only teacher’s desk. g g \ been in force are reported as $221,87%, | “Keep a little money in your pock- | cnly makes oldmen.” Mind makes sages | ollar where they actually nced (hree: | Somehow Waterman's bacheior quar- Wauregan B“lld"\g P clear indication that paroled convicts | et, and learn how not to spend it. and develops in the soul the afte n et s s he A N nily, | ters looked less home-like than com- » , have learned the sharp lesson of pris “In all money dealings, insist on a | 8low which fades into night, rogow- S e v P E n:lonllh!dllnn!:'l:‘li. ::?382{!?:::'n;vzr§ 'i‘h‘: p ” - 3 natha . vhich the spirit says: ° ‘Good admiratio vy o : on discipline and appreciate the value | clear understanding before you enter | & r‘ it - R friends who were familiar with their TY TY of the freedom $HOWSE thumh AT et der conditions "ot Immortality: Let quiet elegance and comfortable ap- The Shop of STYLE, INDIVIDUALI This gives evidence of the sincerity and capability of the paroled men and the saving to the state in fifteen years must amount to & most satisfactory total. Connectiout is young at this busi- ness, but if at the end of fifteen years as good a showing as this can be made the inanguration of the system and | continuance will have been fully justi- fed. PENNSYLVANIA LEADS. The state of Pennsylvania is making an impartial inquirv into the value of accination, and in this it has the =upport of the Journal of the American Medical association, much to the sur- prise of those who do not believe in the method, The issue over vaccination is far from being a non-professional issue. It has the opposition of some of the ablest physicians in this country and Great Britain, and those who favor it e composed of two olasses—thos EDITORIAL NOTES. These are halcyon days whether the wind blows high or blows low. The Christmas card does a large and cheerful business, if it is small. If everybody cannot have a merry Christmas, perhaps everybody might try. the readers v heart now The editor wishes for of The Bulletin: “A mer and ever! The hu- negli- Happy thought for today: man heart is never cheered by zence or craft. The late shoppers are tackling the Christmas problem now as if their lives depended upon it. When a doctor diagnoses a case of ‘the blues” as jaundice, is it good evi- dence he is color biind? Thought take possession of your soul and confirm it 1n the knowledge that vou were designed to dwell with the angels. It is not pleasant to go to the store for some reliable old brand to be told they do not keep that now, but have something just as good. You may have been surprised to find the dealer does not know there is nothing just as good as the brand that gives perfect satisfaction. Sometimes he says he has something better, when there can be nothing better than the brand a profitable customer is stuck on. What makes him take a chance of disap- pointing his customers, think you? Well, he has something he buys for less which he can sell for the same price, or else he has had a difference with’ the wholesaler and is showing him he can get along without it—that he can knock a good thing out of the market. Self-interest and spite play high-handed games in this world at many points. They are not always to be defected, but they work injustice in hundreds of different wi It 1is SUNDAY MORNING TALK CHRISTMAS EVERY DAY. The beautiful season is at hand! The children have dreamt of it; the grown-ups have planned for it; young and old, rich and poor, have thought and worked in anticipation of its com- ing. And mow that it is here most of us are prej to enjoy it. -There's a thoroughly pleasant atmosphere for everybody. A ®good deal of the milk of human kindness is on tap. The spirit of the day gets hold of some of the most unlikely characters. Old Scrooge, in that best Christmas story ever written, was transformed from a dreary old miser into a genial lover of his kind. And that miracle is often repeated about this time of year. Stern people find themselves relaxing into geniality., Your sour-visaged neighbor unbends enough to wish you “Merry Christmas.” The frugal party hands the newsboy a dime and bids him keep the change. The postman wears a smile, the butcher, the baker, pointments. Tossing the wreaths to one side, he found himself still musing over the past, and, jeering at himself for his foolishness. He took from its fastenings the paper attached to one of the wreaths. On it he read: “I am the little girl who made these wreaths to sell. Aunt Millie said I might put my name on one with ‘Merry Christ- mas’ to the one who gets it.” Millie Saunders, and then the address he ex- pected to find that obscure little com- munity in Vermont. He would really like to see the old place again. None of his family was left there, but there must be some he knew still living in the vicinity. When the holiday rush was over, he would go up there and revive old associations, He knew he should enjoy it hugely. So one day in January found Henry Waterman turning his face porthward, never heeding the warnings of his friends. who predicted that heé would be snow-bound and unable to recurn | when he desired. How he enjoved it/ all! Even the frosty air was a pleasurs, and so enveloped was he in fur coat} and cap that had they been al identify him at all after his long ; and ECONOMY 1 WISHES YOU ALL A Very Merry and offers a tions to late Christmas few sugge Christma Shoppers ha advocate and use the dry point — i ooy the candlestick maker beam on you | Sence, no one recogmized him in : mg fidass w:]m endorse the welt:)oml. ltx :a slr:nl:‘lgw;s(‘b:\:klel maker has| The man who knows it all is not so Wb unwencal Shedigiity. - A Spipndis ;’;f;ii‘fi“,“’.‘;“ i B s oo Byl 7nd these classes are constantly at|not turned out for Christmas one en- | uncommon as we think, and the world | infection of friendliness seems abroad. o e tavi . ative - fE g st € 5 3 g Bl . enmilty with onb’ Shgthisd snd Hivers | ALY Srha woms of the an Wwho 1 ha e e e ; lage. Then, as he revealed himsci | We have received for the holidays a shipment of ondemn each other's methods as in- | short.” should. It is mot evidence of good| At such time | catch myself wish- | thers was a general demand —from juricus rather than beneficial. — sense or wisdom to try to convince him | Ing that Christmas came oftener. 1| those assembled for a renewal of old Ladies’ Beautiful Waists to be sold at st* atfractive Heretofore the difficulty has been One perfect life made a lasting im- | he doesn't. It is easier and pleasanier wish the festival might be repeated ties LAdIECS d SIS ) Soid at mo: attractive the extreme attitude which both sides | ITession upon men who should be | !0 let him think he does. If a mis e et e AT e e z 2 5 ashamed not to have more nearly ap- | SLo%ing the man who & o endless filling of small stockings, nor | went 1o the city iwenty vears aso! | Pprices, these in the newest models in all the wanted «f the vaccination question have taken toward each other. Governor Tener has used the authority given him by ihe recent legislature to appoint a state vaccination commission to study into the wlhcle question of vaccination, efficacy in the control of smallpox, and the methods of the preparation proached it. Many people regard Christmas as other people do politics and have a gieat amxiety to find out what there is in it for them. Tt 1s a cause for shame if one poor showing the man who thinks he knows it all that he doesn't, he soon discovers that he Is barking up the Wrong tree— it is an impossibility. That man en- joys nothing so much as the conceit that he is a wonder—and he is one, but not the special kind of a wonder he thinks. To others his impenetrability is the surprise—to himself his all-em- could any stomach accommedate it- self to a succession of holiday din- ners. Mereover, my nerves would re- volt against & program of unceasing fun and frivolity, but these things are only the exuberant and passing ac- companiments of the season. Of the Christmas apirit itself one could nev- er tire. We've kept track of you, and know something of your success, and are proud to see you here.” “Have you forgotten Silas Warner?” asked another voice. o“You and I used to whittle the same" desk in the old schoolhouse. You'll find our initials there now, I warrant. But, man aliv what made you come now.? Why didn't sizes and we do not forget the larger ladies either. Fine Messaline with the regulation long sleeves and and B o Hie vacelns his child in a neshborhood has to say tear- | LiacaE APllity. If he only could el One feels that, somehow, the influ - i s to . =i elf the h vhat a for- > oW, e V. ¢ -3 ide S, H 7 i P K Speaking of the character of thelfuly on Christmas morfing: -Sants | e iaine e e b tor R ences generated on this great day | ¥Owayalt Uil summer? . oratai,|] handsomely embroidered, these in blue and in blacks, commissioners the Waterbury Amer- ican say “Two of the members are extreme anti-vaccinationists. They are John Fitcairn, who has spent a great deal ~f money fighting vaccination, and Secretary Cope, of the Anti-Vaccina- tion league of America. Two regular If Aviator Atwood should appear a rejuvenating experience on the 25th physicia are als o s if a girl has more of value on her hat ks about them. They rallied him on his veiclans, are also members. The) here on Christmas day the Rose of |y 17 0% T0OT€ Do NRaTS, O 1oF, 0% | of December, why not follow out the | .y .1 blesedness, and urged him to other three are ex-Governor Penny- Claus forgot us!” A Kansas village is in a turmoil be- cause the debating societies cannot decide whether a bird prefers a round or a square roost. New England might cordially wish him According to the vernacular of a Chi- cago girl, it is a great thing to have your nead on straight. Whole-headed- tells for success in every walk of The girls in business who bank on their looks than on their ability always rank as one-priced help, roor dependence to make a whole Hv- should stay with us for a long time. We should sing the Christmas songs throughout the year. Joy should not be allowed to die out of our hearts with the fading of the holly wreaths. If it is good to be generous one day, it is good to be so on all the days. If the exercise of love and good will is same programme for the 365 days, be- ginning Jan. 17 explaining that vacations could not always be taken when one chose, and he took his chance when it came, and must make the most of it. And very enjovable he found it, meeting one and anothe- of the old-time friends, most of whom were householders or ma- trons with their flocks of little ones rectify his mistake before many more actually worth $5.00— Our Price $2.48 packer, George Wharton Pepper, the |a merry Christmas b , - " & Y o ing from. This kind of a girl we are years went by. known lawyer, and Emfl Rosen- S e told gets crosser then a sick monkey | ,aie, Characteristic truths of this)” weve s, a few of the old givls erger, a lawver and financieri At| The postal authorities notice an in- | and don't know what is_the matter | potoer 255 Laoss We belleve o jn, WReR | for you to choose from,” said one hap- cast three of the lay members are | crease in postal cards and a decrease | With herself or the boss If she it be- | chimes rink on Christmas morning 1| Py mother tand [ hope we shail hear rained in weighing evidencd.” o i S5 ®| hind a counter and knows w 3 decisic 2 < 3 i : iy 4% =y The physician of the late Kt In parcels this vear. Are we return-| pql Rir mose and eat chocolates| oS to hear the angelic chorus:|® Gco rae, he hunted up little BMillie A delightful showing of fascinating White and ng Ed- | ing to the simple life? she'll h BRCe 1°8 _enie - Snalt W oward | o v ; s < s s get on, otherwise she will not.| jCRS€ OF [FAEGE BOOR O trecord | Saunders, who greatly resembled the ward and others as eminent, condemn all anti-toxins in the most decisive manner, and are openly decrying their. Tharles W. e a very Morse s not likely to merry Christmas., He XKeep a silent mind except during the car-strap hour or the regular family scrap at the table. The head of de- of man’'s inhumanity to man seems a shameful one. War with its cruelty and pillage and bloodshed, is wicked childish schoolmate he so well remem- bered. Aunt Millle, #s the child called her, was still living in her old home, Cream All-over W ists in several different ultra models, iSe as an imposition upon the affifct- [ has tried to be as sick as he could, | partments have a whole head and talk | yaste Peaceful homes seem better | and had taken charge of the orphan p = i cd. but the reprieve hoped for has failed.| business—they don't care who is Wear- | than mighty armies. A cradle is mord | child of a favorite brother, and the wonderfully becoming to most figures and complexion ing an engagement ring—mind! If a&ll| tWo were very happy together—little 7 i THE GRANITES OF NEW ENGLAND It doesn't occur to the uninquiring mind that from New England's rock- ribbed hills nearly nine miliion dollars’ worth of granite is being taken an- Lillian Russell says she is going to hang up her stocking on Christmas eve. Santa Claus cannot be fasci- nated, for he does not notice the dif- ference in sizes, the world knows a cheerful liar is far superior to the senseless kicker. If no one has ever been praised for lying, they have ex- cited admiration by their style in ex- Any man of beautiful than a dreadnought. the nations of men could remain in this mood, after the bells have stop- ped their chiming, what a redemp- tlon of human life and labor and treasure there would be! Millie evidently very fond of the aunt for whom she was nan ed. “Auntie =ald I might make the wreathg and sell them for Csristmas money; but how funny you should get mine and know about me. Come again next summer and I'll show you where and are very appropriate for afternoon and informal oc- casions. Just the gift for a lady of refinement. These 1ally, which 13 42.60 per cent. of t = e pressing themselves. Cheerfulness.| what greater 7 » otal output of the country The Toledo Blade feels sure that|somehow. makes a prevaricator com.|au the days of the year than the vines grow, and there are stepping Waists would be sold elsewhere for $10.00 and & ‘SHSSHE oF ¢B = If the man Who wore a pink shirt|Panionabie if he isn't trustworthy. A|Lin"touward men”? The universal and | Stones in the brook there, and Aunt nlished Lo Eeologlcal survey| .5 green tie at his wife's funeral fsn't | 4N Who can assure you the World 18| genuine adoption of .that principle | Millie says a little boy used to help Jubt_published. by the: ‘guvlemuent | ZiC FIEH AR N6 IR Tneral | 1aade of green cheese as if he surely | ROlNeR, BACEIRE o7 - Ut P iicas, | her over— $12.00 shows these granites are in five colors 2 3 0T as-| peiieved It is at least a wonder. The | poligh courts and open prisons the Why, Aunt Millie, how queer el . . . —black, white, red, purple, pink ana | 52Ult and battery. man in high finance, or who handles | woo, 4% COUFtR BRC OBER BlIsons e |vou look! T am sure he must ellow—and they are seen in construc-| A medical Journal convers the news | SHAdY stocks, is usually on the crest of | problems would be solved directly if{ have been a good little boy to help . tion work in all parts of the country.| thet a1 disti - news | tne wave in the cheerful lars realm.|men should begin to live in the spirit| You, and I don’t wonder you ltked him. The belief of the anthors ot ter Bur¥- | thet 37 distinct diseases can be passed | but how few people realize it. His | gt"tnoir holy festival. Dia’ you know him, Mr. Waterman’s T Bl ors of the Con- | round on a trolley transfer. It forgot | success depends upon his making vou | g5 MMuny ‘Gods, so many creeds. ntio” Dever Sold s is nua’ . And ecticut bulletin, geologists T. Nelson ! that, waiting on. the corner on a cold | L¢lieve something that isnt so and to| S many paths that wind and wind, | she looked Inquiringiy at their guest. Dale and Herbert Gregory, is that but the stumps of lofty land masses it does the work. induce you to pay out good money that how cute some folks are In making one When just the art of being kind Here both Aunt Millie and Henry Wa- A Petticoat for any suit and 5 day is 4 good way to catcl i tne time of the formation of the | top. ¥ ¥ to catch pneumonia, | o orli’ come back for some worthiess | 1y ail this old world needs. terman joined In a hearty laugh, and £Tanite New England was covered with & 1h'mf f*‘riom u»htlgh Ml rakes ?fl'la ‘19?.(1 Some day, when it has grown wiser, | turned the talk to other topics. 1igh mountains, several thousand fe: T:e Boston Record calls attention | 9ividend and lives.in comfort ®| the world may decide to make Christ- | The winter visit was of necessity a bove the land of today. Drofesser| (o the fact that In Nghting the bu. | Cheerful llar often goes to Sunday|mes a perpetual institution. And then |brief ome, but before returning city- ooty Mave:. “We sy be takbds | htaidliiukus: farier i Californrs, | 707001 Ana paradestas 4 WMat. will the hearts of men become glad. | ward, Henry Waterman made Miliie v . 2 by i : V. romise to write him the news occa- Mat oift 3 s 4 caris b Tadi . ably sure, therefore, that mountains|$1.000,000 has been spent and 10,000| | suspect some pescic’s idea of plety WECE FANRON. | > What gift is more appreciated by the ladies than a f folded sirata once occupied Con- | infected squirrels have been dealt | is to beat the trolley service out of ecticut and that the granites and{ With. This puts the cost at $100,000 | Dickels during the week so they can k=) P - ai 1 »ssali Petticoat? / ave in 4 ar- neisses and schists which we see ape | Per Aquirrel—and Is not too much, if | Put them In the contribution box on dainty Messaline Petticoat? We have them in an ar » | Sunday. The world does not dream \ rivaling gedness. e the Alps in height and rug- the natural erosion of those A German author nas figured out that during the civil war there were hand wash the other. It takes a sy coon to get the best of persimmons. 1 always make it a point never to cheat the trolley conduetor out of his nickel Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey is favaluable foc allthroat and ray of shades and colors. at the price to fit any purse. rocks one inch in one thousand | ir the vnion armies 216,000 Germam- 1 ears, it is readily recognize Jorn, 309,900 iorn ey S till it becomes apparent it will make milllons of yeats. Babe bocn Spiirgls|iSerinn Farehii hbd 15000 ot et g S gty S lung troubles. - It gets :t €he sold elsewhere for $3.50 to bring the topography to what it is | German <xtracation, making a total| spare his feelings, which soothes ey s e 'e;- E ) day. of 759,000, and leaving hardly any | own. 1 never Kmew how to assume manent, not temporary, relief. he value of the granite quarried in | F0OM in tke ranks for the patriotic | the of a passenger who- has paid The experience of Rod- New England is stated ing table: Production of Granite in the North- eastern State 1880, in the follow- United States in 1910 was valued at aliens of this and other countries, Bible Question Box Your Biblc questions will be an. swered in these columns or by ms if semi to our Bible Question Box Editor. the different kinds of creatures that wavs the rame, though its manifesta- Cy Billikins has done it so he rides on his face with the ease a policeman or a fireman des on his badge. Perhaps it is not strange a good man comes 1o nk he can't go wrong in a trolley if he is headed for home and has contribution box in his mind. once, but ch ame Strong and serviceable men in this world are not usually men who began bad habits in their youth. The other kind of men often think little vices are rear-virtues and do not feel n!h!mfid tells gers is an example of its mar- vellous remedial qualities. “For some time 1 was a sufferer from bronchitis and spent a great deal of money doctoring, until I heard through a friend of the wonderful merits of Duffy’s Pure Malt Whis- key. y‘Early in the fall I began taking it and since then have been entirely free this wonderful Pure Malt Whiskey This quality of skirt i Our Price $1.89 Don’t forget the happy and comfortable with children—make the little girl a good, sensible Coat. —— £ of th G ral Baden-Powell - H { 3597832 6,207,682 Possess it or are thers various kinda | (e S S from l‘l;ebmnd:al :ttlck.b[ r(in;lder | ¥ of 1ifa? (J. A.) habit of drinking is not of the siightest it my duty to thank you but ave The total granite output of the use for scoutin, v 3 2 ¢ choic a 3 S J eaen = ¥ ise for sc g. or for anythin~ else. e by 40 e o hle- . Answer.—Ths prineiple of lite is al- | 43e for scouting. or'for anything elwe. not enough words to say in praise of Your choice of about 40 Coats—some double-faced ‘l { cause it weakens their evesight: it 2 tions #re varied. These indications of | (2 % s P . : : Fbe bulletin on the granites of Con- | Iife d8acid cntirely upon the kin of | Tometimes makes them shaky and ner- as a medicine that is good for every materials, others lined with good, sturdy flannel, some necticut (No. 484), was propared in co- | OrEanian upor: which i exercises its | [o0i 1l SPOIS INSE ROTet (oL, SRl one.”—Miss Mae Rodgers, 202 S. operation between the United States ey s llght ia invisible | ,;0pi" and the glow of their pipe o 1SS MAE RO! St., East O N.J i i i and ematistes from on- general aource n glow of their pipe or M DGERS. Grove St., East Orange, N. J. self-trimmed, others with the plaid collars and cuffs, geological survey and the state geolog- ical and natural history survey.of Con- necticut. It is written in a style so clear and simple that even the seien- so with th's mysterfous force we call As the rays of life are reflected from @ifferent objects in different ways. so ‘his energizing influence is discussion is plain to the average Indeed the description of the formation of the granite traces the|SMIFINg upon a diwmon?, upon a brick it makes him look like a little es all weaki wasting and rundown <cologic history of Connecticut Trom | Guaes eitibinare diioas Of Elass, pro Thie general cannot have & high | conditions :tuchewy, Fai .n:“‘mluglz, giving - earliest geologic time down to the present in so lucid & fashion that even who knows mnothing of geology can get a clear conception of the stu- pendous changes that have .been wrought in the area now occupied by the staid and peaceful state of Con- necticut. Tet us hepe no one will find that P = F o S it is forced upon them. It Is a com new $20 counterfeit in their wad. This | 51153 Untier - iiese various lendable thing te live within one's .would be worse than a fiy im the creatures X erently” the | ieans and highly meritorious to want ‘The Duffy Malt Co., Rochestez, N. X, Jowers they possess, | less than those who are able to have ointment, when life animates thelr organisms, ' more. It is a goad thing to be con- vy s 1 R \ manifesied in the ditferent forms of animal orgsnism. Tre same sunlight duces “strikingly different ecects. light 18 the same lut the objects upon which it'shines differ in their capacity to receive and to transmit it. So with life; it all flows ircm the one exhoust- less founiain. The oysier has lite, but its organism is such that It cannot e use cf such iife, just as the brivk cannct reflect m.ch of the light of the sun. er manifesi and fowl. in beast, kinds of the scent of theirtobacco carried on them after dark gives them away to watchful enemies. ‘They are nmot such “cols as to smoke. No boy ever began smoking because he llked it, but be- use he thought it made him look grown-up man. As a matter of cpinion of men in high places who are victims of the tobacco habit. A great part of mankind does not kuow what economy is. Since he never carns enough to meet life's necessities he cannot understand how it is possi- ble to create a surplus. It is easier to ach economy than it is to practice . and those who do not have to econ- omize can't hold down the surplus— the system power to throw off and resist colds, catarrh, bronchitis and asthma and remedy in the prevention and stomdich fevers, taken as di- coughs, grip, i e cure e pneumonia, rected. hncridbydowm a family medicine everyw Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey has to its credit fifty years of success without a Question as to its merits as a curative agent. It Setdby Erocers and deaters in sealed botties, price ¥ yon can't procure it, let 3;-:'5.--'1-'&- R o ebealn 1t sold elsewhere for $6.00 to $6.50— Our Price For Saturday Branch of New $3.50 Haven Store =