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CHINA’S FINANCIAL PUZZLE. After o long conference, with the ex- |erine (1 Kecnest iptomacy” und THE MAN WHO TKLAS 23 . tact, and the watehful guardianship to otwich Zulletin |Gt Vo - sivontars wes galned, the representatives of the six| - 4 & i @ 8 . & x Wiy o> The sunshiny disposition is what we e G_ aufier. yowers have succceded in agreeing on | are all’ advised 1o cultivate: but no cco| the $300,000000 loan to China With | note seems to have been taken of the Py e 5 | the proper guarantee for their loans. |fact that there are many varieties of 116 YEARS OI.D_V __| China is in most urgent need of funds [ sunsh and good sunshine, too. By - | in laun:hinz the new republic, which | divine decree we get sunshine about oy SRR oS 1 ” ¢ the ny { half the time, and on the average only includes the ying off of the army [ and the settlement of its obligations. | & little over 100 days of clear sunshine ~ pon < L e OUS. |y vear, all the rest being broken up or stoffice at Norwich | The six great powers, United States, | mitered through haze or clouds. Then 7 e s Great DBritain, Ger FFrance, Rus- | every day has sunshine of increasing iy g sia and Japan, guarded carefully every | intensity until noon, and decreasing vy 7o 1 move that was made in the forming|brilliancy - until sundown. Sunshine Ottion, 18- | of combinations to gain an advantage | 18s to_be graduated, and has to be Otiice, Toow 3 Warzay | o morisaging of | China, and | Shut oft daily. Too much sunshine is eienione 210 baiic vy g ? }just as undesirable as none at all| > BErange, alil s _developed, lh\'l"l‘hv smile that never comes off doesn't . rday, June 22, 1812, | agreement which has been signed sat- | muke the impression the smile do T )old atterapt of Russia Lwhich exactly fits the occasion. A sun- - o carry her point and get a polit shiny countenance looks like the face advantage b; nishing -all the needed | of an idiot to a grouch. There is no . H | b the pres- | objection 1o all the suns human reills s only frustrated by the pres- circnlation Of || s was ony srustraies by tne pres- | AVRSLEN 0 B, P RSN L AuUPe DrONEht ioshontt Saeae "\h”“'ifi‘u sunshine continuous s o R i K i T nanwial problem | nether natur beneficial as { ¢ Builetin, Sngilapdadfla gy S LUE RS SR | republi 1 ind to the bankers who _— *¢ Bullctio kas the lar wre lending the momey the opportunity | | like anyone who doesn’t wish he wion of amy pager in v " barguin was open, | Was Someone else. This mode of mak- succtieut, and from three (w four : 2 ching the agree | N8 vthers acquainted with one's dis- ar tn || ” flcuily in reaching the agree | o isoaction with! himself is to me far iex larger tham that of any i e AR ot feh. 1 livered to over || I # SOUOSER hat, but | from being commendable. It would be wieh. 1t fa dellv e nsi o the understanding | of no advantage to any soul to be 6 88 the 4068 Mamges in Ne that sentatives of the bankers gsome other soul. Our task 1S to make | N LS B WIS Rl wild furnishing the coin shall su- | the most of our own soul, and to mani- ent. of the people. In Windham | ., wditures. This was.a | fest in life its quality. If we cannot ' ered to ever 509 houscs, | | AR improve our own I-am-ness it is more in u and Danielson to over || Wi b e R than llkely the other fellow's I-am- - 1 then: laces It} | pi g o ness would be a misfit—we should not 1 eoustaered ihe oest datly. CONNECTICUT AGRICULTURE. _| 74T at ome in s atmosphere. Whan Fasters Commecticut has forts- || In agriculture the wtate of Connecti- | the mind gets distatisfied with self and e Tty A h It surely Ficking UD:| og-tied against futire progress. The Sve postoffice districts, and wsixty || and wh ut a very smallipart of ~!h'-;,.m‘, feeling 1o have rural free delivery reutes. Syea P and. tobacco of | gt put more into life than we get The Bulletin i» wold In every untry raised in this common- | out of it; and we can only put more town and om all of the R. I, I ealth, yet the increase, continues to|into life by making more of ourselves. routes im Easiern Conmecticut. go on each year. It is the same |It isn't necessary to be like any other | throughout New Englamd in relafion | mortal to be a success in life. to the re der of thescountry The | CIRCULATION |0 (he remainder of thogcountry. The |y LT et aur x : i g £ | capacity for enjoyment {3 just what 1905 average ... né; Pet. Cent, . o L PeTRels fol Tha ] make it. The man who is rich and coun grown in New Fngland, 5.3 1005, ayerage . the tobaioco. tells him he is an under dog. A man i Particuldr interest is being devoted ;‘l' )\lln \\’:j.dlm\ It'l’;\i\ {u\\n mlm% hl; f e R A S o him and depress him, for he realize TRy 8 ; o e a by ,‘r) ¢l | that it will supprss him in the end. L b chpadge gkt s o It is up to all to see good in labor and | by no means has reached anywhere | beneficence through misfortune. The o | near the amount it should in this state. | lessons in life come oftener through UNQEESTIONAELY FOR TAFT. | Try he W control of his delegates 1aid plans are going aske #onal convention. Threats, Aucu ders and bluff have characterized ! ;pelm effort to force his own nomi- tion, & spectacle which no can- /dath would have thought e has lost, and the realization makes him frantic and ready to do ything to have his own In s he has not the united support of E following. Many of the prominent Wackers of his campaign, such as Bo- h, Hadles, Stubbs and Dineen, will it stard for a boit They c co wheel of the progressives.| elt has lost, but they not | iting to looss from party Mzation, for they have too much lose in their plans for the future. | President Taft made ndvance ever t the Colonel has lost Des and the of causing. | way. | | | \ are has ea since the convention opened and the votes on the third trial | of strength showed him to be more positive than ever of control. Bven pn California, whero the contest hinges | Ppn the supremacy of the state law or | nd where the opin he national party on would be more evenly divided, the trength of the president in the con- ention showed that the claims of his managers are founded on facts. The dent has secured the strength on ministration and his stand for progressive measures and the ing of the constitution. He has ndicated even on the strongest test that could be made. The entrance of Governor Hadley's mame into tho sentiment being displayed for him by | the Roosevelt men and the placing of | h name on the ticket with should prove the proper bridge for the chasm and make a strong tick DANGER FROM DANGLING WIRES | A lessem which cost the life of the ‘Taftvilie young man, T. T one which everyone who ling wire should profit by. Tt danger that exists in broken w any kind is sufficient to give them a wide berth, yet the repeated instances | of electrocution touching them | shows what little is gained from | such lessons. a wire carries an electric current of higi urcotte, Is | a_dang nown o heth i > voltage or| g women national delegates of the ::::0‘;‘ “°]‘”':‘"§“""; '[" danger be-{ ¢, iure will find the way to the votes o lity of being crossod 11 ot the men representatives by way of with live wires is ays present § Ve Tomol St o The coroner’s hearing shows that by | oz itself the hone wire was harmless 28 z but when the young man, who evi PUBHALL SEkEs g dently knew tie' proximity of the h il ey tension wires, atarted to swing them [, ‘1€ TeeTrecers A i together, ho invited death. Had he | 'OVSe Possibilitic e he wire, it would & e B T He determined to play wilh it, and | range that we are annoyed be- the result was fatal to a young man | Calise most people think they are just of nineteen, who should better. In absolving the lighting de partment from any blame, Coroner Brown gave the only decisior Sad, indeed, re such cas young men lose their lives, but ! great is to be deplored t t such lessons of reckiesaness and ¢ spect of danger tinue heeded. The best rule to fo! leave all wires alone, It is impossit for the uniformed to tell wherein th sting lles. have known CHANCE FOR MODERN METHODS, Wherever the bubonic plague appea the announcement always creates uneasiness becauss of ifs serious na sanitation and ance of health regulations has served ture, hut the ohsery keep it from getting into this coun- | ough in the east it has been npant for a couple of decades, caus- | ing hundreds of deaths every weak. | o brings it and, rantineg heck it as | known in arance was a long letermined persistent n ships were for transport- | »n has put now the | an ures were put | and past ) grounds for will experiences | he bellef tha i | r Bill, the addition of an alligator | would net impreve the ellegations of | the spellbinders of the Chicago con | wention. Y | vet per cent, of the hay, 6.4 of the potatoes Efforts to intere wn industr the farmers‘in their with slow ‘progress | lack of emthusiasm wck of realization of the possibil fties within their farm. The last cen- issued, shows the state beca their sus report having & es of corn, an increase | Pany with anyone up to that sort of ¢ ten per cent. for the past ten years, | Dusiness. Obedlence is always lending - 5 }a charm to life, 2nd those who kick Tows e g 542 bushels, | ;cainst the ks are the ones who L per cent., the value be- ng $1.693,939, or a gain of a little over 70 cent. Very little wheat 1s groéwn in this state, but the acreage | has doubled since 1900. From 616 acres 11,369 bushels were harvested, valued at $12,567, a gain of 1067 per ent. The vield of oats was 10,207 bushels, only a small gain, but on ac- | count of better prices the value in- reased 55.8 per cent. Barley and rve #how a decrease, but tobacco has more than doubled, Agricultural interests, therefore, are looking up and with good reason. The state is due for its best EDITORIAL NOTES. The proper place to hold the bolting convention is Oyster Bay. A political ~progressive parailel: Down with Lorimer and up with Bill Flinn. William Flinn has bolted the repub- lican national committee. His stay was no briefer than desired. there 1ble plea by tha Colonel to lead the new party? the people a chance. The Colonel's Every- Body should to me, and I should be loyal to no one but myself. The progressives have a new math- ematical method: Taking half from ona leaves two by their political pro- cess. The man who sleeps in his own bed every night has a great deal to be haniful for which he does not even nk of. a man claims he is a second he has reached a point where imitation has ceased to be the sin- cerest flatt When Lincc S we, are The voungeét ex-president this country has r known has shown dents should be behind them A fow years ago butterfish was rated as mongrel flounders, and were demand in the market; now they a better price than cod used to. 1f the Colonel's campaign of (,-n.a»l‘ pretence does not result as.he planned, | he {s willing to make it divine and | becoms the leader, if the people will ald him, The Colonel cannot lead Taft in the belief in the equality of the sexes in for esident commit ament the T ted I to the justice of the claim New Hampshire is not radically pra- gressive yet. The initiative, referen- m and recall defeated with wom n the constitutional | e i The campaign button makers will | \ave to make their prices so that the mistakes made in judgment shall be borne by the successful candidates and their suppor L | near swamps fall, and Detroit has just had a cold storage | were first seen there in the spring, it squeezo With 15,000 boxes of strawber- | was believed they hibernated in the ries kept out of the market so that|mud over winter like the frogs and the supply should not exceed the de- | turtles. It not then mistrustew e S s o that a thousand miles was not much et AV of a fiight for them; but In this day it Is known that some birds In their an mocratic committee dares to | nual migrations make flights of 20,000 N chalrman agatnst | miles every year. he advice of Br Those who th TS ‘: selves leaders are be l)h rl.",',‘.fl Perhaps the word sparking would - 4 ol never have been applied (o humar PAedin mott pOntSV IS JRa | manifestations of affection If th firefly in the-atr and th w-worm In the Wher southwest gets the modern | grass had ne ipped 1o spark, spirit o e there will pe | O signal ring the nup- room fo aying 000 miles of | Ul sedson o me nights. It [1e o wond e 10 see un- n expend & yeur Lqu dwenty years ts something he cannot get is just as miserable as the drudge whose mind adversity than through achievement and it is up to us to benefit by the lesson, however it may be taught. If we keep watchful as'to how we use ourselves we shall not get to imagining the Lord is specially afflicting us. Love and Mercy could not keep com- suffer because they Become conscious, if you can, of the fact that each day is a new span of life to be lived a little better than the last. Yesterday is a record, and to- morrow an expectation. Yesterday is your plcture of life on the blackboard and it is on view to you that you may put something better into this day than you put into yesterday t is this little span of life your vision can take in—what you will do today is within your conception and your power, per- haps; but what you will do this year is another matter. It is the good work done day by day which adds grandeur to the attainment of the-year. In prospective life man is always biting off more than he can chew—he is de- | signing by the yard what he is cquipped to accomplish only by the inch. Now is the bit of time man has a grip on; and it is the aggregate of nows improved that make the total of human accomplishment. “Strike while the iron is hot"—means now! Nows improved, make the total of progress in every direction. persist in error. Nature has its tag days which it touches ever ture and enlists them in its service, This is in seed time when certain plants make you and me carriers of seed. The animate become the serv- ants of the inanimate. These plant seeds have hooks, and gummy exuda- tions which make them hang to fur, feathers, hair or clothing of any kind, You have come through thick brush and come out covered with “ticks,” not realizing that you were touched and had been made a seed spreader. How tenacfously the burr hangs to one's clothing when its hooks | get fixed to go as far as you will carry | it. Cattle and birds carry these in- | digestible and edhesive seeds for miles, and sheep have been known to carry seed of pestiferous weeds in their wool | one hundred miles, when they were dropped and took root The seeds of many water plants sink in the mud and are carrled to other water—to new | localities—in the mud on the logs of water fowl. A record exists that 82 kinds of plants have been grown from tiny seeds taken from the legs of part- | ridges. Man likewiso carries seeds in | the mud on his boots. Nature's tag| day is always a success; and her other | touches are a pleasure, days roaming crea- | A lone duck flying across country attracted my attention the other day; and I do not remember having seen such a sight often in my life. I could | not help wondering if he was the sole survivor of a flock the hunters had gathered in. -This lone duck did not look good to me in the sky, for he suggested to me possibilities of fate. It is the wedge-shaped flock that honks and deploys and maneuvers wita | nilitary precision which shows skiil and obedience and excites wonder and | admiration in us. Even the domesti- cated duck likes to parade and tha drake will march his flock in single | file and by platoons like an orderl sergeant. Abbott describes a wood- | duck leaving its nest in a_ tree with the just fledged ducks following in single file, which shows they take in- tuitively to this order of march. It is told of an old drake who had lost all his ducks, that he never could for- { give the hens who he imagined were 1o blame for the loneliness of his lot, so he used to revenge himself when they were sitting by taking their heads in his mouth and pulling them off their nests, So you see revenge is sweet even to a drake. “The thin-winged swallow skating on the air” ha lways been a rd of interest to me. For celerity and grace fulness of form, for dash and skill he has no peer. While the swallow seems to &port more than work, it 1s one of the most useful of birds, subsisting as it does on midges; and how high {hose fly hown by the height swallow's flight morning and evening. » very air is full of active life far above the treetops. In their swift flight they do cut figures which remind one of the agility of skaters on ice. In the days of Pepys it was not known that the English swallows win- tered in Africa and the s at the equator. of “the in the nted ti disporting | worship the { N b it (Written Specially for The Bulletin.) “The Substitute” is aware that this is an impertinent inquiry, and that the first thought of the reader may be “It is none of your busines: 1t is asked rather to get your attention than your answer. Self interrogation is one of the best of habits; and when I ask myself whether I think or just think I am thinking, my sub-con- u?ious self sits in silence—I get no re- ply Perhaps you saw the statement that “We live and move and have our be- | ing in the sun,” and didn’t believe it at first any more than 1 did. Come to think of it we have no life or being outside of it. And if it were not for the play of sun and water what would life be to us anyway? It is generally conceded that there ie more animal life in the water than on the land; and we know that painted beauty to and sun together—the bow of promise d set in the heavens is the sun and water playing together, expressing to us in color the divine assurance that the Lord will never again lose patience with man and drown him out. And if this is a myth ,the goodness of the chought cannot be denied. It is not strange that the parsees un as their God; or that others have seen in the sun & perfect symbol of the T Am, or were led to think through this that they “live and move and have their being in Him,” since these agents of His love leave no doubt we have our life and being through them. You may have thought this ail out before, but 1 had not. Fire and water are the elements of life and power. ‘Water quenches our thirst, cleanses our bodies and washes and holds in health the globe on which we live ;and fire —or the—dissi pates dampness and tempers the earth and the atmosphe: so that it is adapted to the multifari- ous kinds of life, creating the beauty of our landscapes and the glory of our skies in the morning and evening light. It has been well said “the sun is the boss in Nature and water his mald of all work. This natural play and power of sun and water is what taught man to use fire and water for his own comfort and advancement, first to improve his comfort and his daily fare and then to drive the wheels of industry—to ob- tain power for every kind of work—to accellerate speed, 50 n this age we behold the aeroplanes beating the cars. 1 guess we do “live and move and have our being in the sun,” don’t you. And when we see this clearly why it comes easier to comprehend how “we live and move and have our being in God!” It is mot the fiction gome people would have you believe it is to say that nature is the book of God, as well as the Bible. Man has never been able NORWICH BULLETIN, SATURDAY, JUNE 22, 1912 WHAT DO YOU THINK? skies and colored flowers owe all their | the daily play of the water | | thinker right; | straight. to confine Deity betweck: the covers of any book because he m be co-ex- tensive with, not the universe, but the universes He has created. Divine power and dlvine love are reflected in his works, and by the dally operation of his laws. If it was not for the per- fect work of his laws there would be none of the delightful things we en- Joy—even the lemonade with the ice in’it would be missing. Do we think? Perhaps you think you are In life not that you are life! Being life you are power and it has been given you to make o flife what you willl As I view it there comes to me the conclusion that we make more of a mess of if than we should. Early in life we get io harboring vain con- ceits instead of storing in the mind real treasures. It is up to us to create our own atmosphere and when we get it created we not infrequently find it is not healthy: and then we do not recognize it as a creation of our own, but think it is an afiction divinely sent instead of self inflicted, while we see In nature the bounties of Heaven distributed alike to the just and the unjust Our eyesight ought to keep our and it would if -we would just keep the thought that it s well for both to act in harmony. Seeing has a deal to do with knowing, hence it is necessary we should see The responsibilities of lifc are all ours. We cannot be careless and slovenly without showing it in our lives and feeling it in the conditions We create. Best efforts in every day living bring best results. To be & credit to his Creator man must be alive to the fact that he is a son of God and has himself been a creator in evi- dence of this fact How we think, has all to do with how we feel. If we think villainously we shall soon be possessed of a villain's heart; but if we think righteously we shall know that we are an heir Heaven. Thoughts which arise from Jealously .envy and hate are dangerous to our own well-being, for they carve us as the sculptor's tools carve the marbly, and make us their representa- tives fn appearance and action; while thoughts of love and faith and use- fulness give a glow to the countenance becoming to our heirship, Thoughts are not inert nothings, but active forces which give color to our acts and fix the character of life’s compen- sation; If you are sure ou think, instead of Your thoughts color vour world. If the rainbow is often in your heart; but if you think the world is growing worse it castes a gloom over the little righteousness which may posses your soul. If you think, give the caste to your thought which blesses not blights. Try to be “the captain of your fate and | the Master of your Soul.” | THE SUBSTITUTE. how to produce the light without heat which the lantern bearers in nature display. The bittern fished with the aid of the lantern upon its breast long before man knew enough to make use of the torch to attract fish at night. The infusoria and the beetles carry lights which for their brilliancy have ever surprised man. The lobster comes up out of the water shining with phospherescence at night, and the old rotten logs in the woods have a wierd phosphorescent glory all their own; and many flowers are as visible by night as by day, the plant known as fox-fire being a notable example. Na- ture may vet teach man how to pro- duce an {lluminant which will glow without giving out heat and be cheap- er than natural gas. SUNDAY MORNING TALK If you wreck of some ancient Chinese junk encountering a typhoon in the Yellow | could have witnessed the sea, it would have been evident that only the strongest of the men aboard had a chance of surviving. Such rude means of escape as that age provided would promptly have been seized by the able hodied. It would have been & poor outlook for women and chil- dren, for sick or disabled. All such would have been left to their fate. When the Queen of the Seas went down & few weeks ago on the Grand Bank and the lifeboats were match- ed with those who needed them, the cry “Women and children first,” rang out along the decks of the doomed vessel , And the chivalrous adherence to this law of the sea will never be a gleam of light through the biack- | ness of the stupendous tragedy, The strong perished, the weak were saved. Men of wealth and importance step- ped aside that unknown women of the steerage might make their way to safety. Rarely has civilization so splendidly justified itself. Rarely has there been a more impressive exhibit of the mor- el distance the human spirit has traveled in the’ progress of the years. It was a daily newspaper that said, “It were better millionaires than to lower by a line the standard of service by the strong to the weak. . The law of the sea was the law of the livinz Christ. Should it die He will be crucified again.” Whenever 1 hear anyone lamenting because the times are out of joint and the world getting worse instead of hetter I like to make a few comparisons. The world is pretty sel- fish vet but immeasurably less selfish than it once W What did the oman representative of the greatest to drown FIRM FOUNDATION NOTHING CAN UNDERMINE IT IN NORWICH. Peopls are sometimes slow to recog- nize true merit, and they cannot be blamed, for so many have been hum- bugged in the past. The experience of hundreds of Norwich residents ex- pressed publicly through newspapers and other sources, places Doan's Kid- ney Pills on a firm foundation here. Mrs. Mary Neff, 465 Main Street, Norwich, Conn., says: “For many rs a member of my family was sub- ject to attacks of kidney complaint. He suffered from pains across the loins and at times could scarcely get about on account of his back being so stift and lame. The kidney secretions were irregular in passage and often contained sediment. Doans Kidney Pills, procured at N. D. Sevin & Son's Drug Store, proved of benefit from the first and soon disposed of every symp- tom of kidney complaint.” The above statement was given Aug. 27, 1908, and on July 21, 1911, Mrs. Neff seld: “1 willingly confirm ‘all I said in praise of Doan's Kidney Pills in the testimonial glven for publication in 1908, Nothing has occurred io change my high opinfon of Doan's Kidney Pills. For sale by all dealers. Price Foster-Milburn Co,, Buffalo, York, sole egents for the States. 50c. New United mowing lot, ish grass of o country Man would like to know Remember take no other the name—Doan's—and vellow and blue and green and purple | civilization of antiquity know of sacrifice for the weak? His philoso- phy taught him to despise them. He thought it proper simply to let the sick or deformed die .to expose the puny child on the mountains. The altruism that redeems our modern life had scarcely so much as enter- ed his thought. Today we are coming to believe that the strong must bear the infirmities of the weak. This is the meaning of a great mass of legislation that is finding its way onto the statute books. This s the purpose of count- less organizations and_institutions for the rellef of divers kinds of suf- fering. This is the motive hehind great gifts to philanthropy. It isn't judged even respectable today to be without a degree of enthusiasm for one’s human brothers, no matter how unfortunate they may be. The very fact that people are sick or helpless or deficient gives them a claim on the builders of a Christian civilization. We consider ourselves in_debt not to the strong but to the helpless. The most neglected little child of the tenements must have sufficient food, pre milk, proper cloth- ing, the best education‘the state can provide, and playgrounds to make his childhood happy. It s said that | in sickness, the poorest people of | New York may and surgical attendance fully equsl to that which millionaires can pro- vide for their families When the “boy senator” from Ten- nessee @ few months ago in Wash- ington, suffered his veins to be tapped that the infusion of good blood might save his stricken and pallid wife, he wes doing in effect what thousands of Americans are doing every day. There are millions of fathers and mothers and brothers and sisters, there are tollers in all spheres whose lives are a continual sacrifice through all the years. We have daily illus- tration of the fact that the world is coming gradually into a new and Christian temper. It has been a long slow progress from the age when might made right and weekness had no chance to the hour when the men of the Titanic stood aside in favor of the helpless. But the great movement is on, No one who notes the evidence can fail to see that the world's moral climate is changing. THE PARSON. A Fair Inference. It may be surmised, too, that John D. pavs almost as liftle attention to the Standard Oil company's b as he does 10 the decree preme court of Repu Breaking the Strain. break the strain. Ex-Governor Pen: packer of Pennsylvania has made appearance in public life again Cleveland Leader. [with ca- of | | thinking you think, how do you think? | you think the world is growing better | Mr. S. S. J o h nson, G eenville, 11, writes: “1 was for five years t T o ubled tarrh. Two years ago I had on e foot in the grave. I had tried seven doc- tors and also went to a ca- tarrh spe- calist in St. Louls, and took 1 kinds ~ o't Mr 8. S. Johnson. . medicine a day. I could mnot more than a hundred walk yards without g. iy friends told me to take Peruna, I did so. | mow feel that Peruna has saved my life. It is the best medicine on earth, and I would not be {without it.” IDEAS OF A PLAIN MAN What a vast deal of things the hu- man race has lived through! As a boy has to live through measles and puppy love and self conceit, so the race has had its diseases of immaturity. There are things that only time can teach, There is the fear of the unknown, such as the dread of God, of death and of the futu There is the divine | right of kings the idea that some | people are born to toil and others to | play; human slavery; war: the notion | it is grander e idle than to | work; the belief that plague and pes- | | tilence arc divine punishments to be evaded by prayer instead of by clean- ing up: and that the human soul can be made happy by any other mea than its own resources. One reason the world is growing wis er is that we have books, the record of our past mistakes. No generation can be as big a fool as the one before it. The centuries, by slow and cosmic teach humanity what is worth spective prices. hot weather comfort. e millennium is coming, but it will be grown, not artificiall make things; God grows things. Golden Age will come as the strength- ening oak, not as the perfected ma- chine. {LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. Suggestion for Norwich. Mr. Editor: Will you kindly permit the suggestion that the Rose of New have gratis medical | Something nearly always happens to | that are correct in style and representing the season choicest creations, embracing Panamas, Sennits, Mack- inaws, Splits and Porto Rican Braids, besides a full showing of the renowned Knox productions await the inspection of the particular man at MORAN’'S the leading store in this section for correct and standard quality. Clothing, Hats and Furnishings at all times. Men's and Young Men's Suits of the famous STEIN-BLOCH manufacture— PRICED $18.00 TO $25.00. Every garment hand-tailored and equal to custom made. | OUR SUITS for Men and Young Men at $10.00 $,12.00 and $15.00 are the best values to be had in the market at their re- Seasonable Furnishings of all descriptions, Wool Underwear in union and two- piece suits, Negligee Shirts, Silk and Lisle Hosiery, Wash Neckwear, Soft Collars, and everything necessary for “ASK FOR ROYAL GOLD TRADING STAMPS” John A. Moran Clothier, Hatter and Furnisher, Corner Main and Shetucket Streets | England take as its model “Brook-in- A | Waterlana,” which as long aso as|| OTHER VIEW POINTS | when Washington Irving wielded his | | pen with such inimitable grace and | ‘!hmnur- was the pride of the people of N the “low countries,” and which to this| _ VTR A | day retains its weil earned renown for | Bvery vehicle, big or ""!-‘ I i o Cleanliness, with some notable addi- | Noisy, ought to be provided with lig tions—such as shining tile flooring in | in order to ensure comple | cow stalls and lace draperies at their | Meriden Record. | windows. Superfinous? Not at all.| . i SUUAEAR | May not an additional smack of relish m’w;'n"“flw;‘r‘:"“ D it | be given thereby to the little round | eighteen veate —~2 ¥Od COB o o | cheeses turned out by thousands in | it see how the LaFollette tnf Fui | adjotning workrooms? mins booms have been frost bi | "Cleanliness the watchwor 4| Waterbury Republican jcleanlineas guides the process which| 41,4 the Colonel staved away from e e et elothed i fresh | Chicago, he would have been able to | the dairyman's craft-—clathec n b s | say—and probably, by trying real | yellow for home :ur‘w\m!»‘\l“.‘("M“;:’fl? hard, to believe—that things would red jacket added for oversea JOUrney- |, ..o’ pone very differently if he had in eatness as well as cleanliness rules | this little community. Note the well | ordered cooking utensils in glittering array on the kitchen walls, and the | ornaments on the walls of their best room been there—Hartford Courant perfectly safe an employe for imperfect work The supreme court of the state Massachusetts has declared that it for an employer to fine t will | Surely were canned goods ever to | Just wadit the adcantage (et W Sy S i cane | takén of this dectsion.—Ha reach the Broo 2 e { would be pol! laced with been A great many lives have geometrical precision somewhere—pos- sibly as borders for flower beds—in- rificed to grade crossings, and wil T W 3 ¥ as long as so many are left unguard )‘”e"‘l of bping dumped by the madice | du bt the _automobilist which can [In""country anes—this presupposin | &6 Dl Susily secns most persistont | that, as in our advanced clvilizatlon, | i, piaying the game the stake of whick {an inconspicuous ~dumping ground | joath —Hartford Times. jmila dream of the fatere, preck,|, John Wensmaker i, fitst of sll a The re-reading o o the adoption | business man—and, it need hardly b | the Dutch Paradise,’ and the aCOPTOR | gaded, a successful business man might inspire a worthy SmUalcn | the business men of the country to k which would perchance n e addi. | heard, when business interests are | far reacning results, eves 1o (h® adf e | threatened with a whirlwind of uncer R e Rupply | tainty."—Stamford Advocate names' hospitable banks—to supply rd e B ther. to Berlin, for a les- | The colonel must have been ju son as regards billboards, might follow | bit jealous of that convention demor : 3 e oy the da when all we own re- | sour It started many of the Roose re and the low wooden pillar at ime velt delegates to do some thinking Jrtanc centers of a ntain all | and showed how little it would ha eauired information on matters of |taken to put 4 mew name in the rur 1 i M. B. R | ning for the big prize.—Bridgey i plegram. 4 adian lumber | Lord Mersey seems to be geit struction | Titabic inquiry proceeds } ) ) ) ings. The Big Store w ith the Little Prices Telephone 965 WE DO UPHOLSTERING A word to the June Couples about furnishing your home. our five floors overstocked with the newest styles in home furnishs We are sure to satisfy you, if in doubt ask your neighbor. SCHWARTZ BROTHERS mates rather pla his power apt els of iletown Pr may ery tion's comme refus for | legisiation Sentine And His Head H. AY YOUR BILLS BY CAEQUE on th: Uncas National Bank the bes \ of & receipt in the re tend to every depositor whether the ac ge or small THE UNCAS NATIONAL BANK 1one 65, 42 Shetucket Strest. o et csus e We have 9-11 Water Street