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Borwich Bu iletin mund Guufies. 117 YEARS OLD. 500 Subscription pric month; $6.00 a y--- Eutered at the Postoffice at Norwica, Conn., as second-class matter. Telephone Calls: Bulletin Business Office. 480. Builetin ¥diorial Rooms, 35-3. Bulletin Job Office, 35-6. Wiilimantic Offic Building. Tel " Norwich, Saturday, March 15, 1913. iue Circulation 0i 1se Bulletin. The Bulletin has the Iargest elr- culation of amy paper in Easters Commecticut, und from three to four tlmes lmrger than that ef any Norwicn. It la delivered to ever 4,080 of the 4053 houmscs im Nor- ich: mmad read by mimety-thzee Per cent. of the peoplc. Im Wimdam it in dellvered to over 500 houses. in Putnun: sad Danicison to over 1,100, in all ef these places it in commldered the local daily. Eastern Conmmecticat kas forty- nime towss, enc humdred and Sixty- five postoffice districts, and wixcy rural free delivery reutes. ‘fhe Bulletln Is sold In ecvery (own and em all of the R. T, . routes in Easters Conmecticut. CIRCULATION 1901, average .. 1905, average ... WHITMAN'S CANDIDACY. For a long time Distrigt' Attorney Whitman of New York city has been talked of for the mavor of New York, It was recognized that his efforts in behalf of a better New York made | him at once the logical candidate for the impor good influences we position he holds. His w! to accept nation independe m any the man to e fusion ticket egainst forces of Tammany. The mayoralty of New York city is an of- rds & man of the cal- hi fice which dema tber of Whitiaan who ent®term has demonstra of chara nd a fe the funning down of vice and graft nola ides him to receive the highest honor the citizens of the metropolis could Eive him. The defeat is desired By the forces. For each party to nominate a candidate Simply means the assurance of a Tammany viglory. Fu therefore the only <o which can be pursued with a chamee: of success and such has ap- pealed to the, rep licans and pro- irefstves. Thelr strongest man s Teeded and in Mr. Whitman there is offéred the omnort upen a man who is upperm. csteem of the people. His cond the offtes of m of New Yo ned after his conception of the auties of district attorney, would give the city a chief executite of whom they could be proud. SURPLUS SUPPLIES. been particulariy con- ture siderate to the consumer for the past year throueh the-record breaking crops and the mildness of weather. Alll has contributed to relieving tne sit uation which would haye prevailed had the opposite conditiona existed. The department of agriculture Te- cently estimated that at the begin- ning of this month that there was an enormous surplus of f ducts in the barns of the American farmers. With an fncrease over the surplus of a vear ago of forty-three million bush- els of wheat, there is in stock over four hundred million bushels of corn in excess of this time a year ago. Both as to the corn and the oat crop over forty ‘per cent. of the 1912 vield I still in hand. Simil nditions pr vail with other products. Potatoe for instance which were being Im- ported a yve o are available in quantities in o for export. The mild winter has greatly increased the supply of eggs and despite the activity in beating down the market there §s twice the surplus on hand that there was ear ago in cold storage and prices have steadily been tumbling. Benefits to the farmers and likewise to the consumers v re: from these conditions which ins ®in these lines there will be no Aificulty in supplying the market and that the wolf can be kent from the door with less effort. Relief in price should also be an accompaniment of the disburse- Taent: of theea.large supplies THE NEWSPAPER LAW. ioh to the newspaper pub- Oppo licity law has been persistent ever since its passage even to an attack upon its constitutionality which 1is now pending before the supreme court. It constitstes a plece of legisiation which wenz %through congress, not on its own mesits but attached to ome of the important bills and is an un- just law. It enacts from the news- Ppapers of the country a compliance under the penalty of the loss of the privileges of the United States mail From among the nine per cent, of the newspapers of country whe have not complied with the require- ments, the New York Times saye: “The authors and abettors of this leg- islation attempt to justify it by the argument that as newspaper# are much affected with a public interest, the public s entitled to know wha owns them, to thg end that if greal capitalists or other mulefactors are in control of thelr ntterances, their rs may be informed of the faot, The owlish stupldity’ of this reason- ing has been perfectly apparent to persons who understand fhe relation between newspapers and’ tholr read- ers, A newspaper Is judged by iis contents, by 1ta nows columns and ‘its ditorial opinlons, and in forming thefr judsment upon thexe matters (s read- ers do mot meedi to be told whe the owners are. A newspaper that dees not speak for itself ix very quiekly found out, So the new law is super- fAuous” £ Room 2, Murray nt office even though his e needed in the! llingness tion makes him rlessness in g of law which qual- | ty of combining in the NEW HAMPSHIRE'S SENATOR. The choice of H. F. Hollis as the senator from New Hampshire sends a democrat to Washington from: the Granite state for the first In years and it adds strength tp the 'semate’ Which is needed to insure its demo- | cratic majority. The republican state finds itseif in the position of sending @ tariff for revenue only senator to look after the interests of a manufac- turing commonwealth which Kknows the benefits of and needs a protective tariff. The fight has been a long one and has demonstrated the harm which comes from a divided house. The in- THE MAN WHO TALKS Why had the average American boy rather look like a savage or a cow- Doy’ than a civiliged boy, or a saint? Some people would dismiss this ques- tion with the affirmation that it is Decause of man's total depravity. A “hundred years ago such an answer would have satisfied all the worid, but teday it does not find endorsement with half of it. This idea is 86 Pop- ular in Fisconsin that the state has know how PHOEBE SINCLAIR’S EXPERIENCE Phoebe Sinclair was a seamstress in | §0od home, something the pcor child a large dressmaking estabilshment in | never had i a crowded city. She could remember | much more than a child now, though no other life than that of hustling, | her looks belled her years. bustling toil in dismal surroundings, | Ill venture,” was her final decision. “I both in shop and home, if it could be|can but fail, and I am so tired of termed home. To-night she sat alone | all I have know here In the city. Moth- in her little room, third story back in | er came an inferior boarding house. ' Forlorn | was a littie girl, indeed, but the best she could provide | of her old home. for herself on her meagre earnings. | it. Who make the she was not The section men or 39.60 a week, Most of them Calling the the country, and when I she used to I am sure I'd like Perhaps Nellie Brown's mother can keep his track in good shape un- less he hag one or more men Wwho 7 how to do_their worl withiout - constant telling any more than the F0R G i s Shackine” stope. coa SAIL FROM BOSTON build engines with men who know nothing of the work and those men || road have to learn Many a section man works six- teen years and then gets the seme pay Y- that the new men get the first season, Y hard, particular work and there is no it hope of promotion. get 31.60 per day, er mornth. have & wife and children. rent $8.00, fuel $2.00, groceries, meat, $20.00, means '$30.00. That B’ TO interfered to stop photographers from ability of the opposition to Senator Hollis to asree upon one candidate prevents New Hampshire from send- ing a republican to the senate at a | making pictures of boys in wild wept regalia, with rifle in hand and a cig- arette in their modths, as a means of | Increasing business as an immoral and Often she had sat there moping by | would take me on trial. herself, but tonight she was deeply | little money in my. purse, and the thinking, recalling her past life and | fare is not much, Nellie said, “I will pondering over the future. A dull life [ go the first chance 1 get. surance and pleasure. four (with two children) will need at I cannot be 0 per month for shoes and Assuring Arrival in Paris by Day time when important tariff legislation is planned. It operated the same as the third party did in the ~national election ang means that the common enemy and the undesired principles win through the unwillingness of the factions to get together. It has been an example of the ineficiency of the method of selegting a senator and if ere were mot many otherd equally convincing it would furnish the basis for a demand for changing the meth- od New Hampshire has taken a step hich will be watchied with interest. It means the advocacy in the upper house of congress of principles Which are against the welfare of the many manufacturing interests of the state, if party interests are to be served. BETTERING CITY BUSINESS. Ivery city has its experiénces with | the failure of municipal government in 1y instances to do business on the sis which characterizes private bus- iness. Because it the city there tendency to slight ponsibil- | which no business man would a minute consider. The same thing exists even to a greater extent ' in national government and the ef- foris in. behalf of economy and effi- clency as taken up by the past ad- ministration demonstrates this con- isively. . There is need for system- investigation for the overcoming oe conditions and Springtield is séeking the benefits of such through a municipal survey of the city Eov- ernment. As out by the Indian- | apoiss wrongdoi more than it is 8o in | the man nt of a private busi-| ness; simply the best way ent, for example, has found hundreds of hours aying not long ago resulted in aban- | doning half a dozen useless motions | in th indiing of a brick from the Municipal administrations need to by bettering the metheds of iness, the elimination of du- pileatt and overlapping which abounds. A survey for a city ought to accomplish what an expert actount- ant would for a business which was not operated on a successful business basis. EDITORIAL NOTES. = The employer who is satisfied with tramp labor is easily satisfied | Happy thought for today: Thi would be a bad time for the milliners by not properly assembling | material. A “surve in brick- | il th place in the wall. Tc rem- | Such economy can often be accom- | to strike. The New Haven Union i some’ tough experiences with is a hard adversary in.any The vice probe seems to be in gen- cral use throughout the country. It is a healthy indication of-a desire for better things. It Delaware can take care of all the tramps during the berrypicking | season it is t0o bad the n doesn't | ast the entire year. Though the date for the extra ses- sion of congress has been changed it cannot he forzotten that it was orig- inally called for the first of April. A Milwaukee soclety advises girls outh-corrupting method. It is be- cause the American boy of this age |is bred in an atmosphere of sensa- tlonalism which is far from _being wholesome though it finds popular fa- vor. The American bey would not desire to be a savage if the savage | dia not excite more admiration than | the civilized ty The boy is out of nt because the times be. It looks as if this country was 100 | | free for louts and not free enough for seif-respecting and lsw-abiding people. In this age of civilization an in this country of freedom it must have surprised the world to see what a low and disorderly assault was made pon women at Washington in the | streets. American womanhood has as much right to _ parade the American manhood. While hoodlum- ism has no rights law and order should respect, T am not able to get a high nion of any man who is wiliing his mother and sisters should be classified with dogs and outcasts. The “lord | of creation idea” has been clung to until man ought to blush for shame. —_— < Haven't you been surprised ir this religious men who support vice? There are too fiany men who associate with | upright people and look clean and ntiy by day, who if Shadowed by nizht will perjure themselves to prove an alibi. In other words wolves in sheep’s clothing and hypocrites are too | numerous in all communities. When I was younger I shared in the pre- | judice against those who cater tovice but now I simply sit and ponder con cerning those who support it in our highly enlightened and civilized cities, in’ most of which it is a legal bus- iness, which is as near as Christian communities can come to making vice respectable. Do not curse the man is not a question of | Who profite by it—he gets eur money and we get a little of it back. My attention has been called to the o out ! auestion of finding out ' r,ct"that people dependent upon char- Many & manufacturing ity attend the moving picture shows, and the opinion is that they might spend their money better. I have some oubts about that. It seems to me as poor and needy are entitled to 2 little recreation and entertainment if they can get it. The state recognizes this need and furnishes both to ity prisons and insane retreats, aithoush it 1= not quite as thoughtful about its poor, who are not wholly neglected, ncé thefr need-is met by the service of live and sympathetic people. I can imagine that the same sort of people give nickels to these poor folks so they may attend “the movies,” for orely there is no_ place where they an get more for their money in that lie. I never shall begrudge the poor any temporary joys or diversions they may get, for they need them more than I do. Do you know good eredit is a mis- fortune to a weak butghonest man? It makes it too easy for him to get what he wants, and tends to keep him reliable debtor. The credit foundsd upon “he pays” is not quite as enjoy- able as the credit which is based upon assets or collateral of any sort; and I* is always too near the verge of pon: credit, as a little adversity is likely at y time to swamp such an honest, uovant chap. Good health, honestv nd industrious habits are assets trade willing to bank on, and the tempta- tion to be careless rather than care- ful buyers has been too great for ¢h men. Do not prize credit. { such a wondsrful thing to be go® and get everything you need on vour face. It is getting what one doesn't need that bankrupts most peopie. The cred:t bused upon a sub- stantial surplus is ‘the real thing. I often think the seeker after truth hasn't an easy stunt. It takes a man nearly half a centurv to get his eve- teeth cut, and so many dle before they are 40 that a large part of the peopls do not get a_good conception of life There is no finality to the averment: “Know the truth and the truth will make you free!” Truth as a whole 13 incomprehensible. Every truth con tributes to our freedom because it re- leases from error and increases lght who cannot secure wages at $9 at This fs the whole servics of truih. least a week to keep away from the) Great gospel truths give the soul hope city. How about those who are there?| And an assurance which exalt it ahove The bill before the legislat re de- signed to stop the free lunches is in- | tended to cause a better method of living instead of increasing its costal President Svkes of the Connecticut Woman's college believes in votes for women but that ought not to inter- fere with the attendance at the col- Iege | e seems to be no rush of ap-| s to accept diplomatic posts un- | e new administration. They | are jobs which require wealth to start | The latest thing in batileship con- struction which Germany is consid- ering closely resembles the “Yankee | cheesebox” with much more speed and power. | With the prospect of ten million dol lars being spent in improvements there in the next few years it is not sur- prising that New London feels like taking a new lease on life. Overcoming the pollution of streams is a matter which the legislatire must | give more and more attention for each year the conditions are getting worse and fast become a menace to health. A joining of forces by the reput licans and progressives in Tilinois w be anvthing but pleasant news to Col. Roosevelt. Reason rather than dicta- tion s apparently going to prevail Attempts to iscredit the service of Ambassador Wilson in Mexico City are falling on barren ground. His| work is his best evidence of having| renresented his country with abiltty. | After 4 two monthe’ struggle New Hampshire legislatufe has elected a democratlc senator. The next senator from that stute will undoubtedly be chosen by the people and In one day. If Sir Thomas falls to make his the conditions chs challenge 1 look dublons for the big « yacht races Lave an interest, how r a cup which wiil give the footers a- chance, New York is getting & decidedly un- envizble repulation. Crime has long xeried its powerful influence throuzh graft but now it seems (o have g ten u grip upen these who are ai the | head of the system for the punish- { shocic us test, Big | | made, ure siperior to u craving for the and it ts et some sntbisiagt | ToE#Fd of our fellows. As Charles Lands 5| ment for crime. There is still plenty of work for investigations. fear and the menaces of life. Other truths give breadth and power and ility and confidence and success. The seeker after truth has no chancn to be idle, and he needs be wide awake sixteen hours a d. Truth like op- portunity does not knock at his door- truth siis visible in the mind only af- ter it has been recognized. All that glitters is not gold; and gold is not all that, glitters, bul most everything that glitters finds a wel- come somewhere bv somebodv. The sovereign creature God has made takes to-tinsel—never gets tired of show. The spirit_which warms us to enthusiasm in childhood over the Christmas tree with ita glitter and its gifts never wholly departs from us. We like to &hine figuratively and in every other sense. We feel we have just as much right to shine as the sun, and doubt- 8 we have: but there is the real the counterfei, and the counter- feit appears to be too abundant. Seem- ing and being are so different that the first hasn't a leg to stand on when it 18 challenged. This is why it {s well to be the real stuff. Then the aeld test will not hurt you. You have met the man who is go- ing to put vou up against something that will double vour plle in just six months: but if you have felt grateful that he took such a keen Interest in you and followed the way he pointed out. you know now that his nest has been feathered with your money. and you do not know of any feathers hav- 1| ing been added to yours. It beats all how slick a trained agent can lalk us out of our sufplus cash; but that is because he knows our weakness and we do not suspect his guile. Ignor- ance magnifies craftiness ‘in many ways and makes it appear like gdod fellowship and other good qualities. It is up to us to be live wires in this world and then we should be shocking the other fellow instead of letting him SUNDAY MORNING TALK I7ew of s, if honest confession were onee remarked, “How we all like fo liked!” Let him deny It as lusilly us he meay, the average man is sensitive to applausé or the lack of it In pro cleiming his Indifference (o i he may e LUt pdverising his real heart hun- As 4 muiter of fact o propordon of the peopie AboULus are coveling popu- larity aneui as‘eakerl. a: otbers covet houses or Jande or bank notes. Some desire it for purely selfish reasens. To be liked is a source of complacent sat- fe by the professedly respectable and | isfaction. Others desire it because only in its sunshine can they do their be work or indeed any work at all that is worth while, They are like fowers that | will thrive only in gardens with a | more children. southern exposure. as_the main prize sought. our fellow-men when he insist that | y i | the one’hand nor unduly depressed on, | the other. The calm strength of his | it had been since childhood. Her moth- any worse off there than I am here.” Consequently there appeared at Mrs. door not long after, a slender, er was as kind to the child as she could be under the circumstances, but | Brown what could a discouraged, over-worked | shy girl, who told her simple story and woman do to make a child happy? | begged 'to Worn out before middle life -by hard |look strong enough,” work, enduring the privation . and | Brown. cruelty coming from an intemperate | here in the husband, whom she clung to in spite of | “I would like to try it, I have never all ill-treatment, her only child, though | lived in the country.” The girl's gentle dear to her received but little atten- | manner and wistful 1ooks touched Mrs. tion, and was forced to work as soon | Brown's heart as Ner little fingers gould hold a needle, [ be clean and honest” she inquired. for the small pittance she could earn |do need help the worst own girl dislikes the country. At last the man in a drunken quar- | made you think of coming? rel was so badly injured that his death | worked in the same room with Neille, followed quickly in the hospital to|did vou? which he was taken. The poor wife | ILL, {nok ssonz 1 Phoebe was left to struggle on alone. | she wrote me Generally she dragged through the | work for my board and the chance of i was a help in the household. out-lived him only a short time, and monotony of the day without much thought of its repulsiveness , but to- girls emploved in the same rcom with the birds and the flowers, and the good | things mowher used to cook. “But give evening and 1 can find fun enough to pay me for all I have given up in|many ways, coming here.” 1 agree with responded her the reputation of being morese and will have {o step lively to suit my an overcoat every objected Mrs.|can a section man get grow stronger asked Phoebe. | come that “Can you promise to way, and my | March 13, Again the Problem. Mr. Editor: In regard to the prob- Then you must be the girl LI8IU 7 doU gonul 3¢ JoU M ‘omun ® 10y Keis a home, until you think I am able to pleaded Phoebe, and she day & chance word from the many |spent her first night in a hospitable | farmhouse with a happler heart then | her had set her thinking, and she re- | had been her's for months. alized more than usual how miserable was her lot in life. The girls were |on talking of their homes in the country, And the season being early spring, they recalled the many signs of approach- |long breaths of ing life to which they were accus- |Such as she had never before known. tomed. They were congratulating | Her evident themselves that they were where some- | sights and sounds was an amusement thing could be seen of life, as they |to all | termed it, for the country was ull, | bluebird was a wonder to her, and the nothing to be seen but green grass and | robins coming so fearlessly about the leafy woods. To be sure one missed |lawn were an amazement. they came about the houses,” | and every | me,” sald one, “ a chance to get out | other living thing on the farm were so on the brightly lighted streets in the | &reat a surprise and pleasure to her! And she soon made herself useful in even doing more than she | was desired to do. Mrs. Brown guickly found her help friend. " My folks think I am needed | ful enough to be paid for her service: at home, but no more country life for | and greatly pleased the girl by telling me, tell Mother she must get help some | her so. other way. I am not going to stay at| with the good food and her 'ife in the home and drudge, not if I know my- selt.” “Same here,” replied the first | plump, and her form reunded out, and speaker. Mother told me last time I|she proved the truth of the old adage was home, to send her some one, if 1| that happiness could not come, but who would want | beautifiers. Nellie on her first %o live in Fernside, when she canld live [ home exclaimed over the girl's altered in New York?’ looks. r Phoebe seldom spoke to her‘r;xsazes Why, you are posi in the sewing-room, and had ned | some!” 7 o “Well, why shouldn't but now she plucked up courage | looks? returned Phoebe. 1o ask, “Will you tell me where Fern- | tili now w side IS and your mother's address?’ | your mother is 80 good to me, and the A'look of surprise accompanied the re- | country X Dply. “De you want to try it? You |prefer the city I cannot understand. There we must leave her, happy in mother, I can tell you. She never |her country home. never regreiting for ants any slow pokes around, but she [ one mement her decision to leave the 0es need some one to-help her. Per-|city. haps you will do, if yeu try, and yeu |she never would have a good home, I can testi- | “though it was risky fy_that you are no flirt &t all events.” So Phoebe sat in her reom thinking | dare try if again. with a great longing for the weods and meadows, the birds and flowers, and the ot e end to solve the problem. percentage was always reckoned on the | €52 | D cEiafie 40 not the seling oce. 17 |Sovernment ldoks on. the fines as & | Sombly eoncerine the ack o an_article costs $1 and | $1.47, the seller gains 47 per cent., an: | this ‘statement proves, . horse for $147 and thereby gain 47 per | 203l terpltude-in this matter (mile very dollar invested, T re- |38€) that is astonishine We will bet |iic sentim consequently $147 gives $100, How delightful the awakening was following morning! risers though they were, the household out doors drawing in | life-giving freshness, for if 1 gell a found Phoebe Baldwin vetoes this bill. He o the cost of the . He ought to T claim that if an article cos-s | and it should be allowed to sink into |the season.—Waterbur ¥ $1 and is eold for $1.32 the seller re- cetves 32 per cent. more than the cost (e e z THOROUGH WORK who witnessed Norwich, March Mr. Editor: There is sometimes a cointidence were first introduced to Rough on Rats, put up In attractive boxes, but now we have as well what may be called rough on rats put strength came | ™% Keene fellow down in Jersey, who | applied, but there are such persons | although almost penniless at the time, | accurately described by died this week | Only a reactionary could Introducs | Doan's Kidnes Pills "We will not call this | Sch a bill as that now pending in the | rat money filthy Jucre, for it cleaned up | lezislature, which, if it becomes a law, | ¢d b | a s00d many P The second rough on rats was ol ally for tuition in a high school, inated recently by Senator Ratts, who | Institution supported by the who'e| Can yo introduced into the Indiana legislature | body of taxpayers. a bill providing for an annual rat kill- The bill was signed by the governor. Pretty good for New Jersey and In- | only of the main arieries of travel, but the homes of our new presi- |also of the side streets, the problem is months I Don't you | erising as to whether or not in every | across the small of May we not confidently look | street that is opened permanent pave 3 created by the |ment, preferably of wood, should not |ot legislature of Connecticut, betore some | be installed. At all events, the city . democrats_discover too many |should do its utmost to increase per- flies on Governor Baldwin? Progressive ideas are now as plenty | as mosquitoes soon will be in New Jer- pure air. Her cheeks began to srow | originated | leaving $100,000. is the greatest of all have known ely growing hand- “I'd_never SR passed and| With the increase “T never knew hat a good home meant, and A i vice president. for a fly killing day, As for Mrs. Brown, she declare: must confess, she added, “and I don’t know that I' Phoebe is one of a| It 18 to be hoped that Ratts did not|afrald of criticism. Both branches to provide for the extermination | passed a bill compeliing the railroads two-legged rats that hang | to carry the statesmen free of chargs. | health improved. I around the lobby of the legislature, as | This was tried in Rhode Island, but well as the quadruped rats. hundred AN IDLER. It is probable that those who think too much. As a direct object of quest | it is apt to be an elusive and disap- | pointing quantity. Like so many of | the best gifts of life we gain it as a Rat-a-tat-tat! fu] work be done | Those who do well may get credit for | The Connecticut legislature, after this | Ser The others ought to get rats at the | shameless exhibition. is hardly in po- | New York, sole agents next election. engineer and I think he gets about $70.00 a month. derstood) has only a wife, of the section foreman have one or with expenses of: Tuel, $2.00; total $34.50, e 12 a week for doc- about popularity at all think about | {ors huls, moving pictures and clothes for_four people. Now again, no section foreman, no matter how good a railroad man he children, | bill, ance $2.50; | $35.50, or '38.87 production tates reached an aggregate valye of | that an attempt had been made to against $1,000,- | bribe him, has been called up for rep- | ness bsfore the public. tne 1,918,326,253 060,000 112 years ago and $300,000,000 | rimand and apology, and was suspend- | dium better vears ago. one suit a year and o = - « - - June 24 comiortams || CINCINNATI - - - - - working clothes on his part of the in: || CL EVELAND - A is set apart - B = The fireman’s wife had “only two new ! 7o How often can a HAMBURG-AMERICAN LINE section man’s wife with two or more NTS . e T i 607 BOYLSTON STREET, BOSTON, MASS. OR LOCAL AGEN RUTH BARBER DEVOLVE. Plainficld, Conn. 1913 | charge was not true. 1 con | we do things easier than OTHER VIEW POINTS lem, If an article cost $1, what must it | bunishing the briber or rep: be sold for to gain a profit of 10 per | the accuser.—Waterbury Amer allowing 22 per cent. for doing - = | ¢ 2 akainis 1o e thae noons | Ty 'and work out the stock Market | il {of the solutions I have seen are cor- |Problem in your own mind. For in-| Spring will soon bring Both parties start at the wrong | StANCe, tax excessively legitimate co - | number of automobiliats ¢ In my day |C6TDs and let bucketshop swindlers | W circulation has beer ¢scape with a fine. But possibly ths | remarks of members o Middletown Press 1% iaia for | SyStem of taxation. on the part of the police of to their duty regarding The general assembly displays a|laws. The police cannot o n lack of knowle nt and their woi rly_and decis will spare them much tro count cla dividea | @ollars to doughnuts that Governor | for them, that obseurity from which it never should have been lifted.—New Hav:1 It was hardly necessary for Mr. Taft to deny the rumor connecting him with the presidency of Johns Hopkine He would not despise such an honor How a Norwich Citizen dlssimilar | PUL even if it were offercd to him. his| Freedom from Kidney Trou ne PUnlC ROfl ToMe | Welln it i'He has dontracted 1o bome to New Haven, and he keeps his con- | It you suffer from tracts.—New Haven Register bae legislative enact- — rom urinar s The term reactionary s usually mis- | Any curable diseas that worl will compél parents to pay $10 annu Norwich people testif —Bristol Press. o | fn number of mo. | Mrs. Jare tor vehicles and the use by them not | Norw mpioms. 1 manent pavements as rapidly as Dos- | ago I obtained a ible.—Bridgeport Standard. {Pis at N. D. se The .Connecticut legislature isn’t | Store and soon pain in my back dis public sentiment was so strongly |"°C7mmend this exce Let nothing but use- | against the petty graft that It was| For sale by all deale in the leglslatures. | not included in the public utilities bi'l | sonte Foster-Milburn ¢ sition to criticize the railroads for sins | States. C. H TALCOTT. |cf omission.—Providence Bulletin. Remember the name — D Norwich, March 14, take no other. A member of the Massachusetts sen- United | ate, McDevitt by name, who charged WHEN you want 5 led for a time, on the ground that the | tng columns of T by-product of right living rather than | We make unreasonable demands on they hail us with acclaim. A well- known critic has reminded us that the most anyone has & right to ask in this world is that he be tolerated. It would save many a heartache if so modest an expectation were generally cherished. 3 i Strong souls learn to hold their cours through life whichever way the wind is blowing. They travel toward the goal whether men give praise or withhold it. When it became known a few years ago that two brothers out in D: O., were trying to learn to fly the world scoffed and tapped lts forehead significantly. Later the brothers won and the world applauded. One of them went abroad to Aemonstrate the machine to the French government. The papers lauded him; high offcials hobnobbed with him! enthusiastic women tried to ki him: he was the hero of the hour. | But fWilbur Wright was as indifferent | to the plaudits of the world as he had been earlier to its scofing. Bouguets moved him no more than brickbats had done. The poise of his mind was as | perfect as that of his flying machines. Palm Sunday commemorates a day of triumph in the earthly life of our Lord. . On that day he rode into Jerusalem in demblance of a king, while jubllant at- tendants cried, “Hosanna to the Son of | David.” It was the climax of Jesus' ! popularity. 1 But only a few davs later the crowd _perhaps including) some of the very | enthusiasts of Palm Sunday—was cry- | ing,” “Crucify him, crucify him.” So vering and fickle are the winds of pop- ular favor. In the hours of praising and of re ing alike the Saviou ruffied. He was not undul exalted on urpose carried him to the goal as the | Snine drives the. ship through fair Weather and through foul. He was lift- ed above dependence on human praise or blame. After all it is more important to be popular with one's self than with the | World. He who is true to the highest | instincts of his own soul may safely dispense with much of what the world calls approval, finding life fed the While from hidden sources of joy and power that will carry him undaunted to his journey's end. g THE PARSON. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. The Fireman and the Section Man. Mr. Editor: T was very much inter- ested in the article Wages High but Always in Debt, in the Bulletin of March 12. Fireman James A. Bell says he receives $100 per month. His expenses: Grocery -bill, $25; fuel bill, $2.00; rent, $15; insurance, $7.00: moving pictures, 20c: total $49.20. Where does the other $50 go? It takes sixicen years for a fireman at $100 | per motth fto become an engineer. Now no matter how expert the en- glneer and fireman are they must have « falr track to run on and a section foreman must be responsible. 1f he cun get good men it is his good luck ang if he hes to take men who can't tell a pick from a shovel the company expects him to keep his track in good order just the same. He has to learn hix business just the same as the Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S i CASTORIA Remarkable Showing — O COATS and SUITS We are at present showing the most complete line of Coats and Suits in the history of this store. From the severely tailored models to the highly trimmed and draped effects in Suits, and from our selection of Coats we can sati fy mostly any desire. A few of the suit materials are such as Eponges, Bedford Cords, Poplins, Serges, Worsteds, SUITS $12.50, $16.50, $18.50, $22.50 and U The leading Coat materials are Eponges, Ratine, Angora Cloth, Covets, Serges, Etc. COATS $9.95, $12.50, $14.50, $16.50 and Up ALTERATIONS FREE 194 Main Street, Wauregan llouse Block LONDON, PARIS sx0 HAMBURG leaves $8.40 for clothes, sickness, in- (PLYMOUTH) (BOLOGNE) A family of ON 17,000 TON STEAMSHIPS July July |leave the matter in suspense