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b B velod e W KNOW, ‘as everybody else knows, of course, the Cadillac is_ an economical car to operate. But some owners report to us such low figures of upkeep ex- pense, that, frankly, we feel as though we should make some allowance for their enthusiasm. . THE A. C. SWAN COMPANY Norwich—New London | Tritten ‘Specially. for: The Bulletin. which is -one of it If we think hard and straight, the Star opines that we dustrial - sitnation lls '+ for straight thinking.” shall come through tk all right. ‘But, “If we shail get bumped. us ail: “You have got brains. They will guide you to. sensible on. clusions. If you won't use.them, it wiil | S2me 4 HEh - tligtles dnd ywgsts | have to beat some sense fnto you witn | and sprinkle those same, frees with | & club. You won't like that. You will | Cater] ests and cider apples. ,‘he all bruised and sore. But it's the | Pless_you, it makeé no difference t0 way to o > to use their heads. ansas paper is talking about 1 Won't Work’s and so: 1 agandists ot se clallsts ditlon. to them.” But that {s a ‘topic which must - leave to politicai- and eco. nomic editors, ‘ou’and I and-this e more Interested"in success g, just now, than in even way, nzland fai rmers havé.put them. ago. ‘when my old father got too feebl mountain woodlot,' he bought to the cellar by the coal man.' When ELLINGTON e o1 and evenine the | SALEM of the Con urch pai tional &hureh -Sund: pastor, Rev. G. E. Suvage. w .I“. m Day of Weslevan U Rev. C. The Congregati . and Mrs., Miss Sybll Kilroy rs. Herber Houston. v London atter Loumis’ m: 3 several s ut $13 wwas ralsed. Herman Amman of visited friends here Sunday. Henry blood poisoning in his hand. and son New Preseription Gives Instant Reliet Makes Breathing Lasy ¥ wit nd Mes. A meetine nf me qa]em Soc ah | W cro clected . for | = sitors . mzrmrnt of A ver sure from ope hour cording to the ‘intent of tite giftwand " t-t but somé strike will shut off both _proper functioning of those,suid . T ! of suppiy. whose f: it 2 he :gets - = to come. back to the west v does use them pasal TS AT I AT B AT BT A B AT AT R T s ara | | Diper’s text. However true may he will | escape vy - | 2 Tas the dlternatve of ‘aeing its | Fozeous forune or getting ~why, his braf .- \of 2 thrashing. the cognate liniment to teémpora . 3N | | ~ssertion 1s even more certain that the [ alleviatively, and also how to avold the 2| | farmer who won't use his brains in his [ next pounding, perhaps. S| 1 daily incss is cock-sure to get a According to the Star’s' diagnosis, " || taste-of Nature's club. Nature doesn’t pound one if he uses - For that dreadful old lady s an ever- | his brains; only as a last recourse to Just Received 10 Dozen of Those ARMYQUILTS at $3.98 WE ADVISE THE PEOPLE THAT DIDNOT GET TO OUR LAST SALE,TO GET HERE EARLY. SCHWARTZ BROX 9-11-13 WATER STREET RO TR ITAUAY ACZAT A0 Services, were held i the Congrega- y. morning. ening service was also led b niversity L his home here. Frank Skinner of Yantic d Mrs. Northrop and son Harry of gton were guests Sunday of Mr. throp Ewing has returned home of her son,*John social’held at Grange evening was largely- New. London DeWolfe is. suffering _from Rogers and family and Mrs. Malona were Norwich visitors/Sat- George were av B the ensulng SOUTH WILLINGTON . H. Hall announce to be held at Merrow Satur- eime back to the farm. without givin; thie matter any real thought, I kept o with his method. I did so until the bij Penns: Iv shut off-our stpnly. along for Retting a a. b We puttere: while ‘as_ best elbarrow load. b an JHardwood. cl worrisome after some month or six wee! became clen coal mine owners But it of s of it the the h of the country froze or not, se lonz a thev had their wayv—whr, clared my. indenendence of 'em both T bought a. counie of chean “airtight wood-burning stoves which would tak in_chunks as big as ove wanted te handle and, when tbrs fed, would keel a’ster fire’ for twelve hon thirty acre woodlot adjoi n and, from ed wood orly. 1t's some work to ¢ from .the mountain iifteen or twent; cords of wood. it's some it it and pile it Seaso it and get it ready for th a rule among the farm a T am best acqua to work for about everythin days at- ing nd draw dew: else a substantial’ woodpile by the door gives any farmer that he wi able to keep warm. all b the their daughter, | ha%e turee regular meals cooked is not ¢ «The older. I gfow and the bet- s to TWilllam Rhodes|to be ignored. It's one of the bless- | tef = acquainted I get with t . fence, B.1. ormer's life that he can keep | Biore Im inclined to shy. at peo 4 = ik A wolf from his door and Jack Frost | Use biz words to name simiple, com- ooy anfeation of Urlel | putcide his home, without depending | mon things. e greed of coal owners or th farmhouse on the hills prospect ing to cook 1 present {lustration of Col. Roosevelt's admonition to “walk softiy and carry a ig stick She swings gacross . the ! paralilels and through, the seasons with | the most:nonchalant air in the world. She seems as Gemure as a kitten I ing its paws—till .you get in her way Then she chews you up and distributes ¥ relics along her'path with an-gb- solutely impersonal disregard for your ‘wishes. Talk about the folly of monkeying with a buzz-saw! That's wisdom in- | carnate compared with'the foily of RHEUMATISM You. Can Ease the Pain and Spgedlly Reduce the Swelling Begy's Mustarine will do it, Everyone knows it Who has ever tried it. The first improvement On grandma’s mustard plaster— And the best. It's hot stuff: But it cannot blister. But it will * Stop the gnawing twinges And the agonizing pains Of Rheumatism Afid reduce the swelling— And do it so quickly That yow'll be joyfully astonished. RBe sure you get Begy's Mustarine— Quickest pain killer on earth. In a yellow box. Always Fine for Gout, too, And Lumpago and Neuralgia; 1t subdues Inflammation Amd 'scatters Congéstion. Rub-it on when Influenza thmlenu One box 'does the work » ‘Of 50 mussy, blisterihg - mustard plasters. Money back if not as advertised—30 and 60 cents. . S. C. Walls.& Co, LeRoy, N, Y; THE USE. OF BRAINS ‘AVERTS DlSAsTEk; . According to! the Kansasi City Star, the -level-headedest newspapers published cither west or east of the Mississippi, the present u:l- hard, strjke epidemic) iI'to think, we The Star goes on to.remark that Nature everywher® of- fers us these alternatives, - She says to Te them. with people who re- ght in what it says about the couritry's need to usé its common sense vigorously in regard 1 wonder how : many selves into ‘subjection to coal? Years to cut his own firewood from his own a coal stove and had his winter’s fuel brought vivania anthracite strike sudden- we could. viecing out was d uncatisfactory.. When, her coal milners cared a hoot whether ‘the rest then, T de- bought my at day to this. have < to saw | nted, ng. ¥ n get. We certainly have to f brains in ‘farming ;| work for the money to pay coal v consist in‘a ¥ndw- man, if we use that fuel. Work quite ! iimal metabolism. Nor in as long and as hard, I fancy, as if we |l ce to tesitbook rules. Nor got our own fuel from our own for- al ‘definition of carbohy- ests. drates. Nor in. calling a dilsy a And thescomfortanle assurance which bacl winter and gefting under Sature's téet. Sné cares 1o more about you and your interests or your life, even, than, she cares for any mullein stalk in any pasture. She I don't ulways know the direction or terminus of—and she follows it. You and 1 have the privilége of keeping out of her way or of taking the conse- quences. There is no evidence thiat she cares what we do. She will cover our fields ‘'with_waving grain or load our trees with luscious fruit, if only we have brains enough to see her inten- tiong—have brains enough ~and. wse them. Otherwise, she'll broadeast those her. If it makes any difference to you, why, you've got brains and can use ‘em you see fit. :If not, take the clubbing which is coming to you. It' has been said that!the undevout astronomer ~ is mad. “Assuredfy:‘the brains-ignoring farmer is madder, There may_be other lings' which demand ‘niore’ cunning, There may "be others which require more - expert training. There may be others which compel finer technical skill. But there isn’t a business on earth has use for wider -all ‘rovnd knowledge, for the morc: constant:use of sound judgment, ‘for -the. dally em- ployment of ! all . a man's reasoning powers than farming.. . In other words, for the use of:his brains. No man ever lived yet who was wise enough to” know Yust' which:way Na- ture was heading or just what she was t 1 s a e i '3 ha her road to follow—a road you and | . 8—THE KOREAK HAS HIS © Bevercyes ef Othor Natioms and Poriods. ship. Al is the first Eoston Branch witkes acguaintancy f The character and -qu ger product, aged and m‘llNcH, stamp it as ” perfoction in ginger als. - To those who know ifi, alc at the restaurant ind for the “home, -+ HARVARD COMPANY, LOWE! ity of this. trus gin: “Harvard Ginger thought when ordéring ginger MASS. 23 Cimmercisl Wrat.' Norwich Distributors for Harvard Ginger Ale—James E. Moore, 79-81. Water Street. others to say. But in lems it is about right. When You sce.a mid bl careening | aéross the barnyard, common gumption | bids y6u get over the fence. But it taktes brains not only to do that but to so contrive and-manage that his ram- paging.and plunging shail zet 2 load | of the yard manure out on the onion- | bed. That's about the sort of proposition | the farmer.is commonly up against. | It anyone thinks the solution doesn't | ;‘:n for; the use of brains \let him try | T2 the' multitude of farmiers them- | selves who have riot yet used theids | 1 ! farming prob- ] would oply do so, they might win a few | more. games than' the¥ do. THE ‘FARMER. ~ 'WESTMINSTER n g going to do mext. If is as dure as the sunrise that the wisest of us will make mistakes. Xven ~Solomon’ ‘ seetns to have fallen into:one or twojérrars in the course of his career: “The rest G us are even more liable’ to. blunider. . But the use of our brains.dges heln, some- what.. There can be nd denying this. However regardlessof our-interests Nature may: be in-her’progress:. no a d e matter with how_callous an.indiffer- ence she nlays the game, she is atJeast fair. She carries € club, - True.. :Shé se it just as nonchalantly to < our heads oft as to kiil a-dozen hestnut trees In the woods, But--sne has also given us bfains by the prover use of which we may. keen out. of:that club’s reach, most of the time.’, Not only that, but the active. use af those | brains mav enable ‘us ta et ‘sonie help from the 1y of: that elub’s sw ereln we Qiffey from ghied chestnuts, They can't Help Tf thev: et in the:way of chestnut- hlight, thév're s no Hope for them. But we farmers have.been endowed with brains. - Are we not better than many hestnut trees? Surely we idve; it we use our brains. .If .we, doi’t, whekein. lies the difference? s o n v themse] n S attre's et goners.. Ther: n o mu leucanthemum.” Hor- at “of all horned cattle in a news- er office a colleze graduate was e e brains in just v of the steam T mple employment to all his own and all he can beg. buy, bor- teal from his neighbors in de- g methods by which he can make Rteam roller, turn his grindstone ins is to And When. er doesn’t use the brains aliotted to him for these purposes, ac- teach him dom _when he s too idert to learn it of limseif. T don’t knbw about that.. I-should say. that she pounds him if he gets in her ‘way, regardless, and best professfonal use of a farmer's brains is ‘to’ tedch him how to keep from umder.. Hbw that reading of the rules would | fit ‘the-strike contagion ~I' leave ' to| | President -American Bank: | To the smail dudtence able to arrtve | | in-spite ol deep mud and heavy mist | Sunday morning the pastor spoke from | the first ' chapter of Paul's letter to the | Romang. One child was:present, only | a_little;over 10 years-old, who walked along wdistance of over two miles each way, an example of real pluck which followed by all equally able would fll | the chfch at.every service. s The chutch school entertainment will | baig, Christmas night, and-a large | Chrk as plum pudding has been or- dered ¥or children- belonzing to the school and helping i the entertain- j ment. Fred :Meade has rétirned to his du- ties ‘fif ‘oharze of the fruit department] of the U. §. Experiment station, Dela* ware. Eddie Green, who has been serlously 1I1, is improving. but s not yet able to sif un. for anv length of time. The break in Archie Green's knit together so well that he ning to use his limbs agaln in g, Gybsy Smith meetines have tended by some from Westmi: are dmpressed with the cle ing. way in which .his wor Chirlsttans fn-name to become fact-and ‘the non-Christians to ¢ for’ Christ. This is Norwich. Tuesday evening " Mis" father, spake. Sérinture. passagesfor the Wod day, Deg, 17. home prav 18: ‘1-5and Like 2 Morrls French move house of Mrs. William E. T Mrs. York: Henry Graff has zene. to Néw Yor! to work for the winte~. M her bovs remain on the farm. Westminster Hill sthdol was Tuvesday, the teacher belng siclk Th~ resular teacher las* Tuesday wrs The W. C. T, U. union. met at M Wedrasdav afternoo Willle Parkhurs 181 Shotter. Mrs. Toulse Ravm Auring the holldey sen. w known firm" fn New York. The delaved Thanksgiv rived last Saturday, almost two4n hutwas. wholly removed by the rain o the night. * to dd. 1da Shor!er 1s” visiting of ' | “American Cotton. In . vlew of the many bales of cotton mow produced in America it {s interesting % recall that in 1784, eight bags, entered as Amerl- can. cotton, were seized at' Iiverpool could not have Nzen ‘produced In' the United States.. One sang sung amid a ‘storm s of more benefit to mankind than a w concert when the sun is-shining. millions of | “SWEET Sweet and low, sweet and low, Wind of the western sea;. - low, breathe and blow, Wind of the western sga; Over the rolling waters go, * Come from the dying moon and blow, B Low. "‘AND LOW” Blow him again tome, ' | While-my little-one, whnlemy pretty one sleeps. Sleep and rest, sleep and rest, ~ Father will come'to thee soon; Rest, rest, on mether’s breast, Father will come to thee soon; oo Father will come to his babe in-the ‘nest, Silver sails all out of Under the sitver.moo! Sleep,-my little one; s!eep, my pretty one, sleep. —Tennyson. the west, n, ey HUMOR OF THE DAY “Does she exerciss her voice very muc “Why, she makes i ments on - everything. clectioneering in the oid days,” “%¥ell, Congressman?” “But it looks like 1 gotta w: f 1 -Judge. I aidnt mind plowing when 1 was espeet to corral the wimmen: Greece of ‘today is a .countrvrof ap- proximately $5, 000 inhabitgnts. in a’ territory of about 44,700 squaye miles Black diamonds-conie trom’tle Pro- vince of ‘Bahia,” in' Brazil. ! fwenty thousand "dollars was ~paid. for the finest “specimen’ known. e | s During the last yea: 1,306 fires,, caused arettes * thrown ~awa thers were gars: ahd cig- N=w TYork ¢ Débuf Jeck's|alome. The average loss by “fiiu is quite an expert in the art of self de- $069, A Horge driven by Rev. U.iMyers, Second U\.bumnu:—HA-rd Marie | pastor of St,“Maithew’s Evangelical ade him propose in just ome weel.—|Lutheran church, of Catawissz, Pa. inburgh Scotsman. and stil! ‘itn good condition,” is 47 Jinks—We're pretty careful these years old. Saving to buy a housel Small balloons are sent yp. twice ks—\What does yourwife tuink|daily from 81 observing stations in the "United States to ascertain direc- Jgreat! She thinks we're|tion and velocity of aif currents for g to buy a new car.—Cartoons. |the guidance of aviators. 1.saw a.dog at the show the] A new French law has estended ayed with s nothin. at home that ul I jest found out what o, Hiram! What is 2" ne o' on the piano—Yonkers the lyceum have.'—Louis- hem forty-one- one enacted two yews ago permitting the use of saccharine and'other arti- ficial.and chemical sweeteners,” previ- ously ited in France. | At the beginnifig of a great con- | servation project in South Africa & ys dam is being bi across Sunday's . Doris|River that will impound sufficient oF Glaayes St pame, DOTiS | water to support 10,000 persons. |dedges ha work cut out| The governments department of agriculture in Jamalca is arousing in- | terest in dairying pursuits by the im- | portation of blooded cattle to mprove alf inary breeds of the island, and is_eucating farmers to the ben- efits of this industry. At present, dairymen are Tecelving profitable re- eck labor guys “that| g is goin’ to sell him T sty The dancer who won the prize for Long-haired CAa'xLADo you bel are the best gentleman waltzer at & Hallowe'en masquerade ball at Con- cordia, Kan,, and_who represénted s trim and natty doughboy. with two gold. cheyrons..onwhis sleeve-and. had no trouble copping the prettiest girls, was found when the masks were Te- moved, to be & young negro girl em- ployed " in"a Tlocal hotel. eve ers: Association - . | CoPTRIGHT PAESS u.unmnu Rickard 8. Haves, Vlee mhfi" ) of"the Firs: National Bank of &% Louls, and President of the Amer- * -ican Bankers' Association. Cereal That eeds No Su Delicious Flanrf No RaiseIn Prtce - At Grocers - Made by Postum Cereal Co. BatfleCreek‘Mlch