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Glorwich Bulletin and Goufied 118 YEARS OLD Subscription price 120 a wesk; 60c & month; $6.00 a year. Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Tonn. as second-class matter. Telephone Calls: Bulletin Business Office 480 Bulletin Editorial Rooms 35-3 Bulletin Job Office 35-2 Willimantio Office, Room 2 Murray Bnilding. Telephone 7. Norwich, Saturday. Jan. 3, 1914, The Circulation of The Bulletin The Bulletin has the largest circulation of any paper in East- ern Comnecticut and from three to four times larger than that of any in Norwich. It is delivered to over 3,000 of the 4,053 houses in Norwich, ar | read by ninety- three per cent. of the people. In Windham it 18 delivered to over 900 houses, in Putnam and Danielson to over 1,100 and in all of these places it is consid- ered the local daily. Eastern Connecticut has forty- ne towns, one hundred and sixty-five postoffice districts, and sixty rural fres delivery routes. The Builetin is sold every town and on all of the R. F. D. routes in Eas . Connecticut. CIRCULATION 1901 average......eeseees 4,412 <= 5,820 o = 8,134 AUTO SIGNS NEAR SCHOOL- HOUSES. The action which is being taken by the members of the school committee in behalf of proper signs in the street as 2 warning to autoists of the loca- tion of a school is none too early. It is a matter in which full precaution ! needs to be taken for the protection of the lives of the children. There is al- ways danger from the fast operation of automobiles and this is greatly in- creased when passing a schoolhouse when the children are gathering or leaving. There is no uncertain amount of responsibility which is placed upon the ‘driver of such vehicles but there is also a responsibility which every town not only must but can afford to assume in not only enforcing the law concerning speed, but in - maintain- ing proper signs of warning which will overcome any excuse for fast driving when passing schools, The matter of expense shotild be constdered only as to a reasonable and | proper use of the money. It is a re- quirement imposed by the state and it s a duty in behalf of accident and death prevention which should receive requisite attention. Great and com- mendable efforts are being made in be- half of education but it should not be allowed to overshadow the necessity . of safety. TUnsafe buildings and un- healthful conditions where the children must go would not be tolerated and there is no more reason for the fail- ure to exercise the same concern in behalf of the highways. If in all the time the signs are up only one life is saved or one accident averted, it will pay. Just so long as there are no signs the autolst is possessed of an excuse for not knowing of the loca- tion of the school. 1905, average.... NEW PHILIPPINES POLICY. A new light is shed upon the de- mand for the independence of the Philippines by the new position which has been taken by Delegate Quezon from the Philippines to this country. As the result of a conference with a number of prominent men of the is- lands he has become convinced that it is not independence which is want- ed but the establishment of a protect- orate over the islands the same as Eng- land holds over Canada. This is not only what he thinks would be best for the islands, but what he is planning to urge upon congress. By his state- ment he has become convinced that Philippine independence would cause friction and complications which might result in the division of the islands| among several nations. This is of course a decided change from what has been urged upon con- gress by Delegate Quezon and it is a sudden one. It even disregards the attitude which has been taken by the administration upon this very subject and virtually declares it undesirabl It gives evidence of having taken into consideration the many solid facts | which have been stated about the is- | lands by thoss who are in a position to know and a realization of the exact | conditions. The action which is now favored indicates that all that has been said about the unpreparedness of the islands for independency has not been | exaggerated and presents with new | force the dangers which are to be en- countered by rushing into it. EUGENIC LEGISLATION, The state of Wisconsin is a leader in much modern legislation. If new and advanced ideas are sought they can generally be found in that north- ern commonwealth. The desire seems to exist there for the trying out of whatever seems to offer a chance for betterment in government or other conditions . and as a testing ground it has done a great service to the rest of the country. It has discovered the good as well as the evil of much new legisiation and it i3 today wrestling with the law which has been enacted and put into effect tn behalf of eu- genics, Much Is to be sald and mueh has been said in behaif of this meovement to help mankind better itself through the enforcement “"df the prificiples which aresback ef the eugenic move- ment. There i3, however, always an opposition to compulsion and what might ba.considered good for the other fellow i too often balied at when it comes to general praciice, What the outcome will be of this effori in Wis- consin’for the érestion of a piire race 18 of much interest theaughout the wther states. Washingion preceded | aimed in the right direction. | Nordica has the faculty of getting over | the new year holds out promise for and repealed it at the next session of legislature. When it is considered that the latter state has passed & wauch more drastic law it remains to be seen how the verdict of this state will com- pare with the feeling on the Pacific comst. Wisconsin from all indications is going to furnish many other states some advice confeerning the move- ment for eugenics as applied to legis- lation, Sl S A PROPER ACTION. The action of the postoffice depart- ment is passing an order preventl the acceptance of game for shi by parcel post when It violates the state laws is only what could reasonably be expected under the circumstances. The injustice of the order admitti game to the parcel post when it le null and vold the state efforts in behalf of game conservation was perfectly ap- parent. It was unreasonable to be- lieve that one method of transportation, even though operated by the govern- ment, should be allowed to carry on a business which is denied to others and which is a direct violation of exist- ing law. The express companies in living up to the regulations concerning the shipment of game were unjustly diseriminated against and the interests of the state were given no considera- tion, until the order modifying the parcel post rule was issued. Where no state laws exist concern- ing game shipment out of the state it is of course the legitimate business of parcel post and will continue to be, but recognition of the states rights to protect isegame and to guard its laws against violjtion has been taken. It; was a sltuation which needed to be cleared up and it has been done in a manner which must meet with general approval. Those who were willing to violate -the law found a handy con- federate in the government service. Having its attention called to the sit- uation it was the duty of the govern- ment to take just such action as has been announced. CONSERVING RADIUM. It is a well established fact that there is no great supply of that pro- duct known as radium. It is aiready of much value but just how important it} may yet become because of its cura- tive properties is not known. ®xper- iments made with it offer much encour- agement, so much so that they are bound to be continued with great hopes particularly in the great endeavor of finding a remedy for cancer. Its scar- city and its importance so far as es- tablished warrant, however, the taking of such steps as will conserve this natural resource, In urging such action by congre&s! Secretary Lane takes his position from the fact, as he states, that} “It appears to have been established that radium when applied in time is a| cure for superficial cancer and some of the highest authorities advise that there is no reason to doubt the effec- tiveness of radium as a cure for in- ternal cancer, but that go far we have not been able to secure a sufficient | amount of ihe mineral to determine how far in the body its rays will be effective.” The need of larger quantites of the mineral is realized for the determina- tion of its full value. Much of the radium producing property is already in the control of the government and | the wisdom of the effort to conserve that for the benefit which can be gain- ed therefrom by keeping it away from private ownership can be readily rec- ognized. It is a strange fact that while this country has much property yielding radium ore, that practically ail the radium comes from European coun- tries. This effort for conservation is Being the people’s property its treasure| ghould be reserved for the people’s beneflt, EDITORIAL NOTES. The Christmas toys and the new res- olutions are receiving much the same inconsiderate treatment, While Huerta goes to Europe for his financial assistance Villa is con- tent to raise his money in Mexico. According to past experiences good resolutionis can be figured this early as having shrunk on the average about ten per cent. Dr. Cook seeks to get | From the wa; his north pole tale before the public it must be that he is preserving it in | cold storage. In the matter of murder trials New York seems to be falling back into the ways which preceded the trial of the gunmen. Mental cruelty as a ground for di- vorce in Colorado is open to the in- terpretation of a harsh and violent tongue lashing. In shipwreck or in practice Mme. the high c's somehow, and without trouble, The St. Louls checker player who plaved fifty games simultaneously set himself a task well calculated to keep him on the jump. usually From the way in which it is opening the continuation at least of plenty trouble in Mexico. of The man on the corner says: Tt be- gins to be noticeable that not a few failed to inseribe their resolutions upon | the asbestos curtain of definite pur- pose, Much ig being said about the trip of | Envoy Lind to see the president, but it s a noticeable silence which prevafls | concerning the secretary of state's part therein, Mexico and the Balkans are seek- ing the services of the Red Cross. These are continental patients which need nursing most of the time and they know where to find the good nurses, FEven the ball players, church choirs and clergvmen are being included un- der the workmen's compensation act. There will be few in fact whe are not included thereunder. The persen who yells “Fire!” when there is none is in the class with the chap whe rocks the beat and handles | the “didn’t know it was loaded” gun. Heg is & close student of the sehool of personal experience. Nerwich Lkunews hew te sympathize with the city of Monmtreal during its water famiine. Little serious theught is given to such a necessity until it is suddenly cut Off and then {mme- diately it is found impessible to gel aleng without it, Maine put its “blue sk law inte effect this vear. Buy why should this endeavor te cheek fraud in investments be enjeved by only one New England states. The halt, the lame and the hlind need assistance and extra atteation and se do the guliible. | indulgea { to abide with me. | that the book is a disappointment. are golng the story he is t true he would be b money to invest instead of telling you how to double your wealth in & quarter the time it wilil be doubled at compound interest. not ignorant of & situation which is so absurd. noticed the persons in this world who most need friends do not have ; and those who are abundantly able to do without them | usuelly have more friends than (hey| know what to do with. In fact, some folks claim to be their friends whom they do not even know just for the fancied honor of the pretended rela- tion. Perhaps it was this human manifestation of weakness which gave rise to the maxim “Nothing succeeds Itke success.” It ls of more credit to a person to be a friend to somebody who needs a friend, but it requires more love and more sacrifice, and most folks have neither to spare. It has been sald for a truth no one can blame & hog for being a hog, but| every one should blame a man for being one. There is no place where we feel so lonely as in our bereavements, Kind words do not seem to check the pangs of grief. It is only when the density of sorrow is so intense that all the world seems shut out that the soul awakens to the presence and power of God, and the star of hobe bid's the heart bowed down to arise. —to return to the fulness of life from the valley of the shadow of death. it | is only then the words or hand of | sympathy seem soothing or inspiring | —only then that we realize the de- parted one has gone to a better world, and we frankly ask ourselves, as Ruskin did h\muelf “Why should we mourn for those who are the guests of God?” It has been said can master a sorrow but he who hath | it and he is dull who does not sense the truth of this. Those who feel the weight of sorrow should not be chided—the burdened heart knows when to look up with a new hope. Have i “every one | Only those who have been wounded by them know that there are words which cut like a knife, as well as picture thought. It is singular, but the sharp words of an enemy never cut and_tear like the sharp words of a friend. A friend can say things| which leave a wound for life although | they were immediately forgiven. Ini' moments of petulance or anger the| mcuth should be kept :uardedfthel tongue silent. It is an awful fault to | be careless of speech. Some people think it is cunning to let loose a net- tling tongue, unmindful that Solomon said: “Seest thou a man that is hasty in his words? There is more hope for a fool than for him!” Words may be used for pleasure or for poison, but a person of sense keeps the venom that is in him to himself. It! is possible to portray in words a more beautiful picture then the greatest artist can paint, or to ruin a life which better words would have in- spired to pure and supreme effort. i Politics always present & queer: front. You may have lived long | enough to know the defeated candi- dates are generally honest men who were zealously striving to get the rascals out of office; hence, it is plain enough that our public servants are | all unworthies who are keeping out of | salaries the men who most deserve | them; and the true inference is that the voters do not know enough to guard their own interests. II any other inference can be got out of two sides of a political campaign I have been unable to discover it. There | is nothing stable in politics but the | horse, and now he is being put out and the automobile put in. The horse | has become too slow for the aspiring | politician. The reason political lies | are so popular is because a lle can| travel five times as fast as the truth. | have often wondered in the lttle vices men dD‘ Lkow men would like it. Little vices | are no help life on either side of | the house. They are no worse prac- | ticed by women than by men, m-‘ if’ women though the idealization of woman by man mekes them appear so. There | would be no homes if the women | sought the occasional glass and com- panionships in saloons; and what would heppen should they combine and strike for a nine-hour day? The | habits of the average man transferred | to- his partner would make home- making _impossible. The sweetest type of Heaven, we are told, is the home, and how little man has to do with its best deflnition. A Chinese proverb say hundred men may make an encampment, but it takes a woman to make a home The hom makers are worthy of more respect and consideration. Frank, my method of reading is to read books which please me, not those recommended by some one else. 1 have read recommended good books that were like bad medicine: and when T complained the lender replied “Well, the discipline is good for the mind.” I concluded that meant for his mind, not mine. Friends who have similar tastes usually recom- mend most acceptible books. It makes a difference whether you run through 4 book, or the book runs through yvou. Those who Jjust run through books skip more than they read; urd do mot get a grip on the writer's purpose if he had one. I have read popular books which to me had no excuse for existence. In reading a book 1 like ! to find something in It that is going If 1 do not find 1} am not a book-worm--they are too | abundant. It is not likely 1914 will be a bllnk! year for any of us. Every year has | plenty of disappointments for us if it does not hold sickness or sorrow. One way to check disappointments is not to cultivate anticipations; and one| way to keep well is to indulge in nnl excesses. If we could eliminate the | pain and sorrows which come to all | of us through heedlessness and igner- | ance two-thirds of our troubles would be wiped out. How many inciude emong the responsibilities of life keeping well and keeping happy, Do not think the A]mlfh(y is afflicting you, for we are self-affiicting crea- tures just as sure as you live. Mest of us reedily become slaves of appetite or habit; and we chide others for their excesses when we have plenty of our ewn to correct. Be obedient to sincere eonviction and the way of life will be smoether, Shouid Combine, The Kansas democrais are to | their “blow-out” in January and the Kansas Bull Mensers are to have theirs in February. Why net cemplete the | two and save expenmse, both parties being enlisted in the same cause— democratic victory? — Kansas City Journai, “Pa had the last word ment with ma as usual last night” | ‘The last word, as usual?” “Yes, He | apelogized again.'—=Detroit Free Puu. in an argu- | ing through the street, accompanied by | pose and vigor. ! we are going to try | shaped unalterably New warm, and sat down gentleman’s arrival. It was a cold night, and she felt that a warm welcome should greet him for both body and mind. Meantime she would use her new diary, As she randl:lnt she yl.:d w.ndtm‘ "rhe{emh. an old saying,” lnughed she, “that the last shall be the first, and I think It should have been so in this*case. Re- solved; To keep my is_where I shall fail, 5 Very much like other people if she did, ho doubt you think. Few of us find our attempts at reform are lasting and still it is better to try and fall than never try at all. Sometimes, too, what we call fallure may prove to be & suc- cess after all. A chance word or deed of kindness often returns to us in lat- er years bringing knowledge of re- sults far beyond our expectation. Under each resolution Kitty determ- ined to write a motto to correspond. “Economy 18 Wealth” was the first | “We have every comfort we need, but we certainly have not wealth” she pondered. “Economy is needed, and I read a little while ago that economy is a great revenue. Yes, I'll certainly try to be economical. Then she turned to the next resolu- tion. “Resolved; To be courteous. Her remembrance of Emerson served { to recall a motto for that, “Life is not 80 short, but there is always room for courtesy. “After all what is courtesy? Something more than good manners, a litt of the hat, a ready word of thanks for favor received. The genuine feel- ing of the Golden Rule is genuine courtesy. An instance comes into my mind as I write. I was once walk- to wait a little colored girl. A lady passed us, and we noticed something out of order, about her dress Quick as thought, the child darted ‘forward, and told the lady, at the same time rectifying the trouble Returning to me she said: “I knew she would be glad to be told, I should if I were in her place. “What fine lady in the land could have done a more courteous action? Kitty felt sure it would be easy for her to keep that resolution. Now for the third, Resolved; To be charitable. I am sure that does not mean benevolence alone, though I hope to respond to such demands, whenever they come to my notice, and I mean to train the children to be generous to their mates and to each other. Dear little Teddy came to me after their Christmas tree for permission to give some of his presents to the little Itallan children whose father keeps the fruitstand at the cormer. “I had so many toys,” pleaded he, “and they had so few. I think no better motto can be given to that resolution than the Bi- l | the New Year in. blo gives us. “Charity never failsth” Under all circumstances in word or deed, I mean to be charitable. m:&n to watch my tongue, in order to keep that resolution, for I am too mm- clined to criticize others. We apt to think our way is the only :i:llt ons: y one more resolution to be stud- 1ed, “Resolved; To be hopeful” At flfll Kitty looked pemlexod for a time. could think of no motto mmmuwr it. To be hopeful, one must ! success in what one undertakes. It plies all that goes toward success. Tc be hopeful one must be patient, and cheerful and trustful. That last word called to mind a saying of Lincoln's, which she seized upon for a motto. “If we do_right, God is with us,sand If He is with us, we cannot fail” Then she found one of David Livingstone's. Tl go anywhere, provided it be forward. Surely he must have been hopeful un- der difficulties and privations. What but hope has sustained so many of our great men and women pioneers in sci- ence, invention or art? One after another they trooped through her mind. ‘What other hope gave those famous ones patience to endure and cheerful- ness in ‘spite of apparent fallure? ‘What but hope enables the mother to keep faith in the wayward child, when | all others have ceased to expect re- formation? What aside from hope in- cites the hard-working student to cling | to his task when weariness overtakes | him? “Yes, I'll keep that resolution,” thought Kllt\ and add another mot- to for it. “One with God is a majority I am sure with that thought to help me, it will be easy to be hopeful. That is all I mean to write to-night. Tom will_soon be here, and we will watch I'm so glad gy hus- band is not a_club-man. There he is now in the hall,” and she flew to meet him as he entered the house. Once more seated by the fire, Kitty told of her evening's employment.. May 1 look at your book?” asked Tom. “Of course you may. there are to be no se- crets between you and me. Nothing will ever be written in_that book, which you may not read, for I shall have no sorrows to record. Glancing over the book, Tom's face was @ study. He began, thinking it all a joke, but became Serious as he went on. He seemed to be learning more of Kitty at the turn of every leaf, and his eyes filled with moisture, as he read her thoughts so plainly expressed. Drawing her closely to his side he finally said “You put me to shame, lit- tle wife. I've no fear that you will fail to keep your resolutions. May /I add one to t he number I shall select one very easy for me to keep, so I shall fear no failure in being hopeful, cour teous and charitable. Economy Tl l Resolved; To show my love more plainly for wife and home. Ma ways prove myself worthy of her love |leave out for there you surpass me. | Ial-! | oafiords unusual Wfinh”&em liable merchandise at exceptionally low prices. FOR EXAIPI.E '$ 7.50 °$16m COATS -____________Now $25.00 COATS $15.00 0320.00 SUITS $10.005 $30.00 SUNTS _ $15_m $20.00 ———__Now LS e, $40.00 SUITS ______________Now $15.00 DRESSES $22.00 DRESSES $30.00 DRESSES ___________Now $ 5.50 SKIRTS _______ $ 3.50 SHIRT WAISTS ______-Now $ 5.00 UNDERSKIRTS _ 8 8 $18.758 $ 175 fl and trust. Let my motto be., Her price s above rubies” and How mu(‘h the | wite is dearer than the bride.” They sealed the New Year's resolu- tions with a kiss, then closed the book, and laid it agide. Hand in hand they watched the Old Year out and the New Year in, and when the midnight chimes broke upon their ears, wished each other a Happy New Year. Woman's-ltke Kitty had the last word, “Mine is sure to be happy, and T'll try to make it so for you and the children. AN IDLER. SUNDAY MORNING TALK WESTWARD HO. There in the logbook of Columbus that can hardly fall to thrill us even after | the lapse of centuries. No matter how | his hope deferred may have made heart sick, no matter how terror and the spirit of mutiny may have selzed on the crew 2s wind and wave tossed the little ships, or the weeds Sargaseo sea enmeshed them, always at night when the commander entered his journel the phrase, sailed westward course. Then, pale and worn, he kept his dec which was And peered through darkne: Ah that night Of all dark nights! And then a speck— A light! a light! a light! a light! It grew, a starlight flag unfurled! It grew to be Time's burst of dawn. He gained, a world; he gave world Its grandest lesson: “On, sail on.” is an oft recurring sentenco | of the ! “This day we | our that | LETTERS TO THE EDITORI The Standard Weight of a Sovereign.| Mr. Editor: That problem proposed by Mr. Talcott, and of which he gives two very Intricate solutions, is even very much simpler than he asserts it to be, being only an exercise in “simple | proportion.” The English soverelgn is equal to 20 | shillings; hence if the ounce (480 | grains) of gold be colned into 77 { shillings 10 1-2 pence, then the ratio of 77 shilling: 1-2 pence to 20 shill- ings is the same as the ratio of the ounce of gold is to the weight of the soverei The is this, there- | e: 10 1 480 grains: 27447, { " This eliminates that speculation about the “composition” of the sove- reign as its weight and not its fineness is the question of the problem | X-RAY. Norwich, Conn., Jan. 2, 1914 Thoughts ‘for the New Year. Mr. Editor: An old shoe always| 100 its best when it is polished. But the merchant that starts in for a suc Few of us enter the New Year with- | out at least some small access of pur- There are some things | than | we pian to do better this year last. Certain things, on the contrary, to do as little as vossible or not at all. The loose ends ! of work are to be gathered up waste is to be stopped and life made more efficient. Such purposes as ones and we do well Resolutions, these are good to form them. however much they may be derided by the funny paragraphers, | are really of untold worth. They re- flect infinite credit on those who make them with honest purpose. A kind o nobility attaches to even a common place life that has set a great goal before it. As Lowell says: The thing we long for that we are For one transcendent mement. Before the present poor and bare Can makes its sneering comment. Moreover, with most of us, plan is necessary to performance. The gun- ner who aims at a mark is at least a hundred times more likely to hit than one who fires into tha air. The quest for the kingdom of char- acter is likely to be for most of us, & very arduous one. We must “sall on and on” into the West with fixed pur- pose whatever the discouragements of the voyage. filedged into character as inerva in the old legend_sprang from the fore- head of Jove. No celestial ledgerdemain can ever transform one who hates righteousness into one who loves it. Character is the product of a long continued and patlent succession of right choices day after day, choice reinforced by its predecessor till the course of life has become tion. He is_a properous voyager who can write with reasonable froquency in the logbook. “This day we sailed on- ward”, That is the sort of ‘“patient continuance in well doing” of which the apestle speaks that wins at last. It is Detter resolutely to sail across the sea of life than te submit to be blown hither and yon upon its waters. Few ships drift into pert. man who has held his tiller true is the one qualified to make a safe har- ber when ut last appear the lights of the new and undiscovered country, And his also is the pewer Lo enter in and tauke possessien, THE PARSON, All Greek te Him, Phen, too, it may be that Huerta is not enough pf an Engilsh schelar to understand Wilson's polysyliable ap- peals.—Philadelphia Inguirer. The principal seurce of inceme for | the greater part of Hungary's popula- tion has always been agriculiutal. The estimaied value of the agrieuitural produeis harvesied during the past ¥ear in $1,140,00,000, it | People do not spring full- | in a right direc- ! The steers- ' cesstul career at the commencement of | | the new year should not depend en- tirely on nlish for succet for beau- ty of character with it counts better. | Fair dealing is a cosmetic that me | the merchant look fair and it won't rul off like shoe polish or the cosmetic that the merchant me sell to some | ladies, which, good judges say, is beau- | | ty only skin' deep.” Yet of the latter {article there is one falr thing about iit; it never deceives anyone that has | beauty of her own. c Jan H. TALCOT 1 Norwich, Conn. 14. EDUCATIONAL NOTES | Vocational | troduced into “onnecticut by in- of zu)dam‘o has been the school system a recent law. Credit for_ Bible study is given in | | the North Dakota high schools. A hundred students passed the State examination last year. Sons of farmers in Down and An- trim_counties, Ireland, are named ¢ the beneficiaries of a recent educa- tional bequest of a million doliars. England have recently been travel- ing in Belglum. They were awarded | vocational scholarships by means of which they are investigating old and new methods of hot Many cities @ construction, hesitate to start open- air schools because of the supposed expense, particularly of feeding. In Green Bay, Wis., the cost of feeding in the open-air school has been found | | to be only 51-3 cents per day, or $8| a year, for each child, each | A one-year course in tanning has Brooklyn, N, Y., the National Association { The course is for men already em- ployed in the tanning industries or { high-sehool students without practi- |oal experience who wish to take up | tanning, of Tanners. in New Zealand obliged to do military to 21 years of age, and schools, are required to with-hold grants from any student who can not prove that he has compiled with the previsien of drill. Muech oppesi- tiun has developed, especially among all maies in evening classes. students in household arts. Newly naturalized immigrants In Les Angeles, Cal, are .instructed in § | Two carpenters and a plumber from | been established by Pratt Institute, | in cooperation with | are | arill from 14| holarship | school men, aceording to the American Hotel Peaco Society, g 2:.::1 s Carron Bros. Lariviere Bres. X - | Br i As ingicating the educational work |f Uncas Hotel Frini s Goss Defmon & Wigman of the Y. W, C. A, there are 42,000 || T. F. Moriarty irls und womien entolled in 171 cities |§ P. Mahoney sn day or evening classes. Wach of | Levine Bros. 5 amsseclation has an enrollment of , Bedard more than 100 students, neveral of || M. Geldetefn ORDER FROM them registering from 1500 to 2.000. |} " reakie In each of 14 cities over 500 students| N Fheatre Cafe are registered. Two-fftlis of the 3 i girls are in day classes, and the rest i g There are 26,400 | | | 1 | !l = Mavhaltan $ 19802 121-125 MAIN ST. ssWhere Shopping is a Pleasure” Furs and Fur Coats 15 OFF FORMER PRICES d []: O O el ) Rl O zensh!p Ihruuhh xhe uu(ldl u'nlex‘ construction work. “Recognition day” services are held at The township trustees formerly the close of each term of school. Says | made no attempt to keep cost data. e social center report: “All the new Now they are more capable of esti- citizens who have received their { mating the value of different classes ond papers within the six months of wark since they are required to specially invited to a banquet given | give annual reports to the county en- by prominent citizens as hosts. Later | gineer, showing the expenditure of all there is a public meeting in the | moneys for road and bridge work, Auditorium. The program consists | giving the per cent used in dragging, of addresses by leading citizens, cit; xmd!ng concrete, stone work and county and state officials patriotic ['wooden bridges. mu motion pictures; and the cer mony of extending the right-hand of < 3 : s o & & | Violation of Copyright. Mr. Taft's eulogy of Senator Root looks very much like a violation of the Twenty Years to Fill a Mud Hole. |¢opyright held by Mr. T. Roosevelt— | New York Evening Post. A mud hole on one of our publicy roads had been filled and refilled for ! more than twenty years, writes Kansas County engineers. One hou work setting level and grade stakes and less than one day's work with a ( team and scraper opening an « ditch, has eliminated the trouble Chil dren Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA after year they have tempol mended the same fauits in the rnm s @0 agvertising mean P | and have failed to see that the ulti- = i Eastern Connecticut equal to The Bul: let'n fur Lusiness results. Where You Can Find The l'_amous mate expenditure would have more “BEST BY FAR” LAGER " ALE POI NTTOT LCAP POINTzTE TAP BREWERY BOTTLING /orDRAUGHT Po%c BREWERY EOTTLING ALE LAGER J. Quinn & Co. J. Quinn & Co. George Greenberger N. J. Fournier & Co. A J. Tetlow J. Quinn & Co. A. Glendennin W. E. & J. H. Wilson | P. Shea ‘ prrdrasise kg Goorge Greenterger > 0% P. Shea e 1} 3. Zabrowski T §. Tkaczak & Co. H. Allard H. J. Kilroy C. E. Wright J. Slosberg G. Gmenberger { Careoll & Shea A. Ciendennin The Palace N. J. Fourfiier & Co. N. J. Fournier & Co. W, E. & J H, Wilsen o At M. F. Shea & Co. J. Slesberg W. E. & J. H. Wilsen H. J. Kilroy M. Goldstein | George S. Draper D. J. Murphy & Co. Wauregan House Carrell & Shea C. E. Wright YOUR DEALER Lemith & Johnson 8. Tkaczak & Co. Lariviere Bros, Zook & Puskep |