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FULL ASSOCIATED PRESS DESPATCHES NORWICH, CONN., : MONDAY, JAN. 1, 1912, FULL ASSOCIATED PRESS DESPATCHES WHAT IS GOING ON TONIGHT Moving Pilctur le and Motion Pictures at Asditorium. at the Breed The- The Woman in the Case at Poll's Open House at Y. M. C. A Common council meeting. Uncas lodge, b 13,°1 O, O. X' meets In Odd Feliows hall Thames union, No. 137, of « Buckingham lodge, No. 0. T, meets in Third Baptist church Vestry, Norwich camp, No. 90, Wooduien of the World meets in Foresters' hall. Plumbers’ union meets fn C. L. U., Fall Sedgwick camp, No. 4 S, of V. meels fn Buckingham Memorial. ANNGUNCEMENTS | EXTRA NEW YEAR'S BILL AT THE | AUDITORIUM, The Auditorium staris off the New Year with a show that will be hard to ! lest, 28 1t is & step In advanc an thing seen here this season manageaient havs their sleeve for 1912 The headliner of th gramm Monday Co., the &creas od “Th: is snd it Jarger & few days the Auditor: retrons gerive themselves. Bensc to the able. Edd r artist will apnear ir al <ancing novelt i danci T en owlin Soldier recogmized ‘bLig ti a not often seen it m f this ev oen @ his titie of “Tt Feet Loose Eert <aad comad, tright and ch Their songs their costumes are tle The manacement AMERICAN GA PROTECTIVE AND PROPAGATION ASSOCIATION Believes in Free Shooting for All and is Organized to Promote Ite Policy wil' deal wi assoclation, states; how & : ! enrolied, and the con m of finances. shai) serv nd all w t length s The cantribution a stortsmen and rganizations gurther th~ common cane purpase it it fecte. In result a~complished than by effe rgan- Worse Than Throwing Bombs. After readi t on Mr. Kipling, o “emale of the specie: petuaged deadl ma uthor New York Pos Will Need All His Tact, Harn 1t make his bid for west- ern “oies next month, and he will need all his tact when he reaches the polit! wal earthquake belt of California Beaton, Tran The Difficult Part. It lsw't the purchasing that is hard work It is the trying to find a lot of Fh-cent gifts that Jock as though they bad cost $5.--St. Lou's Post-Uespatch. Of all the world's production of tons of quicksilver last year, the , Lalted States produced-but 772 tons. b NCREASE IN FODDER CROPS (Continued from Page Nineteon.) What One Diligent Farmer Did. I know of a farmer not more than 100 miles from Higganum - vao, this past dry and parched-up summer, sold $8¢ worth of hay from a single acre which, three years ago, was a tangle of five-finger and golden-rod, and from which not a ton of hay had ever been cut at one time in the memory of man, He did it, not by blindly imitating Mr. Clark's adapting them to his conditions. The first ye 200 acre farm he had to buy hay to y Last yvear he hud enough to winter methods, but by he bought his present winter his twenty head of sto; f sold almost as much more. and v head, England on and when the had, one vear, to go to Rnglish way of raising hay, tions necessitated by know of, died the Another farmer | a business trip. He st h ame hom applied it, with some modifi different climate, to @ four acre meadow of his own. In three years the yield of thai field increased from about six tons of common hay ) mearly twenty of the finest “horse hay.” He kept up for several vears o vield a etween four and five tons to the acre. Then vent into other hands. The mew manager old fellow, who didn’t believe in anything tway went back to the old methods in gen- was yielding about a ton and nay.” It certainly had some It was what we should call nd the farm st I saw that field it th v call it and trash. well, the wee monzst ble sheep hay Have you ever thought enough about your mowing land to con- or no you couldn't double the crop you now et off it ®sider whet! Sithoot Goubling the vost of producing it? - Even If better tillage and iser it 1on should actnally double the money cost of your acre, still it would be a gain to make it produce three tons rather than a " Tt would be 5 gain because it would improve the Jand nd m € more valuable; it would be a gain because it would give 1 op bought feed; it would be a gain because for some cultivated crop, would add so u a chance to ent dow T e Paoming Tumus o help that following crop—and it would be a gain becaiise it would make you feel better, yourself; stiffen your backbone, stir np your gizzard and give you a noble chance to do a little me that brageing which is the inspiratign of his life to the reaily farm-minded farmer. ! How'a Poor Farm Was Brought Up to Fertility. Speak egests clover. 1 suppose you know that, theo- retically, hay It cut young, properly cured, and safely moved away, {s about as near a perfect food for both cattle and horses as the s00d Lord has yet grown for them. There are lots and lots of though, who are afraid of it. They think it “bloats” the cows he heaves Probably this may happen|with improperly cured clover improp- happens, 1t isn‘t the fauit of the clover or the haymaker or the feeder. when it fault of the stqck; it's the Did you ever happen to hear of T. B. Terry? He's an Ohio farmer ho was dr recessity, to make a living off 4 farm so poor that tenant-farmer woul sk it for all he could produce from it. After some years hap-and-chance experimenting, Mr. Terry fell upon ven, b \toes as his specialty. After some more years of experimenting with potatoes and fertilizers, he fell upon clover as théionly possible salvation for his crop, his land and himself. He had to keep three or four horses and a cow or two. So he had some manure. But he bought none, in any form, and relied solely upon clover, turned under on to renew his land. If you know about him, lon't need to have me tell you his success. If you don't know, is needful to say is that he did succerd—succeeded so phenom- f ¥m was the Mecca to which pilgrims were floc all the nearby lands to find out “how he a three year rota king from tarted solely with intent Well, in the course of his clover growing, he was suddenly struck by the idea that he crop as a fertilizer, ight save buying oats and such for his horses, if he could use of his clover for d. So he tried it, very gingerly at first. His horse had got d d he needed a new team, He bought a span of ound work: rses, six yea old, which had been used to a heavy fecding of grain, three times a day. He took care of themt him- € and 3r 1ally worked them off graim-on to clover only. At that ime he was drawing potatoes to Akron, twelve miles away, almost daily, and for several months. His regular time for going, with a heavy load, was three hours and thirty-five minutes, and for return- nz, empiy, three hours. in the first few months, the horses gained 20 pounds on scales, developed into unusually fast walkers— s the essential thing with team-horses—and felt so all-fired t 1 It taxed my strength and skill to the most to handle them.” “1 used to hate to drive into Akron,” he adds, ) many wanted to buy that team, when {he clover had got them in ondition.” He paid $350 for them in the fall, and was offered $500 for t n, the next spring, Let me quote a bit from M Terry's “During the last ten years I presume the feeding of clover to our horses, instead of nd grain, has saved us a grain-bill of 000 or me T m large to some, but we ne have less 1an fou s and ¢ D mor $100 worth of oats a year would not " v feeding as some neighbors give. As it is I have not fed $100 worth o ain in twenty years, . One thing is noticeable, we have never had a s i in all those years., Neighbors have lost How Clover is Fed to Horses fr, Terry does not advise the restriction to clover alone as a wise lim-built road horses, because they can't eat enough of it to get the required nutriment, FHis were chunk-built workhorses. Still, he used often to drive one of them twenty-five miles on the d in half a day, nngil he had prospered sufficiently to afford a pecial road-team of light driving horses. To these latter he fed four uarts of oats a day, the balance clover hay—clover, mind you, not mothy. But, as to the work team, he says: “I could not have done at 1 did with timothy hay or timothy with a little clover in it.” r does Mr. Terry consider clover cut when over-ripe, or clover dried to dust In the swathe, or clover half-dried in the cock and partly rotted in the mow, as a safe food for either horses or other animals. Once or twice the second crop—the “rowen”—made his horses “slob- er” a little. Once the first ent crop did the same. But they did not seem, troubled by it, and speedly got over it, without any medicine or change of diet. If it Is possible, as he did, to supplant grain feed, in any large degree, by clover, isn't the growing of more clover and better clover a proposition worth looking into? Let me add one thing which Mr. Terry doesn’t allude to, but which another man who has also been in the hablt of feeding h ork-team clover, once told me. That is, that clover-fed horses shouid always be watered before feeding, never afl ards. Letting them fill themselves full of rich clover and then drink all the water they can swallow on top of it, is, according to this neighboer, about as sure a cause of heaves as one could Invent, it, by watering them freely hefore feeding, he used to give them all the c¢'over they would clean up, and never did one have a touch of heaves. One thing is cock-sure, and that is, if you do try clover, you want ing more of a crop than a ton to the acre. 1f land clover at all, it will grow three tons to the acre, with two And most any land will grow clover, if both land and crop zed. to alm at sometl will grow cuttings. A Leak That is Altogether Too Big. There are 4,528 farms in New London and Windham counties. For theso farms there was bought, in the census year, just $1,201,960 worth of feed and fertilizers. That is an average for each farm of more than $265. It is too much- cat deal too much, The leak is too. big. A ement of its amount ought to set the farmers of the two counties to thinking. That average waste is more than enough to pay the wages of an additional hand dyring the growing season, to care for rdditional crops. It is enough to make a beginning, at least, in the work of real manure-saving. Of course, some of the value of the feed bought Is eventually returned to the land in the manure made from it. But the percentage of the value thus recovered to the total paid for the feed is very small. It is not absolutely negligible, but it would be extremely difficulty to compute, It seems to be fairly dedueible from the census reports, that the average loss of money to the sverage eastern®Connecticut farm by reason of the purchase of feed and fertilizers from outside sources, is not far from $230 a year. mere & If these figures be correct—and there ought to be no reason for doubting them since they were given, ilem by item,”to the census- takers by the farmers themselves—if they be correct, the question is & material and serious one whether it is'nt worth while to try and save that loss—stop that leak, keep that money on the farms. It is one worth thinking about, anyway. Whether you, dearly beloved farmer reader, can stop your share of the leak, no one else can say so well as yourself, Like most other real{farm problems it's one you'v with yourselves and vonr farm. In other words, it's up to\you! %ot to thrash out THE FARMER, TRAVELERS' DIRECTORY. Norwich Line —TO— NEW YORK STEAMERS I_WtAlNE NEW HAMPSEIRE Choose this route next time vou go to New York. You'll have a delightful voyage on Long lsland Sound and a superb view of the wonderful kv line and water front of Manhattan Island. Steumer leaves New London at 11 p. m. week days only, due New York, Pler 70. Bast River, at 5.45, and Pler 40, North River, 7 o'clock next morning. NEW LONDON $1 :iq ML e, | ,Write or telephone W. J. Phillips, | Agent, New London, Condl, for state- rooms’ and informaticn. 1y31d Rew York CHELSEA LiNE Fare $i Freight and passenger service _direct to New York. From Norwich Tuesdays 1] 9ays. Sundays, at 5.15 p. m. New York, Pler 23, East River, foot Rapsevelt S Mondays, |} Weanesdays, Frida t5p m Frelght recefved until 5 p. m. . V.’KNOUSE, Agent. BExRWNMUDA A PARADISE ON EARTH very outdoor recreation. Excellent sea bathe tng. fsuing. boating. tenals, golf. cyellus. &« nurs- | “¥'Avold Seasickness by Travelling on THE MA( IFIC T, FAST. TWIN-SCREW Transatlaatic Liner “OCEANA’’ 14.000 Tons: 535 Feet Long. Largest, Fasiest. Most Luxurious and only Exclus slvely First-Class Passenger Steamer to Bermud: No Cattle or Freight carried on the “Ocean; FIRST-CLASS ROUND TRIP. in- eluding staieroom berth & meals uP Best' Cuisine on the Atianti o Electrio Fans in eve. Steam heatcd when necessary. ~ Orchestra, Prome enade Dances, Gymnasium, Wireless, Submarine Safety Signals, Staterooms with & Beds, Sultes with Private Baths. Finest Promenade Deck in the World. Only Steamer Landing Passengers at Hamilton or St. George's. TOURS Lnding Shore Excursions, [¢] Hotels, &c., at Lowest Rates. Beaufiful booklct. Itinerary, Tiekets, eic.. of | Bermuds-Atiantic Line, 200 B'way, N. Y. § Minutes from McAdoo Tunnel Statton. This hotel has. been redeco- rated. refurnished through- out, and can- e compared favorably with any-im town. Accessible to the docks of all im- Portant steamship lines. railroad Stations, theatres. shops, otc.. as well the bu aistricts. 300 Rooms, 200 Baths Rates $1.00 Per Day The restaurant is noiable for its excellence and very moderate Prices. Send 2 ceats for Gaide and Map "ot Now York City. 2003 2oo0 oz>» “4>»m ©2>» H 150 PLUMBING AND GASFITTING. Sanitary Plumbing | | A peep Into an up to date bathroom ROOM AND BATH | 18 only less refreshing than the bath | | itse.t. * During the summer you wili the more look to the bath for bodily | comfort, I will show you samples and plans of the poicelain and other tubs | and give you es‘imates for the work ot putting them iy In the best manner fiom a sanitary standpolnt—and guar- sntee the entire joh J. E. TOMPKINS, 67 West Main Street The Vaughn Foundry Co. [RON CASTINGS Large ok ct 25 Farrs Street ‘urnished promptly. patterns. No. 11 to or Frank H. Allen, Aliee bullding; John A. Denn, 5y Main Strest, | 150 moom ano maTH 1.50» | it HOTEL - ° ° | ALBERT [¢ ™ " [ ] o |11th St. & University Place | , \} N One Block from Broadway N p | T¥0 Blocks trom Wunamaxers| o NEW YORK CITY 2 | situnted close to the Whele-| = | sale and Retail Districts, o | n the Heart of thesCity and i & H | quiet residentia) nefghborhood. H | 8 Minates grom-Chelsaa Docks 150 © i Fom Grana cemral sca: 1.50 | ADVERTISEMENTS under the heading ot “WANTED, FOR SALE or TO.RENT" are inserted at the rate of 5 Cents per line, six words to the line. ner’s every Thursda; decsd WANTED—AIl kinds of raw_ furs bought at Jos. Connors & Sons’, Water St, every Thursday. A.C. Woodworth. oved | “WANTED—-Piano tuning and repair- ing. All work 'guaranteed. A. 98 Prospect St., Ci T WANTED Cooks, General Farm Help. STATE EMPLOYMENT BUREAU M. J. Coscoran, Supt., Central Building WANTED Wanted: Young 2 to take part in a mus n for chorus work. slight knowledge of sifging and dan g apply to J. Kirke, tage Director Poli’s Theater, mo WANTED A GOOD FAMILY COOK, ALS PETENT GENERAL HC Room 32, Central Building. G. Gordon, §8-2. Housework Girls and Ladie and Young M 1 produc- ) COM- GIRLS, SE LoGblisned firm to deal with. (Established 1872.} THE COLLATERAL LOAN co, 142 Maln Street, Upstairs, ANERICAN HOUSE, Farrell & Sanderscr. Props. | SPECIAL RATES to Theatre Troupes, | Traveling Men, ete. Li connected SHETUCXET STREET. HOWTUCK AFE ANITARY ATISEYING Norwich, Conn. PRING WATER Tei, 34-2 NOTICL OF DISSOLUTION OF PARTNEB&-HIP £ Ke ve recently ship. From now the_past by (slznea) KENYON | _decita WM. F. BAILEY cessor to A. T. Gerdner) Hack, Livery Boarding Stable i12-14 Bath Street, on ti £ PICKHOVER. ! AUTOMOBILE TO RENT. | Telephone 883. New Year Gifts New Year Post Cards, Booklets, Letters, Favors, Stationery, Gifts for Old and Young RS, EOKIN Fai, fr ik oquars T. F. BURNS, Heating and Plumbing, 92 Hranklia Strest CO-OPERATIVE PLUMBING CO. 81 Franklin Stree | Tetenhone 771 | E. L. BURNAP | Plumbing, Sieam-and Gas Prices and work salisfactory 130 Platt Ave. S. F. GIBSON Tin and Sheet Metal Worker Tel Agent for Richardson and Boynion Furnaces. 55 West Main Street. Norwich, Conn WHEN you wanf to put your bust- ness befors the public. there is no me-~ dium better than throngi she advertise ing columna of The Bulletin. B el { The Roads Are Settling ‘l‘lm pleasurs criving w be the best | and cheapest way to t ac- ing fresh air that is an the best tonle. ne us for 4 good team. MAHONEY BROS,, Livery Stable. Falls Avenus. GEORGE G. GRANI Undertaker and Embal 2 Provideace S! Prumm attention to day or night calla Telephone 633. aprisM WFawl AUTOMOBILE STATIO. 5. J. Colt,-¢ Otis Street Automobils sad Blevcis Pepuiring. General Ala~ Phone chine WoIk dulirza Those having a | HORSE CLIPPING A SPECIALTY% , 1 FOR SALE WANTED. i FOR SALk. TO RENT. WANTED-—A canvass a man mu- FOR SA —New milch cow and calf, TO RENT—Second fioor, Circuiating ically inciined or a tuner preferred. | W Tasbon, Cu el aiot. | LiDrary vunding, suitable 105 saoy, o1 Apply at al. Steinert & Sons Company, | SoJl dodgings. _Amos A, Browning. State ‘Street, New London, Conn, | — i — - | decl1MEF St sy hondon, (GO, FOM SALE—Ono new mileh cow with | - i L ikt _fead wne one o Lresuer inside of twy | TENEMENT T0 LI Scven rooms, WANTED—Middle aged woman for |Vtek H. C. denseuer, ruan Hill, CL Idfl mouern lnproveuents, b2 an.._n'lu:m general housework. Apply at Bulletin | 'otie dvi-id. aecsvd | Bu 5 deczed Sitce O I i L YO SALE Amongst _my wood 1| TO RENT—No, 105 North Main St, TURS WANTED i ltawso ave 4 10U greei white birches | deSirabie seven-room fial, nve minuies ple’s every Friday, Wm. H. hich makes good wood lor firepiaces, | Walk oi postoltice. APPLY Oh Dremuses, declbxl Sawed o ora m all le 1 Up- 0'7 L 2 ruwn Wocdyard. J. C. Uainer. decz.d R e T o l-lJu \‘Llr’l]!ll"‘ pair of working | RIVEr aAve, and a seven-room cottage oxen, Devons and Dubiums, weigaing |on Laurel Hill Ave. Hoth with hard- 1500 to diw. The 24w ale dandies | Wood foors and ail modern improve- Weit, Ciurk's Corner Station, | ments. Apply to H. A. Wulf, 161 Main o-24, Willimantic Division, 8 e l"d AGENTS to sell pur UF 10 DA '8 turnisheu 5, .\ur Wantady vy | Hthar guerite building. Mrs, Lees, 376 Main. Write Box 308, yms, ail impr octtd WANTED—Raw fu - i TO RENT—No. 8 Union St, facing Urion Square, flat of seven rooms, thi.d PRINTIN noteheads ness size) envelopes, neat si 0 each, $2.10 Dprices fo (regu; y printed, for princing you are in The Bulletin Cempany, Nor- Conn. GOOD PRINTING | envelopes (regular business size), car in ner, $1.35; 1,000, '$1.85 5 00, $10. 500" noteheads, 1.85; 1,000, $2; 5,000, 500 Jetterheads, 1,000, 32.70; 5,000, X816, 0 wich | | i { need of. | { | printed iheads, , $10." Printing of evefy descrip- 2 done promptiy d for samples, Conn. pullets baby chic elivery. Come and . Cuban game stock and esgs. yflower Poultry Farm, Norwic Conn. 'Phone 34-3. nov28MT \N I PLEASE YOU? CORS-I-CAN? atever you think of Napoleon, ien you buy a mart hope for a nic er morsel ‘hat is somet besides Bon-a | Get a Brond Brook Farm Chicken. | Order your young pig-pork from us. Home-made Sausage. Apply to | F. 0. CUNNINGHAM. Telephones: 287-2; §54-1%. _decl6d hick at thi tor FRUIT FARM 500 foot elevation, 86 acres, overlook- sant surrounding: | ning section in Con t and next 3,000 b tree 1 ou and orchards tools in- 00. Others $500 up, AGENCY, Willimantie, Cinn. $1,60 will buy a good House, Barn, mill, Sawmill, with abunda: priviiege .and 2% acres of lar { locat d and on trolley | E. A. PRENTICE, *Phone 300, | FOR SALE 700 will farm of 130 ; OF. Jand, B0 acrés OF Kootk balance pasture and woodland, place well watered. House contain 86 Cliff Street. i rooms, in good condition, barn 1 other bulldings. Farm is locat- i drive to city | § Centrl Bullding, Norwich, Comn. FRANCIS D. DONOHUE. FOR SALE '+ Three Vainable Pieces of Main Street Property JAMES L. CASE, 40 Shetucket St., Norwich, Conn. Xaashurn Land For Sele F res of high land situate on & cadam road overlooking the A L ocean from Point “Judith on o 0 Montauk on the west. Onl 25 minutes’ ride from Westerly station, |{N. Y. N.H &H R R FRANK W. COY. i Long tance Telephone | [ Street, Westerly, R. I WHITNEY’S AGENCY Main St., Franklin Square, Real Estate and insurance TO RENT 11 ELM ST, PLEASANT FLAT OF r 7 rooms, bath, closet, set bowl, set tubs, hot water, gas fixture rate rear entrance, $15 per mont 5 CHURCH ST., UPPER FLAT OF rooms, with modern improvements, $i3 per month. 30 CLIFF ST, VERY CENTRAL, flat with modern {mprovements, $15 per month. THE AUTO-TRANSFER CO., Successor to The Norwich Parcel Delivery. Office: 303 West Main St. Telephone 176-5. Branch Office: 162 Main St. Tele- phone 106-2. oct10d ROBERT W. OTIS. F. C. ATCHISON, M. D., PAYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Room i, Second Fi r. Shannon Bidg Night phone 1333 THERE 15 no advertistug medjum in Eastern Connecticut equsl to Tho Bul- letin fop business Testiits. WALLPAPERS Our first consignment of Wall Papers vith cutout borders for 1912 has been | received. Others will follow as fast as I made. Before selecting, it will pay you to call and inspect our line. We also have just received a full line of Ready Mixed Paints In all shades. Jainting, Paper Hanging and Dec- orating are a specialty by us P. F. MURTAGH 92 nnd 94 West Mainm St. Telephone noy; 274 Send for samples | CHEAP—500 6% | | irst class restaurant; |ECOT. Enquire of £ A, Gilbert, 111 | owner going away: to be sold cheap. |Main St. Setiin | dppiy D. A, Turnbull, 630 Main St. TO RENT—Store at 69 Franklin St; | Wiimantie, Cr. __ | possession at once. Inquire at Bulletin | ¥For saLE—Al kinds of Chrisimas ot b““ | greens, cedars and laurel for lawns and | “FURNISAED RUUMS, all modsrn con- vindow b L. D. Rogers. 'Phone | veniences, 35 Union St. Telepnone §34- 4, decid | ~“apriod i e e rioHT MANUFACTURING SPACE ull, 2 pair steers, 3 yeurs old, partly | 70" RENT—With or without power | proken, ™ nauire AT, Gardner & Co. | oy HETTTAY Wi qiirlab iy | space. The lightest, cleanest, airlest | OR 1 "sell at a price | factory floor in Norwich. Apply A. A. | that will surprise you my large stock | paurnier, Troy Steam Laundey’ Bulld: | { Al gaia “Jewets Cily, | €, Frankiin St, cor, Chestaut Ave | je2dd FOR SALE. FOETRY, A MILE WITH ME. € who will walk a mile with me Along life's merry way? A comrade blithe ang full of glee \\'m.;_ dares to laugh out loud ana - Tec, nd let his frolic fancy play, Like & happy child through the flow- ers gay ‘That fill the field and fringo the way Where he walks a mile with me. And who will walk a mile with me Along life's weary way, ] A Iriend whose heart has eyes to see | The stars shine out o'er the darken- ing lea, And the qiet vest at the end o the day— A friend who knows and dares to | The brave, sweet words that cheer the way ‘Where he walks a mile with me, ‘With suéh a comrade, such a friend, I fain would walk till journeys end summer sunshine, winter —Farewell, we shall meet againi ~—Henry Van Dyke. “YESTERDAY." ymething spoke in ballowed hush— irge-like, gray and cold: | No_one listening to its wail, | . Yesterday—grown old. Something spoke in iron voice, Do you mind my will? Look ye not at me askance, Today may bring ye ill!" Something drifted down the stream Of memory grown bright, all with tears of long ago, ot knowing this day's light. cmething hidden, something sad, Of human love and strif Leugh ye not at yesterday, For yesterday—was life. WILLIAM B. YOUNG, Jr. Insurance and Real Estate | Shannon Building, Room 21. Norwich. Telephone. 1 z FOR SALB | “up il 10 the minute.” Must be seen to appreciated. On_Montville trolley line; 5c fare, sonablz; easy terms. Lot me show you my reserved * lots in Maple Court. terms to suit. THOMAS H. BECKLEY, 724 368-2 Price rea- Low prices, May Building, Phones: A new eight-room cottage 278 Main St \ Julta. Cook Watson, VIEWS AND VAPIETIES Clever Sayings. ) Mr. Crawford—Keep the kid quiet! —Mrs. Crawford—All right, my dear, 1 give him his drum and tin whistie, Judge. ‘When girls can’t have their own sweet way, each of them picks a man nd leaves her brutal, cruel folks with gladness, so she . can. — Dallas News. Tommy’s Uncle—Hello! Tommy. 1 hear youwve been sick. Was it very bad? Tommy—Awful I wasn't sick enough to stay home €romr” school.— Philadelphia Record. Hokus—Miss Castique says she I Bat fond of young Saphedde. Pokus— Why, I thought she was a manhater. ‘uuh.x.\fs” she is. I suppose that's by she likes Saphedde.—Life. What names would you suggest for a list of the world's greatest men?’ | “None” replied Mr. Meekton. “After | telicing with Henrietta I'm inclined to | think ~ there sn't an. | Washington Star. | Farmer A—I hear that your son | Hiram has made his way to the front in Bawston. Farmer B—I sh'd say he He started in as a conductor on | & street car an’' now he's a motorman. | | —Boston Transcript. | “Well, I've got my winter's supply of coal in, anyho “Is it paid for?” why do you always insist on uch thin, STORAGE $1250 0 acre tarm situsted 31 three other smaller on one crib 12 by workshop 10 by 1 cranberry bo Space for Furniture and Commodities. Storing & Leasing Co, 10-20 W. Main bringing ~up something disagreeabla when a fellow is trying to be opti- mistic?"—Chicago Record-Herald. “You refuse to allow your son to study spelling and grammar,” said_the teacher. “Absolutely, replied Mrs. | Groucher. “I want him to try his hand | at current literature, and I don’t pro- se to spoll his dialect and slang.”— | Vhlthmglnn star. i railroad station, cottags — H house of 10 rooms, painted white, green s, in, excellehl condition, bach 30 WUCH IN_LITTLE v wagon shed 14 by 20."one hen- i nery 12 by 16, one I 8 by 14,| The South African government em- | ploys a veterinarian to study the dis- cases of ostrich: i one acre of strawberries, 200 i trees, orchard of appie, pear and plum treecs, abundance of wood, flne shads| Automatic valves, which sound & trees' in front of house, 1% miles to | whistle when an automobile motor be- | postoffice, school and church, near pros- | ccmes overheated, are & New Yorker's perous factory village. Here s a|invention. | chance to buy a good farm cheap. In- vestigate |_'In tiwe quiet village of Carolina R. I 1 60 acre farm, well divided into To lessen the labors of & window- aner, a Massachusetts man has in- pa , mowing and woodland, abun- | vented s long handled brush with | dance of frult, neat cottage house, largs | magazine 1ty sl barn 40x60, crib. hennery amd smoke: | o840 for soap on its back. house. This place is only % mile to tbe village, where employment oan be Cables of human hair are now furnished to & whole family. $1,300 | made in Antwerp. They are very dur~ takes it % able and have a further advatage that | Transportation free in auto. | they do not stretch under strain, l | Send for Wilcox’s Farm Bulletin pic st (chotca of 400) WILLIAM A. WILCOX, Reai Estate Broker, Westerlx. "Phone connection. HORSES Am in the west, buying. Expect to get home about Jan. 1st with a load of | horses that will equal my | 10ads in quality and price. L ELMER R. PIERSON, decldd R L 4 nov27d ‘Peck’s Real Estate Agency | 132 Spring Streat, PLAID BACK | Broadcloths. Billiard and Carriage Cloths. SPECIAL—1,000 yards of Cloakings at 59 conts that are worth $1.00 a yard. This is something that should 2ppeal to every lady who reads this advertisement. BRADY & SAXTON, ot WM Norwich Town. NOTICE a reasonable ork guaranteed, and I will call for wor BRUCKNER, The Furrier, Telephone 2| price. Drop a postal | No. 41 West Broas St. Rooms 1 and 2, previous | Willmantc. Gonn, | GLORKINGS | alr, remodel, re-edge and clean | Franklin St. The exceptional activity throughout South Africa in flour-milling develop- ments is resulting in heavy orders for rlants being placed with British mak« | ers. | Reinforced concrete shingles ars coming into general use, They are 50 pounds ligter a square than the best Bangor siate and 800 pounds lighter than the best roofing slate, H On the morning of Oct. 11 lhe.l-mnm-{ oters in Coburg registered a little be= low zero, which was the lowest ever | recorded in that city during the nm‘ half of that month. More harvesting machines were fm< ported iato Saltillo, Mexico, last year | than in the three preceding years com {. | bined. Keeping the flaps closed by a rubben cord, # Washington inventor claims to have devised a coin purse that is safer than the usual forms. | The English inventor of a wireless ! telephone claims to have made it so | compact that a man can carry the ens | tire apparatus about with him, e china, pottery and clay indus try of the Netherlands is concentrate ed at Maastricht and Delft. The chi~ na factories employ over 6,000 personss The earliest. record of rubber ship~ ments from the Congo was in 1987, when it amounted to 200,000 pounds. but in 1909 it reached 9,000,000 pounds. e e e R = e i | . A Filipino economic association has | | just been organized in Manila, with the object of awakening interest | among the Filipino people in material | ! Drogress. London Punch thinks that since | Fridtjof Nausen has conclustvel proved that the Norweglans discoveta led America, Columbus has been ‘“re< | lieved of an awful responsibility N In the matter of travel the advan~ tage is clearly in favor of the United. States. One travels by rail in Greec Uelivered to Any Parl of Norwncll vest on the market — HANLEY'S recelve promp: aftentios. B. J. McCCHMICK. 20 Franklin St Dr.F. W. HOLMS, Dentist Room A, oct10d J. F. CONANT. 11 Franklin Streer. Whitesioma S and the J. F. €. 10¢ Cigars are the Dest on the market 1ry them. | letin for pusiness results ilie Ale that 1s acknowiedged to be the | PEERLESS. A telephone order will A THERE 1S no advertising medium In Eastern Connecticut equal to The Buls flrst class, without several of the con- veniences of travel, at the rate of 3 1 cents per mile; the same amount in the former country includes a seat in | a parlor car, i | from ~Harbin states | hares of & mortgase bank y the Japanese at Dalny, ere offered for subscriptién In. ia and represent $150,000 gold, telegrem at 6,000 projecied which wy Vurehn ....._r_._.... S ! have been oversubscribed. The mainder of the sharés, amounting to $230,000 has been placed on the Tokya | Bours The setting aside of the * Rocky Mountain forest reserve has been one | of the most important advances in the | industrigl history of Canada’s central west. It iz Important from the point ! of view of the future supply of tim- ber and the preservation of the water powers with a steady and permanent water flow, B