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Qorwich Bulletin apd Goufier 118 YEARS OLD Subscription price 12 a week; 60c a montn; $8.00 a year. Esitered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Conn. as second-class matter. Telephone Calls: Builetin Business Office 480 PBuiletin Editerial Rooms 35-8 Builetln Job Office 35-2 Willimantic Office, Room 2 Murray amm-»g. Telephone =~ | | ; " Norwioh, Saturday, March 14, 1914, The Circulation of The Bulletiz 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, a: | read by ninety- three per cent. of tae people. In Windhem it 13 delivered to over 900 houses, in Putnam and Danjelsen to over 1,700 and in ah of these places it is consid- ered the local daily. Eastern Connecticut has forty- e towns, ons hundred and sixty-five postoffice districts, and sixty rural free delivery routes. The Bulletin is sold in every town and on all of the R.'F. D. ) routes in Eas Connecticut. CIRCULATION 1901 average............. 4412 1905, average.... 5,920 AMBASSADOR PAGE'S SPEECH. If as has been indicated by Mr. Page, ambassador to the court of St. James, | that the remarks attributed to him n an impromptu address before the oclated Chambers of Commerce in ondon relative to the Monroe Doc- trine and the Panama canal were sim- ply pleasantry, the incident may prove only a tempest in a teapot. It would naturally be supposed, however, that he would have guarded against it hav- ing been taken in any other sort of a manner. Until a diplomat becomes thoroughly acquainted and his man- ners v understood it would seem hat his chief duty was to his country and its policies. Innocent enough may ave been his declarations as made or intended, but the time was inoppor- tune and the subject one which de- served more serious consideration. Such matters are at the present time prominently in the limelight for h diplomatic humor Whether the address was ‘informal not it should possess the balance which would not throw it open to mis- representation. It is undoubtedly one of those unfortunate incidents which an be expected under the present sys. tem of filling diplomatic posts, when training and experience are discarded for the bestowing of political honors. The affair may be a valuable revela- tion to Ambassador Page. Though the duties may not be arduous there are responsibilities in connection with such positions which cannot be too lMghtly regarded, monotonous ough they may be. There are times when more an be gained by letting someone else the cofirt jester. GEORGE WESTINGHOUSE. By the death of George Westing- house there has been removed a man who has won a place among the great nveniors. He was equipped with Ability render a wonderful service in mechanical advancement and he ap- ed himself to such interesting prob- lems in such a manner as to in success and world-wide recognition His name is inseparably linked with the airbrake, which invention has been f the greatest value to railroad pro- gress. but It is by no means con- ined to thdt one product of his cre- ative mind. Many are the other ac- omplishments whereby he has made nvaluable contributions to the world's reasury of applied knowledge. Not I¥ did he have the li = probiems and creating new but he possessed the intelli- gence and persistence which made for To him there was no such word as fail, He was another Edison in his chosen ne of effort. He was constantly boring as inventor, organizer and con- server and through his achievements an incalculable amount of assistance has Deen given to the development of the country. He has won his place n that class of men who as William Ellery Channing declares “have brought the human race more largely into thefr debt than the bioody race of comquerors and even than man: beneficent prince: He has created for himself not only fame, but admira- tion. Tn the world's advancement he has been a generous contributor, DEPARTMENT STORE BANKS. Private banking methods and regu- lations are undergoing close scrutiny as the result of the revelations which have come from the Siegel failure in New York city. That it has been poesible to carry on such a business thus lonz with no greater restrictions or guarantee to those who have been led to place their faith and trust in such great enterprises is surprising tn view of the disclosures which have been made. The situation calls for the application of preventlve measures which will make such institutions and resnlts' impossible in the future. In connection with the indictment of Blegel and Vogel for grand larceny and violatlen of the banking laws the Springfield Union wisely observes that One of the lessons to be drawn ihat the operation of a bank as an adjunct (o & mercantfle business 1s 4 questionable departure, &amd if per witted at all should be the object of most careful supervision by the eu- thoritles. The best poliey, It seems, to keep the banking business dis- tinct from -other money-making en- terprises. A bank has enongh vicissi- tudas to contend with in financial and commercial fields without spectal com- plications being courted. Tha tempia- té% to brace up i shaky amd preca- zione mercantile business by: a-risuss ing for work- la- is the | of public funds is one that ought not to be disregarded by tle public au- thorities.” There can be none too great safe- suards piaced about banking estab- lishments. The private banking in- stitution where savings are sought| should come under state supervision and inspection as surely as any other for the prevention of just such mis- representation as has-been uncovered in this case. But for the false im- pression gained by depositors of the strength of the great business con- cern back of the banking department less deposits would have been attract- ed. POTATO RA'SING. Tt s an important announcement which is made by the department of agriculture to the effect that this coun- try must raise more potatoes, that it must ralse practically ail that it re- i since ‘the other sources of are cut off because of the quarantine which is necessary to keep out the diseased tuber: This means that the potato raising states should give the necessary at- tention to meeting the situation. is no reason why it should not be p sible to raise in this country all the| potatoes that are required. It will call for the devotion of the proper atiention to it the same as to any other business proposition and careful study of the help which is obtainable from scientific cultivation and the methods used in other countries like Germany for stance where the ¥y d from the same area over twice as large, as it is in the United States. Opportu- nity and encouragement are thus a forded the potato raiser. When There is it is realized that the devotion of an eighth land of five states to in an increase of the potatoes of the country a half times its present amount, conducted on the basis of German: vield, the American farmer has chance to make good. If this important article of food can be produced here as cheaply and of better why should there ever come the e when the foreign pro- duct should be in demand? If they are diseased we.certainly do not want foreign potatoes. If we can produce enough for the country domestic dustry should get the proper encour- agement, whether a quarantine exists or not. areable would result production to four and if a dn- ALASKA DEVELOPMENT, There is cause for gratification over the passage of the Alaskan railway Dill for the develapment of that north- ern possession. It doesn't mean by a long shot that the hardest part of the proposition, which ha. been fa- vored by all political parties, has been accomplished. Tt signalizes the im- portant first step. It is the very be- ginning afier which must come a grea amount of careful consideration of ideas and methods for the most suc- cessful working out of the proposition, Responsibility of great magnitude rests upon the succeeding steps. The en- tire affair must be guided by the de- termination that the best manner of | getting at the hidden resources of a, whigh are t owned, shall brevail ance where politics shouid regarded. A great mass of detail must be han- dled by the executive department of the government to whi. ich ha been left by the action congress. Nothing has- been d as whether the government inter: regulated thereby will road after its completion, it will purchase existing lines construction of the new syste where it will be actually located There are also such important mat- ters as the opening up of the coal and copper lands as well as the other nat- ural deposits, either by the govern- ment itself or by lease to private en- terprise, and the determination of what be @ of termined or gperate whether in sts the will be done in the way of offering inducements to settler: ven before the road is started it is readily seen that Alaska is bound to be a loca of much impo: in administrati circles, ance EDITORIAL NOTES Poss »I_v the robin is iting to bring the whole family him It begi < like a record break- ing term for White House weddings. Organizing the Federal league seems to he founded on the rules of tiddley wi it to ‘be will have no cause to be otherwise Tust because a disagre weather prediction fails is no cause for re- gret or men perturbance. Molasses and sulphur and sassafras & no doubt as to the season the year in the old fashioned house- hold. Contrary to a widespread opinion Dame Fashion haen’t vet reached the according to the latest exhibi- . on the corner savs: City noises are being unbearab by the advent of the 1 band. The man who would raise the Ti- tanic by means of a huge maznet a chance to try it on the lost Eng lish submarine first. being realized in state as s finances that getting into debt is much easier, less expensive, but more popular than getting out. Great Britain has reason to organ- ize a vigilant society for the protec- tion and preservation of its antiquities, lic buildings and art treasures. Neutral command or les battles, hut it is a iocallty which staxpayer has never been able to zones are hed re during find. and better state prison. It ently preparing for increased business Carranza gives indication of com- | ing down off his high horse, which opén to the beliéf that has been | Ustening to some new and better ad- vice, President Wilson invited a.delega tion of thuse who d worked for the j:ilnt:’ t bI o witness hLis signature He wisely refrained from inviting all those who favored it Oneé of the president's daughiers was married ber and formally on the thirteenth of Novem- the engagement of anether is announced on Iriday thirteenth March. That’ of iat enough o dispel theught of superstition being countenanced in the Wilson fam- iy, any the | The selection of DeSaulles for en- voy to Uruguay is another endorse- ment of the Yale athlete. Texas is pr ngers and | and | New York is planning on a bigger | is appar- | through a more attractive Institution. | | e maN WHO 1ALKS | L e o o s w—— In the early conceptions of life kid usually Manifests an adventurous spirit. The boy usually wants to be what his parents do not intend he shall be. If he fancies a loud noise he is determined to be a boiler maker: if he likes to see the wheels go round he declares he will be a locomotive engineer; if he 18 attracted by a pret- ty uniform he desires to be a soldie and if he gets interested in uncanny stories he gives notice he means (o be a cowboy, @ soldier or a pirate; but these are the aspirations excited by his ecriy dreams and the boy who thought he would become a pirate makes a preacher: the boy who would | be a robber becomes a jailer; the boy who would be a cowboy becomes a trolley car conductor: the boy who was going to be a soldier becomes a letter carrier; and the boy who ex- pected to drive a locomotive in the end drives an express wagon. These make good citizens, regardless of the ambitions excited by juvenile dreams. When a young fellow essays to make a fool of { he is doing up indulges mother, rather { B someone who do vou think The young man who secret habits fooling his cetheart or his wife, enjoys his trickery until he ned to the fact that habit laved him and that the person fooled is himself. In our daily conduct we are ¢ ster builders and if we do in his swe 1 not become conscious of this fact we eventually get surprised by the cha acter we have made; and if the char- acter doesn’t please us. it fits us ex ly. We blame those who advised 1 well Ifistead of recognizing that our own disloyalty to the principles of righteousness is the cause of all our woe: The Vv m of every sly fooler is himself. A s t of deception never yet helped a man. To be true is to build character aright for the best manhood. How common s for us to measure peaker by what we not know instead of what he does know, The law of mentality doesn't make it pos sible for as to accept or plaud any- thing beyond our own mental expio tation. It is quite common if one does not comprehend what speaker is say ing, or understand him, mentalls regard him being a fanatic or a fool when he man s might confess dise that the fool was on the platform a lowed a new and doubtful Ject a on. We are not any of half eager for the truth as we think we are unless it is something which harmon with our precon- ceived ideas, for it takes good while for us to realize that our preconéeived ideas are the most serious stumbling blocks to be foind s life, a do to either neither. A great having the hav- i vered not in fc to a conclus as in you ever hear I would do were This is one common foolishness begi Did “What place ich sa anyone point at 15 to express It- self. We do not know what we would do were we in the other person’s place T we only think we know what we would do. You cannot be in the other tellow's place but the experience of the other fellow may fall to vour lot, and then you will not do what you l)‘u".)‘h( you would if the opportunity « ed you. We are qu 1 Most things we feel sure we | would do in moments of excitement we | as quickly repu in cooler mo- { ments Were we ermitted to act in the other fellow’s place | bility is that we sho as the persons we fe versely criticise. “W the stereotyped preface of foolish | remarks. The world sets no value on | what we would do. Ot what we do count | The present winter has been excep- tional in in the Acadian ch red poll which have » further south than northern M chuse have extended their southérn flight through Connecticut to southern Rhode Island. There has been some question | as to the ide ty of tk hickadee, but [ Bird Lore has determined the fact its identity The starlings, wh been located in Norwich for \ vears, are represented by sizeable flocks in most A also by Bostc The win- far nortt ter grosbeak hz n at variou points, and see inclined to make a permanent residence hereabouts. I wonder if a boy ever forgets his mother? Some boys are wild and run away from home and become dissolute and degenerate and neglectful of their | duty to the mother who bore them i often he letter ard expe: dies waiting for It the little remembered swerful factors fc 1 seem to be almo: r when weary igh came ooked to author Wayw when him. er »mpting The minister in the pulpit who has dictators in the n the right God's to do good pew who b ds and world pit pews is no ement harmon Tove whe sreeder brother | tabn | answerable an is aware he has sither 1 dic- ignare the dictator « forming pinions utterance of truth is not in good form Divine truth both inspiration and | power—modified truth Jacks sincerity and force. The spirit which demands | of the pulpit the truth as the people understand it instead of as the pastc understands it is reversing the order | of divine revelations and reeding con- | tempt for thi profe 5 | have an idea that on | rimonial matches are n | although it has to be cc marriage which has true love foundation is heaven-made becat | true love can be nothing less than heavenly. Those who wed simply for a home of a helpmate smrt with a | selfish spirit which always breeds un- satisfactory Tesults. Mercenary mar- riages were er more numerous or | more ope racted n at the present time, the. sharp bar- gains rather haliowed unic be hallowed parties to the union must regard marrlage relation as belng holy. It the spirit of those plighted and united which must san tify the for a perfunctory mony alone does not A co-op ) do with mari- who recognize a a puli maritat a few mat- e in heaven, nceded that the its for than the | has much thrift, and those ess of interes fail in their aslve soirit tal t | ments. | Only_one wood, odorata), is e Spanish commen eda 1sed for Sometimes a cheaper form the hagis of the box 1 with paper-thin veneers of the tropical cedar over it the | I in his or her | of | (ced- | i L] (Written Specially For The Bulletin.) . Some time ago an old lady showed me a portiere which she had made of silk and ribbon and had woven hit or miss. The colors were well blended, and the result was pleasing. As a testimonial to her patience and industry the work ‘was worth while, and the family priz- ed it highly because it was Mol work, but had her time been counted the cost would have been greater than would have supplied portieres galore. In many a farmhouse in former times the floors owed. their carpets to the untiring fingers of the busy house- wife and children whose dally task it was to sew together strips of cloth, and roll them into pound balls to be woven into hit or miss. The winter was considered iil spent If a new car- pet was not forthcoming in the spring. The advance to our day is that we have silk portieres instead of rag car- pets. There was a feeling of uncertainty about those rag carpets waich grati- fied the love of taking chances. That desire seems to exist in al times and under all circumstances. Those strict old pilgrim mothers wouldn't _have gambled for the world how that hit or miss would turn out, and in their minds, if not in words, they wagered a good deal upon its success. ald they lived today, they would have join ed a whist club and played “auction There was a feeling of uncertainty about those rag carpets which grati- fled, the love of taking chances. That desite seems to exist in all terms and under all circumstances. Those strict old pilgrim mothers wouldn't have gambled for the world; but they couldn’t help wondering how that hit or miss would turn out, and in their minds, if not in words, they wagered a zood deal upon its success. Had they | lived to-day they would have joined a whist club and played “auction” or ‘bridge,” and taken a prize with an casy conscignce. If not that, u would find them at the church fair, guessing at the number of beans in a can, or at the weight of a cake. Pos- sibly they would prefer the grab-bag or the mystery table. The love of gambling is surely inherent in the human heart. Now what do miss? Only that the pattern to itself to come out as it will, regard- less of all planning. So pleasing is the outcome, that now-a-days it can be found in expensive carpets and rugs. Even in other materials, the same work is done. I know of a glass bon-bon dish in which the materials were put together and the dish came we mean by hit or is left SUNDAY MORNING TALKl THINK OF THESE THINGS A pessimist sat next to me on the train the other day. Glancing over the paper in his hand he exclaimed, “Look at that record of vice- What a com- mentary!"” There was indeed spread before us that morning a discouraging array of rrests, scandals, graft exposures, sto- | ries of large misdoings of corporations and the like. One’s optimism was sobere in looking over the dismal list. If this was the true state of modern society one might feel alarm with reason. We are reeling back to | the pit if titere is no other news “fit | to print” than such as that on the sheet before u Happily there i picture, a beauti and upon it we another side of the ul and cheering one; should never neglect to look. Let us remember the splen- did exhortation which sa: “What- soever things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things {are just, whatsoever things are pure, | whatsoever things are lovely, whatso- ever things are of good report, if there be any praise, think on these things.” 1k then for a moment on the & and the pure things. Reflect while there is a lot of bad in the world, there is also an amazing amount of good. For every exploited criminal there are scores of unheralded virtuous and law-abiding citizens. For every defaulting cashier, hundreds of honest ones live lives of probity and faithful- ness. For every family torn asunder by scandal, thousands of American households are bound together in bless- | ed ties of mutual love and trust. Such | réfiections, founded as they are on fact, ‘,\rn'Lle h us to believe in the es- | sential health of our body politic. It is well to remember that there are | tates unnumbered thou- orab! thousands of business me: public officia whose hands no unright- | ever sticks, who do their fully, and with a fine regard e they can render Neve istory has there been so | much of self-sacrificing devotion as at s hour, expressed hurches, chari- | ties, hospitals, tions for all sorts | of human ) t is well for us at | times to turn our eyes from the | | rascals and to gaze upon No | headlines blazen their fa to | the world—but it is there. | The heroic spirit is widely It needs but the call of some crisis to bring it tc expression. Let the steam- er Monroe go down In a wintry sea and there is a splendid young wireless operator to remove the lifebelt that { would have saved him and put it on a helpless passeneger. Stewards, unhon- ored and unsung, spend thelr last hours rescuing thelr charges. Tire- men by the hundreds are risking their each week in every big city. En- cers. conductors, elevator men, hers, doct nurses and a host of every day are giving the lie to raface assumption of pessimism humanity is seifish and depraved There is a picture in Pligrim’s Prog- ress in which Christian is taken by the interpreter a into room where he sees someone throwing water on a. fire, and the more water is thrown the hotter the fire burns. He cannot understand t till the interpreter takes him to the other side of the partition and there he finds that someone unseen is feed- ing the fire with oil. Not otherwise the name of our national life is kept burn- ing brightly by the devotion of thou- sands of clean living and faithful men and women whose reward is found not glaring headlines, but In_self-re- ect and in the conscious favor of in ! back here poorer than when you went,” ifferent colors m fashion, no to be of the same out with splashes of here and there in ran two dishes likely deslgn. ‘What else than a love of chance and hope of gain leads the broke to the stock exchange, where fortunes are won and loat in'a day? Why does the inventor trust his life and limb to hazardous adventure? Why? But we need not multiply proofs that we are all garblers by nature, and like to risk chances. Once in a while we find an exception. I knew one woman who wanted a‘rug hit or miss, but sho sewed her rags in regular arrange- ment, so that they should miss just as she wanted them to, and they never failed to hit where she intended. This love of hit or miss led Earl Stanhope and his young wife to strive for a new home of their own in a re- gion far from their old associations and friends. Among these last were, some who tried to discourage them, and keep them from going. “You will fall in your plans and we'll have you croaked they. “Oh, mo,” was the hopeful rejoinder, we are young and strong. We ars willing to work hard, and shall get a home of our own. Don't fear for us. and in that spirit they started and succeeded. “Hit or miss, T am going to the city try my luck” declared Harold King, “I am tired of this hundrum life on a farm. ‘Nothing ventured, noth- ing_won' is my motto in the future. “Well,” replied his brother Frank “I shall remain here. Father needs one of us, for he is growing old and fee- ble. I know of many ways to make the place more fruitful, and father does not object to my having my own way usually. Ill run my chances here for_a while longer.” “Well, you're welcome to do so. You never did have any ambition! I shall feel easier about the old folks with ou here, I admit, and I'll soon be able to help you out, if you get into a pinch.” The pinch never came on the farm, but Harold was very glad to accept the occasional offer of a loan to tide him over a tight place now and then. Hit or miss,” said Ethel Blake, “I am _going to try for college. I have a little money from Aunt Betty, and I can find sometiing to do to help out. I can darn stockings for the other girls, it nothing else offers,” and she held up the stocking in her hand in proof of her statement. “I want to try it, anyway, and it will fit me for better wages in the future. I saw a statement not long since of the aver- age pay of teachers and it was pret low. 1 don’t want to be one of those that lessen the average, as it was said all untrained teachers did’ To col- lege she went, and outside her door was placed a notice that darning and repairing would be done neatly and quickly and at low rates. She found plenty of patrons, who expressed their gratitude, and paid their bills prompt- ly. She made many friends among them all by so dolng, and felt that she was gaining both respect and an in- come by her decision. In after years it was pleasant to recall her coilege life, and many a vacation from scnool work was spent with the friends there acquired while she was able to assist her parents much more generously than she could otherwise have done. “You were in the right of it, dear child,” said they, “your coliege life has | been a help to us all.” Articles woven hit or miss have both sides alike, but in human affairs, there are two sides to the question. “Tll manage somehow, hit or thought Reginald Ranger, “and the pater has money enough to help me through,” so he loafed in his school days, and entered college with con- ditlons to be worked off. “Tll get along, hit or miss,” he again and | the conditions remained against him and he was suspended. ‘“Poor Regi- | nald’s health gave out with such hard work,” explained his fond mother, | when people queried why Reginald re- | turned home. His father's face grew to stern, as he informed his son that he must go to work in the counting-room of the firm of which he was a mem- not ber. But work of any kind was pleasing to the voung man, who re ing on his father's aid, took liberties no other could claim, and was sur- prised to receive a reprimand from his father with orders to attend strictly to business or be discharged to shift | for himself. That opened his eyes somewhat, and he regretted the time wasted in previous year: He, like many others, learned from his failures that life was something more than a dreamy Indulgence. Hit or miss was no longer “somehow” to him, but an incentive to industry, and from that time he began to do a man’s work in earnest. To his surprise the more earnestiy worked, the more enjovment he took in =o doing. Which meaning are we going to hit or miss? Is it an incentive to work, or a hindrance to effort? AN IDLER. EVERY DAY REFLECTONS Vital Words. Try to realize words, especially the strong vital words { Onme way to do this is to create by | your imagination a picture that shall | express the word. Make your own | cinematograph show. Learn how to | entertain yourself a e by your own | fancy and you will not be s helpless dependent upon othe people and outside things for amusement. Here are some hints. S them and create your own Strength—A strong man His face is ruddy, smiling, vigorous, His hair s crisp, his eves blue and clear. Sleaves uprolled and collar downturned display his healtby skin. | He is pausing for a moment's rest, his | hand upon the plow. His two huge horses stand, deep breathing, ready, docile. Watch that man work. Power—You stand at a little way | station in the country. The lightning express goes by. You hear its owl- like hoot in the distance, see its headlight miles away as a dim star; it approaches, whirls past with crash and shriek as of a thousand giants. There is & blur of light. there are streams of sparks, a whirlwind of smoke and it is gone; soon ou hear its owl-like hoot agin in the t from scenes: plowing. a Almighty God. THEN Just 30 years ago today _the United States Congress first offici- ally_recognized the present system of Standard Time by adepting it first to propose that time should be governed by meridians one hour for ghe Dls(r»ck of Columbia. The apart is said to have been Charl F. Dowd, principal of a zeuns women's school at Saratoga, . who sketched numerous schemes orior to 1882. The plan taken up by the railroads the followin ? yl-r, however, was drawn by Willlam F. Allen, secretary of the G.mn! Time Convention. Previously there had been so many different stand- ards of time in the United States that a traveler's watch had to be reset some fifty times in a trip across the continent if he desired to he correct. For years had been said the problem was pas* solution. and Power Peace—A summer lake. Sheep asleep NOW Today clocks all over the United States are ticking off the seconds almost in perfect unision. Some thirty nations have followed the lead taken by the United States: |! by conputing standard time by || meridians one hour apart. In this country a score of time balls are dropped precisely at noon in the nrincipal Atlantic, Pacific, Gulf and Lake ports by electric signal from the United States Naval Observa- tory at Washingten, where thre Standard clocks are regularly set by star sights and meridian tran- sit instrument. The difference in official clocks over 3,000 miles apart is seldom more than twa-tenths of a second. Astronomers the world over are striving to be still more Pprecise as to time signals and hope soon te be able to flash instantan- eous signals around the world by wireless. | | them declared that they | your stomach; The Grand Sale Remnant Store’s SALE which commenced Wednesday, was met with great enthusiasm. Our store was thronged with bargain hunters all day long. Bigger and better bargains every day. Sale continues all this and next week, and every day marks unheard of bargains. SPECIAL VALUES LACES 1c yard—Edgings and Insertions. One lot of JEWELRY, values from 25¢, for 121/¢ each. HOUSE DRESSES, value $1.00, for 49\, wunl sizs. LARGE BUNGALOW APRONS, 29c. MERCERIZED DRESS MATERIALS, 10¢ yard, all colors. LADIES’ SAMPLE SUITS, all styles and colors— Sale price $8.75. VOILE and LINGERIE DRESSES, values to $12.00 —Sale price $3.98. THERE ARE DOZENS OF OTHER BARGAINS WHICH IT IS IMPOSSIBLE FOR US TO DESCRIBE The Grand Sale Remnant Store 261 MAIN STREET, NORWICH A | agony I baths," in a meadow. Motionless trees. | soft half moon silvering all with veil of mystery. A house, dark, with drawn_blinds. Wisdom—Recall Moses.” 1 ou, mas: what those artist once speak. Let these every day they used these R Interesting Bits. & ngelo’s | “Ragium banks” have been establish- set this statue rise before|eq in a few Furopean cities. These ive. majestical. Wonder | hanis possess a few milligrams of ra- lips mxtz‘uJ g d it oy she | dium. They lend their radium for ona commanded, it should!gay for $200 for surgical or other use. Radium saits, it is said, may be re- peatedly used without losing any of their properties. Spain ig considering the building of a double tracked rallway line of al European gauge, to be opened electricity, between Madrid and h border. ere are about thirty barber shops ' in India the habit of of picturing them Resented the Bath. American doctors who are denounc- | ing_the bath as an evil influence on | health would find many supporters at Cardiff, Wales. For there the makers of patent fuel (briquettes) were com- | | pelled by law to bathe and resented | it. Thus an official report to the British home secretary expresses the | sincere belief of those workers: “One | man said that the taking of baths had | aged the men ten vears, and most of | suffered great | us get thing inking It has been suggested that certain kinds of timber on the national for- ests be reserved for the needs of the navy. This recalls the fact that the first forest reservations in this coun- try were made for naval material WeAreHeadquarters —FOR— Suit Cases Traveling Bags, also Ladies’ Handbags, Bill Books, Pocket Books, Card Cases and all kinds of Leather Novelties A LARGE STOCK TO SELECT FROM All Goods of Selected Quality—Prices Low. 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