Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, December 30, 1911, Page 4

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. Borwich Baulletin and Gousict. 115 YEARS OLD. mom tha s = year. tion price. 1Zc a week; S0c & Con.. as wecond-clans matiet. Telephone Calle: Bulletin Business Office, ¢ Bulletin Edite-ial R.-_ 4 Butlding. Teiephons 210. Entersd at tho Postoffice at Norwich, Norwich, Saturday, Dec, 30, 1911. The Circulation ol | The Bulletin. The Bulietin Bms the largest elr @om of amy paper in Emstern Conmecticut, and from three to four @imes larger tham that of amy Borwieh. It 1z delivered to over 2000 of the 4,053 houses 1a Ner- weich, and read by mimety-ihree per cont. of the people. Im Windham 1 ix dellvered to over 900 homses, i Pamam and Dasfelson o ever and ta all of theme piaces 1 amily. wt ham forty- ome humdred amd sixty- five postofmce dimtricts, and forcr- ome rural free dellvery romtes. The Bulletin Iz sold in every town mnd om all of the R. F. D. CIRCULATION 1901 1905, average ... Decemaer DEFECTIVE CHILDREN. 2 this 's from Bos- the at- nink what people of ery tiquors, ng and 00,000,000 s, 111;,000,- d chocolate, offee, 100,000 £000 pounds of tea, 400,000 Fopium. and 30,000 cunces of that most Fsubtle of all enslaving drugs, cocalne, and these poisoms circulate in the ar- £ierfes of our peaple day and nisht, fyear after year, we can expect noth- }ing different but the degeneracy now incressing. t right up to home, ses parents are guilty of caves no doubt In sane minds that reform in popular practices might # prove beneficial 1o the race and pro- mote the spiritual conditions for which ®0 many sincerely work' and pray. SPORT AND COLLEGE FINANCES. resson football with its flerce- pays the colleges engaged in The figures are not all at hand to =how what it means to the colleges, 2 efe is no doubt it brings in over illion to the colleges of the land. cleared $30,000 and Harvard very ¥ as much, and Princeton not lag- £xing far behind in recelpts. The uni- versity of Chicago made $14,300 and a £ Yaie near! pounds of | { | | months a total of 584 million dollars, | | 1ast yvear | tacturing exported —_— FOREIGN COMMERCE OF THE UNITED STATES. ‘picture of the forelgn commerce of ‘United States during the year Just closing is presented by. the bureau af statistics, department of commerce @and labor, in the figures for the month of November and the 11 months endlng with November. They show the im- ports and exports by great groups, made up by combining into separate classes the varfous articles of a Sim- ilar character, such as foodstuffs, manufactures, materials for use in manufacturing, etc, etc. These 11 months figures, accompanied as they are by the figures for the single month of November, enable a close estimate of the business for the full year, since it mav be assumed that the December fgures will In most cases approximate those for Novembér, and that by the addition of the November fgures to those for the 11 months a Teasonably accurate estimate of the business for the full year, which ends with the cur- rent week, may be obtained. Tmports for the 11 months ending with November, 1911, were valued at 1,392 1-2 million dollars, against 1,426 milllen in the corresponding months of 1910. Of this total of 1,392 1-2 mil- lion dollars’ worth of imports, 324 1-2 were manufactures ready for use, against 344 1-2 million In the same months of last year, a fall of 20 mil- lion doliars. This decrease occurred chiefly in manufactures of iron and steel, manufectures of wood, and man- factures of silk. Manufactures for urther use in manufacturing imported show practically no change when com- pared with the corresponding months of last year, Crude materials for use in manufacturing show a decided fall- ing off. being for the 11 months of 211 459 willion dollars, against 493 million in the same months of 1910, e decrease of 3¢ million occurring chiefly in india rubber, hides and skin 1nd wool. Foodstuffs partly or wholly actured show a decline of 15 1 dollars, the 11 months figures 166 million, against 181 million ear. The decline occurred chiefly suzar, of which the quantity fm- ported is materfally less than last vear. Crude foodstuffs imported show a marked increase, the 11 months fig- | million dol- | ures of 1811 belng 168 1- lars, against 134 miilion In the same believe the New Year's resolutfons 2 delusion a8d & Soace. Mus Sety 04 by making his units of long. Saviour made the unit of time when he taught “Give us this day our dally ' What you resolve tp do t0day makes the good or evil day; and it is the multiplication of these davs which gives color, character and effeet to the entire year. New Year's resolu- tions are a farce, and have properly ceme to be ridiculed, not because of the good intent, but because of the ufter failure of the resolver to make No one ever seems to feel bad Over these fallures, and thls is why the greater part of them seem to be insincere. I say to you: Do mot do it. Every day one should consider life in its bearings upon him, and his duty to himself and hie neiglibors. The key- note of all religlous action is “Now! not to- “seek and ye shall t year but as a reward for immediate action. As | advance in world calls bad men look to me like God’s men more and more. He made all things and pronounced them good, and he geve them all the power of cholce and through mistaken choice what vile conditions they create for | themselves. Ignorance, thoughtless- | ness, excesses and habit make men vile. | Someone has sald no other creature | Ged has made laughs except man—no | other creature he has made can claim | the title of being a creator. The sons | of men are all creators as one ma 860 from the constant progress made in mechanics, the sclences and the arts Has not some man reputed to be bad | surprised you by his good and kindly | acts? “Have you never noticed how men of bad repute now and then show up noble traits. The milk of human kindness is not all to the rich or the | poor, the good or the bad, but it flows where God has planted it—and out of evil conditions goodness occasionally sparkies as a lone star does sometimes | through a rift in the clouds at night Terhaps this was why we were warned “To judge not,-lest we be judged.” years what - the The life of another was nev ned to be controlied by any be he father or ruler. By a divine overy human being must live his own Hfe—no one can live it for him. The most that can be done for any human soul is to impress it with the cardinal Irinciples which tell for true develop. ment and power. Every individual must not only Iive his own life, but he must recognize hia own shortcomings nd by the aid of the divine spirit, not by the ald of his father, or a zoo friend, correct them himself. The r de- man, Tasy | months of last year. This is largely jue to an advance in the price of cof- fee, of which the stated value of the 11 months imports was $2 2-3 mild— | Purt him—rhe dollars in 1911, against 60 million in | 1910, though the increase in quantity | wa very slight, from 677 milK pounds in 11 months of 1910 to { miillon in a like period of 1811, the{ advance in value being due, therefore, | chiefly to higher prices. On the export side ready for consumption show for manufactures 11 against 454 miilion fin & like period of an_increase of 90 milfion doilars, while for Njovember the figures are 52 2-3 million, .against 45 1-8 Anil- | lien dollars in November of last:vear. | Manufactures for further use in manu increased from 2 | million dollars in 11 months of 1910 | to 293 million in the same months of the current year, a growth of 34 mil- lion dollars, while for the single month of November they increased from 4 3-4 to a little over 36 million dol- | lars. This indicates that the total value of manufactures sent to forelgn countries during the full year will b about 960 million dollars, snd if to this is added the value of thome sent to | Porto Rico and Hawaii, the total value of manufactures sent out of continent- | al United States will for the first time approximate and probably pass the billion-dollar line, EDITORIAL NOTES. To usher the New Year in'with a drunk is to make one's self lower than the ass. Making good resolutions would never hurt anybody, did not fallure weaken the will. | manitest | cannot be developed in any other | whether he shall man—the God-like way Qood reading and zood counsel doesn't help, if he is receptive 16 them. Tt is up to him whether he shall take into his life good or ev walk fn_the illumi- nated way of ove and Wiadom. or whether ha shall plod along in doubt and darkness. The man whose ¥ was plotted for him by a parent and has hoen uccemsfully lved har ot wrought what he should have wrought for himaelf. Tt is wp fo o ue to yield to the inspiration spirit. and blind to slander. It does not mak. so much difference what folks say about us. If what they sav t0 our d credit s trug, I¢ is time to mend, n ‘o assail them for it; and 1 un- trae, there is no reason why we he disturbed since falsehood has nc ! foundation. The right way to deal| with slander is to starve it to death; and if one does not notice it there is | nothing which sooner disconcerts a | slanderer than the conmsciousness that | Ihe 18 deemed utterly unworihy of no- | vanity in others. It tice—that his effort to stir up strife has falled. This is the only true way to make a counter impression. For as Alexander Dumas says: “The way | to check alander is to ignore it. At- tempt to refute it, or to rum it down and 1t/will soon outrun you. Perhaps it will do you good to come nto a full realization of the fact that a3 a man you are an_expression of God—it doesn’t matter what kind of a man you be—and mind is an expres- sion of you; and thought is an expres- sion of mind; and inteilect s an ex- pression of thought; and knowledge is an expression of intellect; and pow- or i an expression of knowledse; and all these represent the divine order which makes man the crowning crea. tion of the Most High. It will do | over, a quiet 3 | a pretty good world to live in, one of | habit: but enough men It is a good plan to be both deaf|t | ner own should | 1 3 5 After the we seem to be the Ol4 Year. We try to. forget whatever of gloom and sadness may have come to us during the twelve months past. So many thines Very much less serious Calamitics’ a8 we ook Dack at them than they did when we encountered Vs differnt perbbactive . The. and very different e. The - scape profiles, so often. claimed in many localities and of which _the residents there are so proud, must be [ Séen at just the right spot, or they be- come mérely a disorderly bile of rocks instead of “The Great Stone Face,” or “The Old Man of the Mountain,” or “ProfileRock,” or many more which have a far-reaching fame. Thus many an event, which seemed a sorrow when it occurfed, now is counted as some- thing to be thankful for. and we say cheerfully that it is a pleasant memory after all and the best thing that could have happened. In fact, we don’t quite see how we could have ot alons with- out it. “We find so much more sun- | shine than shadow, more good times than bad ones. We count up the new friends we have made, the old friend- ships rencwed and the many tokens of Kindness the past year has brousht us. Looking about us, we find in the com- | munity so many who have helped to | make a pleasant holiday week for those less favored than themselves. | Svery year more and more of the dif- ent organizations and lodges are | opening a free hand to those in need, | and there are so many helpers of whom | we hear nothing. 'Tis not the vaiue of the gift that cheers, but the fact of be- ing remembered at such times. You know in Sweden a Christmas sheaf is given to the bride, who sing out their | ankfulness in payment. We know | of kind-hesrted people who make the | birds their care during all the cold | months and feel repaid for their | trouble in watching their feathere guests at the feast. Which is made | the happier ,do_you think, the giver | or the receiver? The former, I am | sure, for good thoughts and deeds as well as bad ones, like come home to roost. ~After ail, this we th At least, it is the best we have tr thus far 1 Then w rwvar | Year, with much greater assurance be causé of our review of the Old. Have | our griefs been out-counted by the joys during the year gone by, 50 ma) We face the coming year with ek- pectations of similer experience. friends have come to us in Year, there are probably new awaiting us in the New. Opportuni ties for doing And receiving kindness have been furnished in the past year we may be sure there will be no lack other, and if moderation had been ap- preciated the whole human race wou huve repute today for living slow and ving long. The habit of looking in is generally regarded as inin re guilty of it 1o prévent the women from having the fame of it all to themselves, Fortunata man who has 2 poor opinion of for he is | a easy prey to self he person who cannot charmed by the reflection of face Is safe unless conceit enough to make up a face with cos os which passes with the painter, | but to the observers is a fright, What | is mirrowed ig not always us, for a mirror can make us all 150k like cari- catures of ourselves. Vanity is always at the mirror; and it is the vanity in us which makes us tolerant of the was_the fly on the wheel of the chariot of Acsop that sald: “What a dust we ra and there is no record that Aesop swatted him. He must have recognized the fly was in it. Still vanity is the proper | thing to put under the ban. | SUNDAY MORNING TALK WHAT IS WORTH KEEPING. | The end of the year is a good time to give yourself a sort of moral over- hauling.” Just as a careful house- keeper will go through closets and attic from time to time and throw away useless rubbish, we all need, on Arab chickens | 1 suces citi- it, and only the croakers say we shall pay for it before spring, and remind us that “A green Christmas makes a full churchyard.” What would they say if they were placed on the south- ern instead of the northern half of our £lobe? Would_they feel saddened be- cause Merry Christmas came in mid- summer ,and sigh for snow and jce? I think not. Like all such saylngs their value lessens as time goes on. What of that old fashion of telling the weather of the year from the twelve days following Christmas ! 1 believe 1 hiave never found two people to agree 48 to whether the calendar begins with the great festival itself or the day fol- lowing. Hach theory bhas its Strons advocates, and no one remembers the record long enough te compare the results with the predictions. One other thing has always been to me a puzzle, which grows more and more_difficull of solution as time goes on. Why is New Year set apart par- ticularly as a time for making good esolutions? 1o people exgect to be o different in attainment that January first will find them better able than | on the day before to overcome bad | habits and adopt new ones? What of | people whose calendar differs from | ours! Are they to defer reform til thelr New Year comes? The Parson whose Saturday sermon is a constant | delight to me, said not long ago that | ould be a Merry Christ- | that Christmas us the year the same advice 1o the N lutions. Let each morning find us re solved to overcome the bad habit which we meant to attack in earnest at the | beginning of 191 | Away back in the last century my | work lay for a time in u school room. | There, one day, 1 found on apupil desk, Where her eves Tell upon It fre- quently, a card bearing these words, L will whisper- today. giri id it helped her to remember. In r life, her career was one of much | ariety and attended with great re spousibility. 1 have wondered some imes whether she took a daily pleds S tait s “and How mich O her owing to daily resolve to do her best. The Parson's about a daily Christmas £00d, and will serve as well for 3 dges. A little girl, 1 know, _excecdingly good paper words. might Don't wait for any special day | or time to begin a good thing, “Start AN IDLER. Bible Question Box c aquestions will be n in thewe columns or by mai 0 our Bible Question Box Q—Kincly explain the significance of | the word “eternal” in the following | verse of Scripture: “Even as Sodon and Gomorrah, and the cities about m in like manner, * * * are set| forth fo- an example, suffering the | vengeance of ETERNAL fire."—Jude 7. (R. M. B. Answer.—The cities of the plain, be- 1se of their corrnpiion and degrada wera Cestroyed Ty “eternal fire,’ to express the matter in modern guage, they suffered the veng-anca < lasting destruction. The word “eter- nal from the Creek alonlan and cignifies jasting or “to the age.” The cestruction that came upon those cities s certsinly 4 lasting one. The in- habitants of those citles, however, were | WEich had been performed in their cit- Grand Concert and Ball Under the auspices of W Cross Council, No. 13, Knights of Columbus, IN THE ARMORY Friday Evening, January 5th, 1911 Tickets admitting Gentleman and Lady, $1.00. Each additional Lady 50c. Miller’s Augmented Orchestra. Conoert 8 to 9. 1ot eternally destroyed, for the Savior, more then two thousand years afier- vards, declared of soms of the cities cf His day and of kHis own people, tho Jews. that, had the mighty works nd Gomorra, | th | T people ot [l The 1 ies heen done in Sodom would have repented in sacke and, therefore, it would thap for the Cay. (Mat xi, 20-24.) son for the Lord's people I8, that I 1ag been fully eniignten2d concerniy Divine grace, if then they wers to pu 1e an evil ¢ it would mean ti iese would suffer the vengeance cverlast'ng destruction (not etern Week of January 1st START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT The Poli Players In Clyde Fitch’s Best Play “The Woman In the Gase” The Poetry of Woman’s Undying Fidelity Set to the Music of the Soul A Powerful Play Telling a Beautiful Story. Every Sweetheart, Husband and Wife should t Matinees 10c. Evenings 10¢c, 20c¢, 30c Evening Prices Matinee Jan. 1st Coming Week of Jan. 8th “Brewster’s Millions” tcrment) from t{he presence of thc Lerd."—11 Thessalonfans 1, 9. Diagnesed. “That's a smart thing I've dome, sald the doctor to his assistant “What's that, doctor?” “I have put my signatare in the column ‘cause of death’ in this death certificate.”—Tit- Bits, Daily Thought. We sieep, but the loom of life never stops; and the pattern which was weaving when the sun went down is weaving when it comes up tomorrow. —Henry Ward Beecher. 3 8MOWS DALY 230,7 Awn 8.45 KEITH & PROCTOR VAUGEVILLE Specially Secured for Monday, Tuesd Wedne AL. MARSCH & €0. b, THE and In a Screaming Comecy Playlet entitlec BERT & IRENE VAUGHN,| tile Comedians. Dancing Novelt March of Progress. “I see they have torn down a 20. story shack in New York to get a site to put a building on.” “Yes; and they are using last years dread- noughts for targets.” A shadow 50 miles long is thrown en the oear. by the peak of Teneriffe. OFO =0=0=¢fi- BEGINNING THIS MORNING 2.30—7.15—8.30 P. M. BREED THEATER TODAY'S FEATURE PICTURE Featuring MASTER KENNETH CASEY Adam’s Tavern | 1647 { January | 1st 2nd EDDIE RAWLEY Photoplay, Ibsen's THE LADY OF THE SEA Same Popular Price 3rd e e SOLDIEF “The Little Spy”’ you good to think of this order, for in 1€ ltes the mastery of spirit over mat. | 0ccasion, to throw away certain pos- sessions that life is lumbered up with. There are muititudes of things in our | minds and_hearts that are not worth Phrow them away and start 122 Proavwct S, ARNUAL GLEARANGE SALE § Wesleyan came off with 32,000 In ex- § cess of expenses. . 1861 £ The Fitchburg News, commenting The American farmer should let the fact soak into him that he is worth | ber and the ability of man to come in- 000,000,000, It wil o the fullness of his inheritance. Do - wiil make him feel {0t be content to belleve, but be enges Tel. 8 Norwlah, G offer to the public the finest standard brands of Beer of Europe and America, upon the game and its revenue, say IF YOU WANT A 3 The fgures show the extraordinary | 71 to know. “The more you know' what i | Boiemiin, Plsner, Culimbach Davarias development of football as a student o practice, the more vou will be likely 2 | Boor, Bass FPale and Burton, Musl Sisithno, J industrs and raise the question wheth- | Lije " an ey faying Jenuary |t practice what vou know.” Knowi- z | Bocten Ale, Guisness’ . Dipils Stont, P! U Ry er the colleges are not losing a great bills and furnishing money for Jan- ledge is a lamp which lights the way | A good memery is a blessing, but . o AnIDaRed Glaper Ale. Banbes Sst e SHONINGER throush ! of man. a good forgettery is equally as impor- Hill P. B. Ale, Frank Jones' Nourish- 48 Bouth A St. Ta e uary bargain sales, Father is right up ing_Ale, Storling Bitter Ale, Anheuser, | Budwelissr, Schlitz and Pal — | K C. ATCHISON, M. D., some things that it We should that are opportunity to utilize it for their gen- eral nal benefit. A There needful to remember. to forget “the thing: ind” when those memories weaken discourage us, We do ourselves ant. are isn't against It tootball | *F" & % alance-sheet of the pro- | The Woodrow Wilson publicity bu- : learly engaged In | reau is making the most of his presi- ( BeCurity rtant b g = | strive man should realize that a trade in life; and a recogniti that every A. A. ADAM, Norwich Town. Telephone 447-12. el O P2 OVERGOATS AND SUITy portions of Yale's ts ig business. The equivalent of a cor- | gential & this fact is the reason wise kings s “ s Poration tax on $80,000 would at least | g that the princes know how to make |Ereat injury when we insist on hold- o oy PAYSICIAN AND SURGEON, add et oy Koo e a living by thelr hands, Instead of be- | IN& _depressing ges before the @) O | oromim im0, AaYCriei® M BN | Room 1 Second Fh or. Shannon Bide 4 e to the curriculum | When it comes to duplicate presents ;i ‘tauent an art or professio aind. Throw out on the scrap heap ey o L B T Rt Night 'phone 1085, emse no woman ever domplained 1f they [of which might not prove to be re- atever has no use in making life : rger interests of colleze foot- | wers diamo i oo “born | better and stronger. — Rt rovide ansuiabaiiie witn | . oA ontases, only a fow, and thes sppear | It s mot worth while to retain our $12.50 OVERCOATS and SUITS, $ 9.50 { what i to all intents a business enter- | A sixty-mile-an-hour gale, chased |to be born physically and mentally | hatreds. ‘e heaviest burden a man | j »rise in practical operation. The edu- [bY a cold wave, is a Tather Marchy {ambidextrous. The ambition to know | a0 carry is 4 grudge. It will breck (h :tional value of the object-lesson | Performance for December. P e T T wabr | are the one hurt most when You cher- $]5 00 OVERCOATS and SUITS s]z 50 | might be enforced and t g o! broa. {sh the = inst v e 3y o 4 and the paraliel Peld of endeavor. _The unskilled in | ISh the thought of wrongs, insults, in H emphasized if the college authorities | If this country is to have 300,000,000 | 1ife are more to be pitied than blamed, | Juries that some one has done you. ) ¢ s subjected football to the kind of eco- | People in 1960, we wonder what the | Thev are in a narrow sphere with such | It Is @ pretty good plan to forget these o 320 00 OVERCOATS and SUITS $]4 50 | We take pleasure in announcing that after Saturday, e ragat s o j o > SuCh | things as soon as we can and g0 about 2 3 i + i 4 Rl Folkn nigh W fmigdiea on | opulstion ¢f Nopwich Wi Be Bien A e O L e L0 | our-Drope: : Naiieine IR “usaiie to- 2 (<] December 30th, we shall be located in our new and more B T % $tis worth while 1o have a purpose in | Ward nome, with charity for all” We | " 201 in Sto " c =N Happy thought for today: When a “"_",m‘a o Take abitin for @ muide | shall live happier and work better if | \ convenient offices at 203 Main Street, one flight up, over FT ON NATIONAL GOOD ROADS |man gets too rich to work, he be- |inc: "Dractical and profitable ways) | W refuse to keep enmities. | .00 R and UITS, 18.50 Smith’s Drug Store. i sident Taft doss mot approve of | COMeS a good motion advertisement for | The young man who learns a trade| It 18 not worth while to retain re- | ol o3 b N i R4 ol . morse for our failures. It is Impor- omobilists ang | (e tatlor. |has an ancher to the leeward, and he | {ort"simply to try to learn the loa- | FaH . or of national | z }is mever. St = o tle 10 sons they have to teach. Wi ould R s Tamw, Tk bacante s |1 Have oF meh oF mistortuns, |acher ove X M el Every Qvercoat and Suit in our entire stock | the matter at a recent Dankrupt we are now informed thui | ing or purpose or practise is respon- . . B . . H DR. ¥. C. JACKSON, Manager w Yor gt 43 - In this world of ours you doubtles# gihle for them and then to forget i 2 % York: e 1 | i Shtcen of Deing relemmad are maouc |ty Rt GBS SUS® (PTCER | Ml for, e a0k, chen Lo eet | gy is included in this great price o DR F. C. GALLUP, DR. i. D, SYDLEMAN, Associat e { closely related to honesty; and pride | seif, because he made a failure once . . \ N i Who 13 1o pay for the | R e T L iy | e e e e 2 reduction—nothing reserved Heurs 0. ntstn P my SRy, I0-R.tm. to 1 p. m 4 < bullt by the The nations quietly looking on may |and style is akin to pride, and what s moral ball and chaln about his ankles. | Telephone 5 Ly the suddenly come in and partition China | dash it creates among the daughicrs A mistake may serve to réb one of i E % take carg-dt | dbuii the Wroundiihat thit 10 SSEeriig | :,; men mt :Il:‘g chnrct:-s‘ :nd‘;‘m( ot all co wrage .or it may be like a guide | A A h IJ l f | p thon 8 arn: triot (and | just as good. em. Pretence seems to have the cen- | post on the way of life showing one | R S = 3 k i X e | i S S 105Gt tha arens, whils Romilty and | hierd to Ko When You nave w one /@ Assortment comprises the best styles from O ce how 4 hongety do mot compiain hecauss they | st the Eulde post oBCE. 1enve 56 DeInd o e e e . e e e tion, If thera Horace Johnson in wondering how | ¥ . kS 4 . s s | . n peor fo be assigned back seais. | There is no meed Of carrying the | > - lonal road |1t was ho lost his sloightide on Christ. | AEiw s often hesn Jabelled an in | fewey tring with you. » The House of Kuppenheimer, Alfred Benjamin | st he earnest ™ 7‘;‘ He knows now a poor guess is | moral, because it is so on:n consclous —_— — i t is iness of the © disappointment. of not being what it pretends to be.| g.rows even should not forever b c i amen 0" bulld thete| g0 1o e T'a "Rochetononid. says Tor o {Fulh | poss e mien *56"id, ok forever.be | & Co., Geo. Lawrence and other well known | i s have a na e tary St. Louls boy was given a loaded | “One s never so ridiculous for the | (hem we can at least try to abandon | § ew Tork o San Francises, | £Un for Christmas, and before he put | AU8litles he has .as for those he vre- | (no™piiierness of spirlt with which | k sl ) it down he had killed his mother. Guna | (9038 to haves’ Tt is honorable to!incy are assodfated. Like the psalm maxers. i Shat o IRl HoRl 1o At By for Ny r- ‘GUDS | gtand for just what we are—it 18 f00l- [ ot we' may remember our SoRgs. in o { ) = SRR ol WY o e ey S ishness to Mear tho Deard of a nanny_ | tné night. We ahould {hink on ihe (=] e wave |, Mr= Hetty Green may be an author- | fifs whicn has Teen x complete Taisa | LUiny our trionds Wave bestowed on THE VALUES ARE EXTRAORDINARY 1 ey en she says | pretense must produce only a S03p-| the deep and abiding values that our At the New York Sh | “women are fools’ her judgment is|bubble in the heavenly sphere. affifotions ‘Have 'fevealed = Hffort. for 0 OWs open to question. - some worthy cause is a better mark of to building 't it strange an Englishman thinks regpe e Beieren — ; t for a friend who has left " ndred million be- | General Reyes savs he mounded a | DO Must have & meal every three OF | inan o xo mourning ol our fave . o EARLY SELECTIONS ARE ADVISABLE (Madison Square Garden, Jan. 6-13, 1912) T call for revolution In Mexico and there | fOUr_ROUTS, and an American thinks| “'I¢ life is encumbered with @ lot of crnment moner. 1 OhinK | Loper o7 10 #tarting a_revolution | weaithiest people deciine (o eul often” | Woray ~ while. « faith, Lope, love, the | @) Pope-Hartford Pleasure Care on exhibition ut the New York Aut | rto e neighber- | O *l”llhl:; \“{)I:P‘:_g:.;x and a large por- | great ibiding spiritual realties. Let ' © bile Show in Madison Square Garden during the week of Junua b 1 S sthie &3 s o b PR o - D ntry have but onel(he rest go. You are then fit for the A E N is to be wha our spuce on the main floor [ R A% 2 largs unit - | Congressman Barger predicts that in | 88! in twenty-four HOUFE: and ihosa ) new duties that shall confront yoi. ‘ T“.,"md" a0 o o) e u' 1 : anev in comstrtiction of | ien years there will be u socialiat in | PeGDle H&ve fuore cenienarians amons | Your ship will sail better when you | 4-oylinder touring car; & d-cylinder Phaeton: u 4-cylinder limousir aas the e, and aiding the | the White house. There was a time ‘l:‘om l)l:ln are 16 be found in the Brit- | nave jettisoned some of the carg M| p a 6-cylinder touring oar; and a 6-cylinder chassl van-truck a " io keep_ the Toads in opalr, | when no one tioight & BIREK regubli< AR e the Smarioin. Tepy) fic | Lhnjer: smas =g fire wagon on exhibition Jan. 17-20. 1 once set o pon. a | can would ever reside ther the popuiation. Man doesn't test his|+~Old past, I = Visttors froms Norwich .and vicinity are cordiaily invit e i o P gt d- e he . Man doesn't test his| “Old past, let go, and drop ¥ the sea, T - Pralle g o T ability to fast In vature we find fur- | Till fhthomless waters cover thee! 121-125 MAIN STREET. call at the Pope-Hartford space and inspect our exhibits 4 n uf] national ‘:lflrwayu,“l do fflmnnnr Baldwin will be one of the Nxhl‘ .nl’:’n: a8 that fast from s o For T am living, but thou art dead; <pow lhow great the expenditure | fifteen noted democrats who are to ad- | eight months in the year; the condor | Thou drawest back, I strive ahead 2 s Sin secome. [ reee o (hrong of demeceatic hanguet. | §0e8 forty dave and the caxie twancy | The day To- Abd: Ry TP e C e A £Saites Qasebetiost herion okviurively . (G THE POPE MANUFACTURING COMPANY, We havs 4% different states. and |ers in Washington, on Jackson's birth- | Without food: and doubtless some of | shells unbind! Night comes be- | to Men’s, Womon's end Children’s Wearing Agbare! = B ab enlibias. <0 iibe in b our hardy native birds fast weeks at | hind, Hartford, Conn. axery state . the idea being, perhaps, to see if common funds.at Wagshington as | democrats are as hardy. a8 vesy: oState. It ivaEdammgron; in JAckion's Wms a time in winter weather. It is ap : 1 neods must hurry with the wind, they wers | parent enongh that life was not in at % An trim me best for sailing.” 1 oKl EABSON, S m o~ .l Pt ) mitetile ) o (o) N A A

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