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¥ TOGETHER (Wianten Specially for The Bulletin.) |Adam” in us wakes up to glower at To say that the new nelghbor is a |them? “book farmer” is, in many l:ctlol:l. to :’x‘t::ug: last word of contemptuous Unlvarlltly otmlf[lswi\lxrihnu a7 L we old | & new rule which will have a tendency h.rn..d“",' Do s den g A we canl|to help in this direction. Hereattor i notions” sbout farming. no student will receive a diploma from ‘We have calloused our palms and |that college unless he shall have spent broken our finger-nails and torn our |8t least six months in actual labor on sl t0o, many years in our rough- (& farm. Of course, students brought and-tumble scrapping-matches with {UP on a farm will have done more than Nature to believe in the eficiency of |that. But it is said that a majority of ing less thorough-going than the students in the Missouri college 4 and iron,"—to use Bismark's|are city boys. These will have to put famous phrase. in a half-year or more at actual work Evérybody admits that there is mo|On actual farms—not station experi- royal road to learning. We old fel- |ment grounds,—before the college will lows are as emphatic in asserting that | give them any warranty of being fit to there’s no easy way of farming. call themselves farmers. ekl il nder | rather like that idea. In this work- rl'.::‘ .::-m:h'n::r “w‘hr..th ;;;.p:.r’ a-day world of ours the two brothers, headed old fogies ,too “sot” and stub- | Theory and Experlence, do best when ‘born to learn. Frankly, I have to con- | they work together. Theory, left to fess that I have never found any way | himself, is likely to go off on tangents, . tp 1 Nor have I ever happened to run|land, llke a comet through empty across any other farmer, without larg- | Space. Experience, similarly left to er capital, who could make a decent | himself, is likely to get his back so living without steady hard work. bent and his boots so loaded with dirt Of course, the chap who has plenty | that he can't lift himself over a fall- of money can uysually make his money (en tree limb when it happens to lie work for him and save him the sweat. | across his hoeing, grubbing, digging But,, In that case, he simply transfers | way. It is rather essentlal to the best the toil to some other hired shoulders, |results that we should know What to The toll itself cannot be escaped or |Do as well as How to Do It. For the evaded. It is the price which must | first, Theory, trained in the knowledge be pald for Achievement:—the Sine [of books and the schools, is a real qua non of Success. And, again speak_|service, For the second, Experience, ing for myself alone, I own up to a(trained in the University of Hard much higher respect for the man who | Knocks, 18 absolutely indispensible. pays the price with the strain and i R T stress of his own struggle than for the It is quite conceiveable that a man man who hires some one else to do it | who had never seen an engine in ac- for him. Just as I respect more highly | tual operation might be taught from the volunteer who shoulders his musk- | plans and specifications how to build et and went to war than the stay-|one and all the principles of its op- at-home who hired a substitute. eration. But no sane superintendent PR vt of a factory would' put such a chap On the other hand, it seems to me|in charge of the 500 horse-power that we're liable to be a 1- -e bit | monster in his engine-room. There “oft” when we make an idol of mere |are differences between the ways in work, and‘ worship it as something|which Iron and steel and coal and holy in itself. This is carrying the | steam act, in books, and the way they thing too far. As a means to an end, |act in a furnace and a boiler and an ‘work seems to be something we can’t engine. along without. But it {sn't’'an end The best engineer is the one who iteelf. I'm perfectly willing to ad- [ knows the whole theory of his big ma- mit that I should be very much obliged | ehine, from A to Izzard,—and who al to anybody who would show me how |80 knows just how theory “pans out” attain the same results as now | in actual practice from coal bunker to th half the work. In that case, I'd | eylinder-head. either. have more time for fishing, or, The best farmer would be the one \ —I'd know how to double results.| who knew the whole theory of farm- Which I should do would depend |ing—If such a peripatetic cyclopedia largely on my temperament and on |Wwere possible—and also knew from the condition of the weather. hard_won experience how to apply that . theory in actual practive. At present, and as things now are —_— it seems inevitable that farmers, like | Seems to me I've said it before, but other folks, must pay for what they |it will bear saying over a good many get, either in money or in labor. As (times,—that right there is the greatest we generally haven't the money, it|charm of farming and its grandest op- must be the other thing. Apd we|portunity. There isn't another voca- haven't much interest—unless an|tion in the world which affords such amused contempt be called interest,— | even-handed chances for self-building in the .doings of callow chaps who |on both sides, that of Knowledge and think that they, with their cheesé- | that of Expertness. Not one which of- cloth theories, can wipe the eyes of |fers such chances, I say. I do not say our and double-twisted experi_|that many of us avail ourselves of ence. them. Very few do, more's the pity. ~ - But it Isn't the fault of our calling if Some of the popinjays turned out by | we unworthy followers of it fail to some of the agricultural colleges have | take the good it holds for us. We all helped to heighten this contempt. We [ have the right of Othello’s “base In- have of us seen young sprigs, fresh | dlan” to throw our pearls of oppor- from e lagboratory, and without a |tunity away; to sell our heritage for a trace of tan on their cheeks or & |mess of pottage: to devolute down- The College of Agriculture in the | it which was not hard work. | skyhooting uselessly through dream-’ singlé callous on their hands, assume’ wards that about everything we old hunks had been doing was wrong and that they were divinely appointed to teach us better. “old Is it any wonder that SUGGESTIONS Advice to Expectant Mothers the The experience of Motherhood is & ing one to most women and marks dis- tinetly an epoch in their lives. Not one ‘woman in a hundred is prepared or un- derstands how to properly care for her- self. Of course nearly every woman nowadays has medical treatment at such times, but many approach the experience with an organism unfitted for the trial of strength, and when it is over her system bas received a shock from which it is hard to recover. Fol- lowing right upon this comes the ner- wous strain of caring for the child, and & distinct change in the mother results. There is nothing more charming than 2 happy and healthy mother of children, and indeed child-birth under the right conditions need be no hazard to health or beauty. The unexplainable thing is that, with all the evidence of shattered nerves and broken health resulting from an un- prepared condition, and with ample time in which to prepare, women will persist in going blindly to the trial. Every woman at this time should rely upon Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound, a most valuable tonic and invig- orator of the female organism. In many homes = once childless there are now children be- cause of the fact that Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound makes women normal, bealthy and strong. 2 2 If you want special advice write to Lyll{ B.Plnkh':elelldu Co. (confle dential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, readsand answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. POCKET BOOKS New. line of Pocket Books, Purses, Pass Books, Pocket Banks and Drinking Cups. Taft, Wilson and Roosevelt Pennants and Hatbands. MRS. EDWIN FAY 1 don't profess to be very handy with theological terms ,but I 'should say that farming was foreordained to give & whole lot of us the chance to use our free will in the wrong way. . When one gets down to the very bot- tom of things, I suspect that nine- tenths of the opposition and friction between “book farmers” and grubbing farmers i8 due to nothing more serious than outside manners. Some of us who have to do coarse work and rasp- ing work and hard work come to think that coarseness and waspish_ ness and harshness are really virtues, —marks of virility, indeed. We pride ourselves upon them: we actually cul- tivate them: we come to think that those who do not possess them are “mollycoddles.” At the same time oth- ers of us look on these same qualities— of coarseness and harshness ,etc.—as offensive and reprehensible. Pretty soon each sort gets on the other sort's nerves. And then the row begins. The theorist condemns his horny handed neighbor as a small-souled, narrow- minded clodhopper, while the said horny-handed sneers at the theorist as a kid-gloved dandy, a' sort of man- milliner escaped from the sewing- room. _Probably both are about oné-tenth right,—and nine-tenths wromg. There are mighty few men outside of asy- lums really as unintelligent as some of the young fry think their old fogy neighbors are. There are mighty few young callants just out of college so utterly impractical as some old farm_ ers think they are. Each might well learn something fro mthe other, to the advantag of both. Instead of which, each goes at the other with hammer and tongs, determined to make him over,—or abolish him. The youngster takes the old man's slow weighing of plans and dublous recallings of past experiences as just denseness and dunderheadedness. The practical old chap takes the youth’s untested en- thusiasm and zeal for mere bump- tlousness. They clash every time they ought to rub up agalnst each other, and turn away with both sets of teeth on edge,—Just because they don’t and won't understand each other, My idea of a first-class farmer is one who knows the principles of agri~ culture, just as he knows his A, B, C's, and can put them into praetice, just as he puts into use his acquaintance with the alphabet every time he reads a market report, He is o man with his mind stored full of agricultural knowledge and his hands trained te expertness In giving that knowledge valuable form, He I8 a man whe works his head all the ~ time, but doesn’t therefore despise his arms and hands as poer relations, He works them to their normal capaeity, toe, and is just as proud ef his proficiency in hendicraft as of his mental mastery in problem-solving, well as to evolute upwards. BLOODLESS BATTLE ENDS. Whites About to Capture Reds When Chief Umpire Sounds Recall—U. S. Regulars Embark at Groton for land Forts. 7 (Special to The Bulletin.) Stonington, Oct. 4—The last of the mimic warfare took place Friday be- tween the Road church, Stonington, and Groton. The companies broke camp at the Browning farm about 7 a. m. The Reds took up a position east of Old Mystic on Copps hill, near the Middleton farm, where a_small force were outflanked by the Whites and retreated across the Mystic, los- ing a company, which was captured by the Whites. s Both forces stopped beyond Mystic river for luncheon. After luncheon the fighting again commenced, and the | Reds retreateqd to the ridge 1 1-2 miles | east of Center Groton, took up posi- tions in the woods from which they could not be driven within the time at the disposal of the Whites. There was a_sharp engagement 1 1-2 miles east of Center Groton, the Reds’ rear guard falling back after a spirited ac- tion. There were a few skirmishes ’bxetween the scouts west of this posi- tion. The chief umpire sounded a recall at 2 o'clock, just as the Whites were starting to march around the position of the Reds. The commanding officers of the two forces assembled their commands and all marched to Groton, where the steamers Gen. J. M. Bran- nan, Gen. Nathaniel Greene and Gen. R. T. Frank were waiting to trans- port them to Fort Wright, Fishers is- land, and Fort Terry, Plum island. Col. R. P. Davis was chief umpire, Maj. C. H. McNeal and Maj. W. R. Beggison were assistant umpires. Maj. G. A. Nugent was in command of the Whites and Maj. B. M. Keeler was in command of the Reds. A large crowd from Mystic, Stonington and Westerly assembled at Old Mystic bridge to watch the battle. NEW BOOKS Retrospection. ' By Hubert Howe Ban- croft. Cioth, 562 pages, with in- dex. The Bancroft Company, New York. Price $2. This book is a review of the cen- tury, with much attention given to the Panama canal and the development of California. +In all of Mr. Bancroft's writings fearlessness is a prominent character- istic, and nowhere is this quality morc manifest than in. Retrospection. He does not stop to consider the effect of a statement upon an individual, or up- on a coterie; the questions are sim- ply, is the matter worthy of consid- eration, and is it true? In turning from business to enter the fleld of letters he thought little of fame or reward other than the satis- faction of doing well certain work which he thought well worth doing, and- which no one else seemed dis- posed to undertake. You and | and the Stars. By William Timothy Call. Cloth, 101 ~ages. C. M. Potterdon, Hawthorne, N. J. Price ‘50 cents. An interesting pocket edition study of astrology recording incidents and experiences as they occurred with treatment of the astrological periods and rules for the practice of the sci- ence. Included are men of prominence whose temperament is in accordance with the various divisions and the con- clusion {s reached that men of differ- ent periods differ because of planetary influence. The volume interests. Kimball's English Grammar. By Lil- Han G. Kimball, formerly head of English department, State Normal school, Oshkosh, Wis. Cloth, 12mo, 271 pages. American Book com- pany, New York. Price 60 cents. A textbook in grammar, distinguish- ed by its common sense, In which the subject is simplified and robbed of all unnecersary and minor technicalities. The treament is original and interest- ing, while the style is simple, clear and concise. Throughout, the practical side of the subject has received special attention. many exercises being given in which the substitution of corfect forms for common errors in speech will be of great aid. Mezger and Mueller. Kreux und quer urch Deutsche Lande. By Robert Mezger, Barringer High school, Newark,and Willlam Mueller, Cin- cinnati. Coth, 16mo, 260 pages, notes, conversational questions, vocabulary, map, and illustrations. American Book Co, New York. Price 60 cents. This German reader for second year classes gives an account of the trip of two Americans through Germany,com- mencing with the ocean voyage, land- ing at Hamburg, and proceeding thence through the most interesting portions of the empire. Conversations and let- ters are introduced to vary the style of the narrative, while numerous anec- dotes, stories, ballads and songs illus- trate the characteristics of the German people, and their customs and instity- tions. The language is simple and idi- omatic, the vocabulary practical and modoern, with frequent repetition of words. An Unfortunate Oversight. ere the Archbold-Harriman inquiry is almost at hand, and that Senate In- vestigation Committee hasn’t summ- oned Link Steffens or Ida Tarbell yea. —Washington Post. H Already Admitted It. Now that they have brought the Bible into the campaign wé may ex- pect to hear that the Seer of Ar- mageddon was the author of the Ten Commandments.—Atlanta Constitu- tion. Cost of Living. The official government report shows that the high cost of living is almost equal to the cost of high living.—Chi- cago Inter Ocean. RECOVERY OF WILLIE. (Continued from Page Eleven.) market and told her how sad it was that Willle had to be shut up such fine weather, and how their hearts ached for him, as he was such a brigh{ boy, anyhow. Willie's mother steadily grew paler and more nervous, and even when Willie began to recover she did not regain her courage. The horrible fecling that something dreadful was golng to happen to him clutched her firmly and would not be shaken off. At last Willle was able to get out into the yard and walk about a bit. Then the neighbors paused to pat him on the head and feed him chocolate drops and tell him how they had sat up nights worrying about him, t It was only a few days after Willie | had reached this peint of convalescenea that his disheartened mother jumped wildly from the perch hammockwhere she had been resting fitfully, end with & hand on her heart peered through TR 4 the vines, From th o He uses his brain to guide his hands | come g shrill __\,mx.:hjahe_l;w‘d“mr 11;;:} and his hands to serve his brain, He | would have dee credit to an Apache combines knowledge and skill. e is | It was followed by o smashing of ginss, at onee the artist and the artisan, He | g glang of falling metal and & crash ag 18 both designer and performer, He |ihough a part of the heuse were tum- contrives and enacts, He plans and |phiing down, Clese upeR it eamse parforms. He thinks ideas ,and he | wrathful, “Willie Snears! Will-i-e-e! does things, He is evenly - balanced | You ge right home new and siep thatl and equal-sided, He is no tep-heavy | Stop if, you awful boy!” : dreamer, nor is he a drudge Rer an mother leaned back in the sutomaton. He uses eaeh of his sk with peaee fleeding her soul, powers to complement and fulfil all} Phe tension of menths was relaxed. the cthers She Leaved a deep sigh of comfort ind tucked anether pillew under her head, Of course, such a farmer is an ideal. | | feel now that Willie is going to g Bul why isn't the ideal one worth | well after all” she murmured before cLasiaw after. for even you and 17 she dropped inte a deep and dvesm- THE FARMER, less slesp —Chicage Newa. NORWICH BULLETIN, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5, Nursing and for the baby. ity, of their hfimmk Vet 8] are SOMETIMES deficient in the quantity, SOMETIMES in the qual- are, therefore, unable to supply the proper nour- BORDEN'S Malted Milk IN THE SQUARE PACKAGE can be used to make up the deficiency, as its analysis is_almost identical with the best milk, and when used b will be enriched and the supply increased, owing to Mothers In all such cases grade of mother’s the mother herself, her milk BREED THEATER SENSATIONAL WESTERN FEATURE A Woman of Arizona--Essanay A strong, vigorous drama of the far West, portrayed with rare skill amidst the grandeur of rugged hills the stimulation of the lacteal glands h‘.(h. (non- aleoholic) malt, which is a part of the food. Send for free trial package and special BORDEN’S Manufacturers Eagl booklet on Infant-feeding. Maited Milk Department E lo Brand Condensed. Milk. Geo. Wm. Bentley Co., State St, Boston, Mass. Tel. Richmond 336. CONDENSED MILK CO. of Borden's Milk and N. E. Selling Agents, 152 MUNICIPAL ELECTION Mayor Mahan’s administration re- ceived the practically unanimous en- dorsement of the people at the very largely attended annual city meeting which was illustrated in the unanimity with wnich every item in the budget was favored and appropriations made to meet the expenses as recommended by the court of common council. Con- trary to the usual custom of railroad- ing measures through the city meeting, the mayor invited discussion on every single item. He went farther and per- mitteq Ex-Mayor Gorge F. Tinker, the oldest living former chief magistrate of the city, to glve expression of his views on the conduct of city affairs even before any part of the budget was presented for action. Mayor Tinker, usual advised the citizens to go low in an increase of the city ex- nditures as he considered that New nndun was going too fast for a city of its size and cautioned conservative action. Mayor Mahan reminded the ex-mayor that there had been a change in the conditions since he was at the helm of the ship Mare Liberam, the fast steamships had taken the place of salling vessels, that the trol- ley cars had supplanted the old-style stage coach and omnibus and to- mobiles had replaced the slower-go- ing methods and that even fishing smacks were now with motor power. The mayor said that the budget was carefully prepared and that the amounts recommended were, in the opinion of the members of the court of common council, necessary for the proper conduct of the city business. Mayor Mahan then extended like courtesy to Ex-Alderman Thomas W. Casey to give a general talk along the line of extravagance and lax methods of conducting the public business. Mr. Casey considered some of recommend- ations excessive, especially the ap- propriation for streets, with which he was best posted having served as chalrman of the street committee, Both these gentlemen were given ample time to give expression of their views on municipal management before the real business of the meeting was in- troduced for action. The gentlemen were given respectful hearings and Mayor Mahan reminded them and the rest of the citizens that there would be ample time given for general dis- cussion on every item in tbe budget as they ‘'were to be presented to the meeting separately. Both Messrs. Tinker and Casey spoke in opposition to the size of some of the recommend- ations and Representative Lucius S. ‘Whiton asked for explanation of some of the items, satisfactory replies be- ing given in every instance. Every item in the budget was unanimously favored and the meeting was devoid of wrangling of any description, which was in marked contrast to some form- er city meetings in the not very long ago. . As expected, there was just insinua- tion enough exhi d to show person- al bitterness against the mayor of the city, who has placed New London more prominently on the map than ever before. Engelbert Sauter learn- ed that the chauffeur of the city ma- chine received the munificent salary of $600 a year Being of opinion that the salary was paid from the miscel- laneous fund, he made motion that the fund be lessened $600 and that the highway commissioner be the driver of the automobile. The motion of the gentleman was not even sec- onded. After this action, the mayor stated that the driver of the automo- bile was a city employe and that he was paid from the appropriation for streets just as are the other employes of that department. It was a harmo- nious meeting and there was no se- rious opposition to what the mayor had done and what he proposes to do, if re-ciected. Every dollar expended he said was for the best interests of the city and that the books were open | to investigation. “The same tax of 16 mills was laid. The city election will be held next Monday and the voters will have op- portunity to give approval of the ac- tion of some of the leading members of the present court of common council who have served the city for the past three years, as besides Mayor Mahan, four of the candidates for re-election to e council as aldermen are in the present membership. In the First ward {8 Alderman Charles C. Perkins, republicail; & member of the finance committee and senlor alderman. In the Third ward je alderman John J. Ryan, democrat, chairman of the po- lice committee. ~ Alderman James F. O'Leary, is the candidate for re-elec- tion. He i the efficlent chairman of the publie property committee with membership on the fire and other im- ! portant committees, and one of the best working members of the council, He has not only represented the Fourth ward but was foremost In many | measures of general importance to th whao'e city, He 18 one of the live wire land Aldermun Robert Small, republi | ean, of the Fifth ward 18 another, There are net many matters that are intreduced in the meetings of the suneil that de net get by until they theroughly understood by Mr. Small, He is a valued member and there is no deubt of his return as the IFifth ward is the strenghold of local NEW LONDON'S ANNUAL MEETING Several Urge Curtailing Expenses But Same Tax of Sixteen Mills is Voted WILL BE HELD MON Interesting Contests Will Help to Enliven—Many Would Like to See Ex-Mayor Armstrong Get Back Into Political Ac- tivity—Senatorial District Likely to Go Republican., ing city election. As usual, the dem. ocrats will have the minority repre- sentation on the board of selectmen. Perhaps the most hotly contested office in the election will be between Alfred H. Pollock, republican, and Thomas R. Murray, democrat, for the office of assessor. Mr. Murray has been the defeated candidate for that office for the past two years against ‘Wallace Johnson, republican, and poll- ed a much greater vote than his party, coming very close to election. At the recent republican caucus, Mr. John- son was defeated In the contest for nomination to make room for Mr. Pol- lock, a former selectman, and who used to be something of a vote getter. He trained with the Armstrong forces and temporarily retired from active poli- tics. He is a foreman in the Arm- strong Silk mill and deservedly popu- lar. However, Mr. Johnson has some friends who would perhaps prefer Murray to Pollock and there are oth- ers who may extend their political dislike of former Mayor ng- to his faithful employe. By the way, it is a pity that Mr. Armstrong does not come from his retirement and re- enter the politica] game in which he was for a time ‘an easy winner. He is the gentleman who gave New Lon- don the business administration that he promised and who, with his many friends, are proud of the business ad- ministration. Everybody here and hersabouts sup- posed that Ex-Alderman Thomas W. Casey was republican stand pat stripe, a thorough Taftite, but it seems he has gone over to the Bull Moose herd hook and line and sink- er. In fact he is a leader of the party for he has accepted nomina- tion as candidate of the party for the senatorship of the Eighteenth district which comprises the towns of New London and Groton, and which has been so ably represented by Sen- ator Bryan F. Mahan. During the ad- ministration of Mayor Armstrong, Mr. Casey was a member of the court of common council, alderman from the republican Fifth ward, and ably as- sisted the then mayor in his business administration of city affairs, He was chairman of the street committee and as such gave satisfactory public service. In return he probably ex- pects, and should receive the political support of those whom he supported at political loss to himself. Mr. Casey is a successful business man and has long taken interest in public affairs. He has conducted the granite business in Groton as well as in New London and therefore has personal acquaint- ance with nearly all of his conmsti- tuency. His opponent on the regular repub- lican ticket will probably be Lucius E. Whiton, a leading manufacturer of New London, and who has had con- siderable legislative experience as a member of the lower house, in which he was an acknowledged leader. Mr. ‘Whiton is the logical party candi- date and will probably receive the nomination without opposition, and with chances favorable to election. For the democratic nomination, Al- derman Alton T. Miner, chairman of the finance and other committees and one of the most valuable members of the court of common council, is be- ing groomed for the nomination. He, too, is a successful business man and decidedly upright citizen and good democrgt. Fortunately, in any of this trio of gentlemen the district has assurance of competent and comnscientious rep- resentation. From this distance it looks as if Senator Mahan would be succeeded by a republican, as the dis- trict is strongly republican under or- dinary conditions, and under the ap- portionment of several years ago was never represented by any democratic candidate, except Senator Mahan, Knees Became Stiff Five Years of Severe Rheumatism The cure of Henry J. Goldstein, 14 Barton Street, Boston, Mass., is anoth- er victory by Hood’s Sarsaparilla. This great medicine has succeeded in many cases where others have utterly failed. Mr. Goldsteln says: “I suf- fered from rheumatism five years, it kept me from business and caused ex- cruciating pain. My knees would be- come as stiff as steel. I trled many medicines without relief, then took Hood's Sarsaparilla, soon felt much better, and now consider myself en- tirely cured. I recommend Hood's.” Get It today in usual liquid form or ehocolated tablets called Sarsatabs. Seo Our New Line of 10 cent and 15 cent NOVELS —at THE NOVELTY SHOP C. L. HILL, 56 Franklin St. ALEFS BOWLING ALLEYS Bowling to § p. m., 5 cents & samg. 237 Main Street. republicanism, even if party lines are not to be striotly drawn In the com- | mayid M. ALDI & CO, Prepe oav|Advice to Mothers Ha: had '; you baby's photograph | Delivered to Any Part of Norwich the the best on the market—HANLEY’S PEERLESS. A telephéne order will receive prompt attention. D. J. McCORMICK, 20 Franklin a. Mon., Tues., Wed. AUDITORIUM S5eeiti telrone s “La PETITE REVUE” Vaudeville’s Classiest Comedy Singing Novelty 7 CLEVER COMEDIANS ] Special Scenery and Electrical Effects. L Highest Priced Act Ever Seen Here. SWEENEY & ROONEY | THE BRITTONS Expert Extra for Monday and Tuesday Omly A 2-REEL 101-BISON FEATURE FILM “THE PENALTY” Indians, Horses, Soldiers, Cowboys in Hundreds WE REFUSE TO BTOP THE GOOD WORK-—as witnesseth: DICK STEAD “Tnm Al dv Song, Dance JULIA R JOND & CO, In a ch “The and Girl® PHOTO PLAYS—|—PHOTO PLAYS Black '-1 J Horee—THE HIG LAIGHTON, |5k The Photographer, 6% one Opposite Norwich Savings Soclety. ‘IM GET TH'E HABIT, for Winter M Flowering at REUTERS Including Chinese Sacred Eilies BULBS Geduldig’s Greenhouses, . se - LUMBER users will be astonished at the com- pleteness of our assortment' within ‘a month after our DISASTROUS FIRE and we have also unloaded a cargo, each, of Chestnut, Stove and Egg OAL CHAPPELL CO. on what 1s left of GENTRAL WHARF . Telephones Dutch, French and Japanese have arrived in good shape. Let us know. your wants. L SET TEET FIT GUARANTEED FuL Bridgewo os Our prices are within the ork: | Ushesttatioots “wo | ¥ 0 HIGH xly we | PRICES 208 Main S DR. JACKSON, Manager. famt §p m Telephone. A. MARSHAK 123 West Main St. Commencing this k 1 bave mark-down ::l on :-:‘l:d -'ymu' d and men boys n4 et oup “u . - . Ale that is acknowledged to be