Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 2, 1915, Page 4

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P to as much :m«mm eyed when really she is blind. knew how often our neigh- as we claim to know how curses his wife, it would be better for all coneerned. 'If truth only ed the onal qualities of it oftener. Bulletin The Bulletin has the largest? “eirculation-of any paper in East- learn —_— Though there has been -no official udgment to’ know -announcement the word which comes .,;:,: .(‘:‘.p.e.mk.nm’ n'"?: cheap stuff trom ‘Washington to the effect that|compared to the silence which has the president has practically decided|been defined as the eloquence of dis- ! with the cares ml i writes to say: “ are ing; but we are, uvw.m % § ‘weather, b urge congress to autherize a bond |cretion. If we were punished for our|sunsets! The flelds are gay flowers! We issue for the punpose of producing the ':‘:b-l h:‘.";:.‘ifr" as vzle T;ebm' m;; tumnal flowers, there is a soft u.‘m ‘mea: roviding es should be moi - " blgger army |0 S "0F our speech. It is a matter [ g and navy instead of advocating a re-|of record that “five words cost Zach- vision of the tarift shows him unwill- |ariah forty weeks of silence.” We be- ing to admit that the present tariff |lieve one famous 1 won celebrity s a failure, with the exception that{by “holding his tongue in ten lan- he will doubtless agree that the pro- |Suages,” which s a most mortifyinz ¥iston for free sugar mext spring is|f3ct to those who cannot hold thelr unwise and to save the $60,000,000 in |iORETE in one lsnguage! Sience was A recognized Ly Zeno as the most de- revenus. which. would be given uD|sirable virtus because' it enabled him when sugar.goes on the free list It i8{to hear of other men's imperfections highly Probable " that that pro n{and to conceal his own. It has been will be removed. pointed out that the snt cxcels as 3 The president’s idea is that the ex-|Preacher because it 8ays ncthing. To Isting tarift bas not had adequate test,|Pe Sllent when maligned brings your it wae plainly demonstrated before|®¥5allant to shame. He may be an- other, but it does no good for you to the war gnd it is even dlselosed noW |fell him so. What we do not say £ fown - - on all of the R. F. D?A that the revenue has been seriously |never confronts us or covers us with | ‘3% rovtes in Eastern Connectisut. cut and despite the loss to the gov-|confusion. i in_Norwich, and read by minety~ cent, of the people. In it is d.lvered to aver houses, in Putnam snd ~ Danielson to ovey 1,100 and in of these places it is consid- £} ered the local daily. Eastern Connecticut has farty- { mine towns;, one hundred and § sixty-five: postoffice districts, and -+ pural free delivery routes. _ The Bulletin is sold in every, Perahps ghat womsn Fag pot so much to as R:a her g.‘ in the crow big “%ity, with streets, rush of traffic, thousands _hurrying back ang forth, galleries and mu- seums, places of amusements and en- ticing store windows; but the win- dows of her soul are opened, neve: theless and she looks abroad and feasts her eves on all the beautiful, albeit homely, things in the cramped round of her dally existence. ] 5§ 2 3 ¥ £ & R £ and includes many. choice patterns and good . tailoring, Look for yours and DO IT NOW! The FALL HATS and CAPS in big variety, 50c to $3.00. Look fer yours and DO IT NOW! ¥ pect of ice and mmow. Agsin why ‘What more consoling symbol of life from death, of the immortality w hope for, can human bclnfa desire ( |tnan ia fumished thery during these 5 v s som onesome’ There was much amussment over | ' * 4478 S0 the story of the newly rich man and woman who had just returned from abroad. and were asked about Ven- ice. The go0d woman said, after & little reflection, “Oh, yes, Veaice t The earth robes herself in gorgeous- | of good character to the vaccini nmew ness for the year's few remalning|used and emphasizing as & fact that days of ioviimess. The commonest|wherever bad results were apparent e cmcl",ATloN ernment it has resulted in no benefit to the ultimate gonsumer, the object % for which the cuts were made. In the thirteen chief customs dis- tricts of this cotintry for the week ending ‘September 4 imports were re- celved to the value of $32,454,477. The dugles which were paid thereon un- der the existing tariff amoynted to $3,631,478, ' or about an average ad valorem rate of 10.9 per cent. Had the republicen tariff been in opera- tion tho revenue received for (hat period . would have amounted to over © 1901, average ......co..w. 4412 ---5,920 9,254 REPUBLICAN TOWN TICKET. 4905, average ...... " sept. 28 . | $5700,000. This means that the cous Selectmen. try lost about a miltion and a quar- £ . CASPER K. BAILEY ter by the change without getting any .| CHARLES P. BUSHNELL _~ |benefits and the ‘conditions will be ¥ it Dhtoanere. ; |worse when the flood of cheap ma- FRANK H. WOODWORTH, ALBIE L. HALE. o Board of Relief, g ANSEIL, A. BECKWITH, FRED G. PROTHERO, terial comes in after the war, If the president’ is riot convinced of the test of the tariff law there is little ques- tion but what the people are. o GERMANY AND THE ARMENIANS. Look out what you carry with you when you are hunting for work. “The kind of a front you put up is of real importance—a. winning manner ls al- ways an asset, It i3 necessary to look efficlent as weil as, to think it A man who has ability to sell should be careful not to have the air of a tramp selling shoestrings. There /is nothing haphazard in life about achievement. A few things can be done by plunging, or on a fluke, but most progress is based upon sofld preparation. If you expect to be the architect of your own ecareer just bear in mind it i worth something to have good designs. To hunt a job with ex- treme caution is to be more than half- doomed at the start. To doubt your- self is to carry an expression which is likely to make others doubt you. Everybody cannot look cheerful and smile in hard luck, but it is a clever way out. Do not venture to become a locomotive engineer if you are only gualified to drive an ice-cart. Cheek is not efficiency. It is doubtful it there ever was a new house that had closets egough in it to suit the wom: in the right plac & science, or the windows all House-buildin though only considere: is a job, and those who build should have the aid of an efficient architect. No man h many men th k they A little attention and a kindly act in the hour of need is not friendship; neither is the lovaity which is tr there is something to falters when called There is nothing weak or flighty but it fs as constant and friendsh true as $o0 long as but_which magnet to the pole. When Charles Kingsiey was asked what had made him slch an example of pow A triend and grace, he answered: His ever dependable friend was knewn to him. It was not the flattering and fawning of many which had impressed him and wrought new light amd life, shrub is garbed in scarlet, every briar takes on colors which -are the despair of the chemists. Purples and soft orange tip the grass, so soon to- be withered by frost tomches. The roval purple of wild asters and the richmess of the nodding golden rod carpet the roadsides and fields with splendor which never made gorgeous the path of even Soioman. _Scents the vines and the boughs, there is the buzz about hives and the flutter about the sense of preparation in the air. e Preparation—for death; the seem- ing death of Nature. But throughout the dull. long twilights, the ever-in-: creasing chill of the frosty nights, fin- ally the sharp, stinging cold, which leaves - blackness and death where bloom and color and life have been Dbefore. there is that in the soul which brings - asgurance that this desolaticn is, aftet all, but temporary. The eyes which really see, lock far beyond un- inviting, blackened. shriveled figures from vaccination lack of care on the part of the parent or murse Was re- sponsible. Dz, G. E. it of Au I, in & recent m magazihe discusses 1 beg to present & vaccines at length. few of his eriticisms. Dr. Dienst says: “That school of therapeutics which nas eulogized the new method of healing. the and great | via vaccine route should carefully note |] Coke . from what the A. M. A. Journal says Aus. 29 1914, The first point of interest is: The noted advance in therapeutics gers as well opment,” gers” in one single simpie breath! Grave dangers! Not to the phydician #0 long as he conceal the “grave dan- gers” to the laity. The editorial aito mentioned a “dan- ger” of a rapld commercialization of this new method. Ahem! Isn’t it already commercial- ized? Isn't the commercial feature, rather than the therapeutic value of his method, the crux of the system? 10 $2.00. Get yours, Fit him ‘out here. DO here. UNDERWEAR in Two-Piece and Unions, 50c CHILDREN’S SUITS with extra Pants, $4.00 to $7.50.- Bood wearing clothes for the boy. : Prompt service and courteous treatment and DO IT NOW! IT NOW! THE F. A. WELLS 0. “Goog Clothes Store” In view of this the latest disaster s 2 but ihe example of Ohe. There f4|of Wwhat but yesterday were flowers, to( In vi s the lagwt Spa Town Claric and Town Treasurer, | = @ statements mado by Ambassa.| A near-philosopher tells us “Iie |ncthing cheap about real friendship. | reavakening of ‘s newer loveller | SO COTRL Q0 oottt ey be C BS 8. HOLB’R?DK dor Bbrnstorff to tha effect that the|™an Whose only claim to sanctity is|It ls precious because it is always true g g v the lot of some family in our midst to -k . Tax Collector. ) effect that the|, jong face should dispose of some of —it overlooks our faults and admires whatever of good there is in us. No man, questioned as to his real attain- can truly reports of conditions in Armenia were| his cheek.” The long face is an af- inventions and -fabrications . because | fectation not a virtue. Infants are there have been ng atrocitics there |not born with long f The Indian have to mourn the loss of a child or THOMAS' A. ROBINSON. children who because of greed and graft characteristic of a godless med- It is to be feared that there are those whose eyes never unclose from answer: - “Many | the cradle to the grave. At least|ical sclence are forced to lay their ingicate Httlé sympathy with the ap-|chiliren do not know how to smile Many sb-called friends un- | that is the impression we gain from | lives on the altar of medical intoler- peald which are being made for so.|Decause their parents’ visual _ef-|make more men than they make in|their words and actions. They speak :jeuring. rellef for those. people, They tude in case such a state of affairs proved to be true, contrary as 1t might bo to the German belief. 1t remains to be seen, however, will be Germany’s attitude now that this country places sucll éredence in the reports of the butchered and op- presséd Armenians. s to informally 4 . |reauest the German government to in- terfere in behalf of those people. NET Whatever ‘Ambassador Bernstorft may BEST TOWN GOVERNMENT. ::'flk t;; mdlitloné in Turkey, it is 3 own that this country attaches more e e e acket whioh | importance to the reports of nited JER taced: Satere the rutce by States Ambassador Morgenthav, who e e a strang ool e ection | has tor some time been urging Ereat- ot en OF oo mon o e |er rellet for the Armentans. R e e o 21| At-the. présent, timertha one govern- a o be mieed Tor b Eanetal ena|ment which has any {nfiuence jn Con- Sagh performance of thoir agte < | Stantinople bearing ‘upon the treat- Canpor & Baton eentdnte for e ss | ment of the subjects of that country hae e e sor st |is Germany. Turkey has been gulded i Tade & micess in ik | o »'Tong time, bypGetinan opinfon msibilities of public office are and | 219, Whatever Germany.said would be M8 can be depended upon to adminis- | Ll to garry-much weiglit in chang- The Hown affais I the caminte ling the Dollcy which is being nsed SR e Jocien” | asainst- the Armenians, “That fn fact is the polley to| NASMUch as no subjects of . Registrar of Voters, = TYLER D, GUY. Constables. GUSTAVE LAMEERT, JOHN REEVES, GEORGE . ROUSE. ALVAF F. GARDNER. ‘what e this floiency is not equal to the” task of have a conception of their Heavenly father s a being with a. face like 8 stone infage. '¥he idea that God laughs wculd horrify tiem, but wit- nessing what a burlesque -men make of life, it would not surprise us if he did. We cannot image a being ca- pable of grief who is not capable of glee. Doesn't the smile of a child seemy like a gleam of Heaven? He who laughs too much gets in poor repute; but he who laughs jollily gets into the hearts of his friends. No one has a right to a long face, but an un- dertaker, and he needs a professional face. So long as “a laugh continues to be worth a hundred groans in any market” it has the long face dis- counted. We all carry a pretty good load of £00d_intentions, and most of Us won- der what becomes of them. We lose most of them somewhere on the way, not because the prompter erred, but because he exceeded our standard. | How much more interesting our col- lection of~concreted yesterdays would be when we logk them over if the g00d intentions ere mirrowed there- in as we like to see ourselves mirrow- this world. of magnaninity and -trust.” Sunday Morning - Talk INTENSIVE LIVING. The foundation of true Japan cafi teach America how to till the soil the term' “intensive Over here we glibly use farming,” but over there they actually do the thing. Each square palle of the Mikado's em- pire that is under cultivation furnish- es food for almost 2300 people. At that ratdnthe tilled fields of any single one of a score of our Western States would support more people than now- live in the whole country. Your Oriental requires mo 10-acre lot for a kitchen garden. He supports his family on a corner of land that Si Perkins. of New Hampshire would re- fuse for a dump. The Jap or the Chinaman plows deep, fertilizes heav- fly and gets three crops a year. Hav- ing but little, he mekes the most of it, and plan as though, instead of being ever. When sorrows and losses come - to them, they cry out, either in anger or despair or imprecation, as though they were the only ones ever afflicted. If y lose friends by death, they ‘wail, as though death were not as natural as lffe—in fact, the finishing part of life. They never look beyond their small spites, and rancors, and neig} borly wrangles, never get their soul eyes opefied 1o see through the cob- webby windows of their own litle in- terests and selffish passions and put- tering lkes and disiikes. They never ses themselves as a tiny atom of a great system, in which it is. theirs td do tbeir part for today— leaving the rest to Omnipotence and Omniscience. i Perhaps the world-war has dane us in opening” our eyes Il value—except that But when we pictures of thousands engaged in one goed thin to our own every soul is valuable. look at millions of soldiers and of the earth, we sense the fact that our little town is a me: Tligion: ance. echovlhouses - that legend of - Dantes, “He who enters here leaves hope he- hind,” it is up to the citizen to realize that the state has no more right to in- vade the domain ofatherapeutics than it bas to invade the domain of Te- Both are necessarily and in- herently matters of personal and pri- ate judgment, and in the exercise of this judgment the person must remain free. Let's talk it over at the town meeting! A. W. DAVIS. Norwich, Oct. 1, 1915, ; OTHER VIEW POl'N'l‘S_‘ Alabama is about to do by constitu- tional amendment that which Con- necticut took care of a century or more ago. Its voters one year from now will be asked to pass upon a pro- posed change ,In the state’s organic law which “will allow the levying of pecial taxes for school purposes. It hard to think of a state in the Union so_behind the times as to not permit in these days special help for eaution of the administration.” We are rightly solicitous of the interests of the Mexican people, but it w.: wi if there was coming a time veciprecity should be & Howard's argument.—Ansonia Sentinel. St. Louls people stremously, object to allowing the tipping to go as far employes. And as the check room they are_right. Not that those em- loyes are not entitled to tips as well waiters, who also nre employes. ut the check room brigade is part of a tipping trust, and the persons who gather in the tips are mot the ones-directly benefitted by the public dimes and quapters poured into the open paims of Ihese Deople g0 o buy furs and wraps for the wives of the men who pay” enormous prices to the hotels for the privilege of collecting the tips at the hatrack.« When this is universally known this part of the tipping evil will eventually be dome away with.gNew Britain Herald: For six years the city has been gaverned by a machine which com- plefely controlled one party and enough of another to make success head gives point to the teaching them. - Th onden-faced | friendship is I ¢ gain, and as Em ts \nn, they had Deen | nectirut ' plax e docrs ot ot5 PRl - vacki tize chances o - ching them. ~ These worden-faced | friendship is love not gaia, a - | mero guests at an inn, they necticut ‘places over the doors of our th citizen for mayer, their chances o s Tow | furthermore disciosed little or ho in- | people who live in an atmesphere of | erson says. it is.composad, of “a.tofal | sent upon this -earth to rematn for- L ity s; ROU, o;v._ 1915, terest and displayed a peculiar atti-|awe because of their morbid thoughts . . BISHOP, Qct, 1916, victory are the brightest in a decade. If they do not rise to the occasion it is practically certaip that an in- dependent ticket will, for the city is sick of ring rule, and is chiefly inter- ested at present in assuring the safe- ty and success of the commission government charter that the vojers have asked for.—Bridgeport Tek sram. The trade school is hers to stay, and Putnam is the latest fownm in the state to_vote money for a trade school. The trade school promises to become to the™trades what the busi- ness college is th business. in olden times a business education was gain- ed by actual experience from a start at the bottom in a business house. Now the business college student is ready to start & part of ¢he business. It will no doubt be the same with the trade school. Of the trades will have to undergo the change just the same as business has and many excuses will beoffered and the public will have to accept conditions for the apprentice period is evidently to be & thing of the past—Middietown Press. Colorado is the leading state in the A% y tion of tu n ores and y ed in o, silyered glass. Our good In-| A useful trick, that of the Jap! One | mall inconsiderable map, T T Ao 1o, 1 onliod Spres JCOLIEIN SaAelectid ey, culy '8 for- Penadium micerais ‘and ranks sec ch fe is committed. For the mem. | CUBFY, 50 Tar as known, have suf-| tentions are very much like the fairy | who learns it can get a lot out of the | We ourselves weigh about as heavily|gressive” west, which are not up to x ond for ‘Of the board with him, Charles | er®d at Turkish hands the only part|rings we see beneBth the trees on a wet | soil or out of life. as does a grain of sand on the sea- Which the United States can take is that of a friend of Fumanity and time Will - tell ~whether- Germany's- interept in that direction has been entirely al- tered by the war. The appeal of this country should be sufficient at least for it to make a.thorough.investiga- tion, and not cast it aside under the one-sided belfef that the reports are groundless, EDITORIAL NOTES, There was mnothing very auspicious about the opening performance of Oc- tober, Bushnell deserves reelection. He “sérved op the board a number of and s fully acquainted with thé reqiiirements: He has always d true to-every trust and his | knowledge of the work and his abil- make Him a desirable choice for bbara. For the Hoard of assessors, Frank H. foodworth ‘and Albie L. Hale are ughly equipped to give Norwich benefit of their sound Judgment. know the town, have done busi- here for many yvears and have a ledge of the duties which partic- fits them for the office. Ansel A. .Beckwith and Freas G.| EYen 8 heated trolley car gets an as candidates for the boaud | 2PPreciated welcome on a cold gray rélief can be relied upon for faith- | O°tOPer 1st: yigs _service. They have not only the flity, but the inclination to mpar- ly administer that important. work. That Charl>s S. Holbrook has been X, usly renominated for town ~clerk and town treasurer, and Thomas ‘A. Robinson likewise selected for tax tor and both placed upon each indicates that thelr -services for themselves and that they are ble, _members of the town school “Herbert M. Lerou and “B.” P. Who haye been . renominated, on their recadd to be reelect- are needed in properly miain- E M,‘ @ schools of the tcwn. while ‘the other candidates on the ticket have 7 caretully chosen beeause of their AR It takes war to demonstrate how quickly ammunition can be squander- ed as well as money, The man on the corrier says: Strange how all sinners watch for a reformed man to backslide some day. \ Every day furnishes its lessons in the great amount of laxity which ex- ists concerning: fire prevention. The ;ithpression grows that some boys satiefy their desire® for ar edu- cation ‘by making good an the football When Greece tells Bulgaria that it will stand by Servia it is like daring a fellow to knock a chip off a brother's shoulder. “hds ‘been sald befére Norwich 2 the best in town government the election of the ticket named g is one of the best assufances i, 7 EETIAM. DRIVEN . S1IBMARINES. It is-some time since Germany broke of importance are be- | jts submarine promises, but all such made in all other branches and it | previous periods have had harshly matural that they should fol- | abrupt turnings. v submarine. ‘While in other A vourig man has walked from one coast to the other in 30 days, thus. breaking Weston's récord in everything except age. October morning;- pretty in form, but too ephemeral to last. If We keep well in mind what we haven't done we feel less free to boast about what we have done. ‘When our perform- ances gnd our intentions are placed side by side we are surprised that so much of us at last goes to the burial place. Perhaps when the Saviour id: “Let the dead bury their dead,” e haq these good intentions in mind, A good intention is as worthy of being honored as a_good promise, and some folks honor heither, hence they soon find themselves " in dishonor. What is auto-intexication? It is an intyxication for which. the individual is not directly responsiblé; and it is being recognized as the source of di ease which manifests itself in_many forms. Metchinkoff says becaiise of the work af the colon bacterla man does not ltve out half his davs;- that instead of dying at seventy man should live to be 140 :and that there is no such thing as a natural death, These microscopic plants—Metchinkoff calls them: intestinal flora — bring about chemical changes in our ill- advised diets which result in poison- ing the blood and in slowly undermin- ing the health, being responsible for phyeical ailments which includes the loss of memory and decrepitude, which we attribute to age; hence you see, we must look sharply after our intes- tinal flora. although very few people are aware they possess any. When bactlli_of buttermilk were found to tinal flora although very few peopl be inimical to colon bacteria, ant that their presence in the colon check- ed their mischief, Methinkoff recom- mended the buttermilk method o overcoming their impairment of men's physical condition, and ‘the lives of many people have been saved by this cheap, simple and effective remedy always within our reach. It is a common thought with every foan and woman who has foney that thiy are capable of bullding -a home. they? How many of them, think you, have given much thought to the house sanitary and the house practical ~—the house which contributes to health | there are who aj farming. Intensive methods pay dividends in other spheres than Not widespread diversity, but con- centrated vigor of efforts counts. Most of us could raise some kind of a prize crop if we would till well our single acre. The trouble is that we make & try at the whole farm. Think it over, Clarence, Are you conserving or scat- tering your energies? Are you s ing out your endeavers wide and thin, or doing with your whole might some particuiar thing your hands have found to do? Rigid limitation of effort is harder and wiser than it seems. Good peopls parently think them. Selves responsible for every form of helpful activity practised among men. The mistake is a natural, but a great on nevertheless. One is responsible only for that particular bit of work that fits his particular powers. A man once remarked that he did not care for much real estate, he only wanted to buy all the land that adjcined own. He is about -~ equally is cragked h who thinks that he must accept every opportunity for service that appears on the horizon. at most, -two or three, To do_one thing well, or is_about ‘the limit for most humans. To attempt more would stagger an archangel. Hapiness, top, waits on intensive. methodg. It is less the range than the vigor of our enjoyments that counts. The-happy man is one who has learn. ed to taste the sweetness of common experiences. He will get more real fun out of a b: car than his neifhl nt ride In a trolley r knows in a tour de Iuxe across the continent. Here s one way In which a kindly Providence balances the apaprently uneven lotes of men. Do you think we must have a lot of time in order to live? Are We wait- ing for the years to bring large gift before we can be At the present. moment - we live, really as we ever will be living. Why do we imagine we shall be contented by and by, “Write it 6n your hegrt t at f not now ? Says Emerson: every day is the best day in the year. No 'man hae learned anything rightly un- shore in the world’s fmportan And the realization helps a bit, to rudely tear open our eyes, in case they been all along blinded to the real issue, the real object, the real mean- ing of life! , THE DICTAGRAPH. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Safety of the Highways. Mr. Editor: Some fellow bas sald: ‘Humanity is divided by the automo- bile into two parts—the quick and the dead™ Although it appeared in print some years ago, the one who expressed it' “bullded better than he kmew.” It is extremely sad to realize that the ay- tomobile, which is capable of such a ast amount of good in the world, should be used to make the division. Yet this is backed up by the reports of accidents (?) in all newspapers, I speak, of course, of the automobile in the hands of those who, for various reasons, should never be permitted to operate one on a public highway. A tew years ago one could go on a ceun- try road with pleasure and with a feel. Ing of security. ANl that is changed It is admitted on all sides that the pleasure of riding in a t is gore. Although the horse may be much afrald of an automobile, there is the constant fear that some incompetent or who has no regard for the of others will run’ you down beforé you can be quick enough to got out of the road, and in the fon of a second you ‘are a candidate for the second class. Perhaps we do not fear death, but most of us would prefer that when the breath leaves “un body there is enough left that zable for surviving friends to mourn over. Thee are users of automobiles who mean all right, but take chanc which the expert runmer gets . away with but which they themselves are|.iomts the .blood to the point Connecticut reached when she became a commonwealth before the last century.—Bridgeport Post. Mexican bandits are displaying with considerable pride the head of a soldier of the United States Just across the border. He is that How- ard, who was mysteriously missing from dgty. We know where he is now. It is a trifle hard that such murderous insolence must go unpun- The War a Year Ago Today Oet, 2, 1914, Allies checked "at Arvas. 9 back across the rzemysl. German cruisers shelled capital of French Islands of Tahiti, French “M sank German auxiliary ships Rhios and Itolo. German cruiser Leipzig sank Union eil tanker Elsinore, German foreign office accused French of torturing wounded at Orchies. 3 American Red Cross ship arrived auillac, ‘France. —_— Rheumatism “and Allied Paine—They The congestion of the blood im flow cuuses pain. Sloan's Liniment to the ummlw' ~ and not equal to. Don't do it. There are|poq;’s warmth is renewed; the pain is. millions of people who camnot afford | gore * TTRC™ar 0 O ‘woman who: an automob (and who have sense uralgia ther S o relie, the- tact ARd Eovers | Dovmetian. Do . 1l themseives accordingly) who are pay- ing taxes regularly for the uee of the highway not getting. These taxes has and falls to Liniment intentiongof giving the city a good. business- government, the administration has become drunken with power and has ruled the city In an_ arrogant, indifferent, spoilsman- like manner. To say that the admin- istration has come under the public distrust is to put it midly. It ha certainly not behaved In a manner to invite confidence. Under the circum- stances if the democrats have the strength to throw off the servile yoke which they have worn, and the good sense to put up an unimpeachable wis Z . third In zinc and fluor- spar and fourth in lead. | ¥ you want clean hands- ~ VANCO Wizard and O-Cedar : Polishing and Dusting Mops (. 75¢, $1, $125,$1.50 :’l: he knows that every day is Dooms. iy ¥ One's garden plot may be small, but he should never forget that he owns all the way up, and all the. @down, too. It is astonishing what she may 2 Snd pul) e weeas SnGbIRE ' - rocks and pull up the _ . T ah “hnder . cuttivation. . Methupelah | t e nely tnd! of conditions &na. existed on the earth, according to record, for 969, years. But he than anyone * who Is each day between -eun’s setting, with honest Increased by year to-pay for roads for tl of the awi e. There woul no kick coming If the automobile was always in competent & -3 A > I belleve these things should be ,_gteam has been aban-| ‘It is important that every voter who|@nd strength and savea steps? What r city and\ coal has E1v- | (s, not fully acquainted with the oper- | 15 there D onret -t Titteey ofl as fuel, It has been|ation of the voting machines should|Anq safety from fire, and saters o m 35’”'):-“ take the time to have their simpleity | health, and durability, and comfort o ufidéry| demonstrated. It saves donfusion on |and edonomy—economy in heating and dangers 2 - i economy of strength by the conven- 3 \0 ' |lience of things—the shortest way home ‘When it comes to. town elections no | Inetead of the farthest way round. It thances can be taken. The best can- | ¥ no simple matter to design a home. d'itfaidsten- nre mems tao guod “and the | Mstakes re commoner among archi: recognition of ‘this makes 1t important | goi¢ piances house 3 [that the republican ticket should be|be fust what lene. ! enthusiastically supported on Monday. -m;u have baen Sy ! which

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