Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Norwich, Monday, THE WEATHER weather was generally fair v\m mnda‘rlta]y high pressure east “of the GET RELIEF WITHOUT FEAR AS|Tiiasusippi rive except in ‘BAYER PACMAGES” Tumpenmre- will and_Tuesday east i riveP-=nd the weather will Winds Off the Atlantic Coast North of Bandy ‘Hook—Moderate, reé:mln‘ south. ‘u it variable winds, f Southern New England: er warmer Monday in interior; 'ruuaw the same meaning us 14 Karat Both mean Genuine! or Tablets of Aspirin” should be taken ascording 1o the safe and proper directions in _each “Bayer” package. Be sure the “Bayer Cross” Is on pack- age and on tablets. Then you are get- ting the genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for over eighteen years for the rellef of Colds, Pain, "Toothach. Lumbage, Neuritis. For a few ceats you can yet a hlndy tin box M(llnll‘“ Druggists also se! packages. Aspirin is the lrtfll! mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceti- cacidester of Salicylicacid. Obllwdlunl in Norwich The following records, re The Bulletin's o changes in temperatupre nd_the baro- metric changes Saturday and s:nd.‘gr Rheumatism, Saturday's weather: Snow, clearing Probahly CHAPLAIN SODUNDS THE CALL TO K. OF C. AND OTHER MEN Prrdlv_!luns for Sunday: Before his sermon at the high mass " Sunday's weather. Fair, Warmer. in St Patrick's church Sunda Myles P. Gaivin at White Cros SUN, MOON AND TIDES the extreme northeast. Temperatures are general- Ti the reported from E‘riend.! of Irish COLLEGE’S FRENCH PLAY or R Predictions for Saturdayw Rain BRINGS $300 FOR LOUVAIN Imaginaire” a three act by Mollere, was pre-|erally are inte e Pre. | Shtton by the rtion inoreased as a national machine, says Representativ eho on the oom day evening under the ;u:}l::cea of l.h‘] French department an personal Carola E. direction of Mile. professor of Fremch at the ocollege. The_ performance, which was enu;ely i_High |l Moon University of Louvain, B 7:30 mass jn the church next S marching froa, h way In a body er Holy Comm Sets, ve their East- am | p.m |l a mT p m He stated that|_ S 8.54 | Abstinence and‘ y Henevolent Societ the two divisions of the A. O. H. aiso the Holy Name Soclety had been invited to join the Knights at that service, making next e b 3 the result of the svening. doctors, with titles but Iittl edge, assigned illness and diseases to susceptible patients, reaping harvests Sunday a special men's day for thel parieh, as a manifestation of practic- in making the Easter Six hours after Mgh water it is Jow ter ‘“ hich is followed by flood tide. TAFTVILLE Many local members of the K. { | attended ths meeting of_the K. of in Norwich Sunday afterncon and| Argan, in accordance with 1 | witnessed the exemplification of the Many of the villagers took advan- tage of the *fair weather of Sunday taking The Baster examinations begin this week at the Wequonnoo school M ira Yerrington wag pleasant- «d at her heme om Front street Saturday night by a number of . \nmerans games were{ “Malade” of his fad. Miss Anna Flaherty of New London, as Argan, the “malade imaginaire? who would rage and roar when told by members of his family there was. nothing the ‘trouble With him, who wanted attention' and insisted = upon having it. who finally eoneented to. his daughter’s love affair and realized the 5 folly of his imagination and {mpress Miss Idith Gross of Willipantic was|sionableness, played the part to per- i fection. Miss Marle Antoinette Tay- lor, also of New London, as Angelique, his daughter, was bewitching and es- pecially appealing in the love duet of Versailles{ Which she sang im the second act i 2 Cleante, her sajlent lover, played by ry of Hunter's avenue ‘has { Miss_Agnes Leahy of Norwich. The cast was well balanced and the production finished in all details, The The dog ar- | cOmplete cast was as follows: 1t 15| Argan, malade imaginaire, L Anna Fl;her‘tiy New Londrm. 21 15 a sledge dog, and is of pow- | Berline, second wife of Mr. Jarry prizes the dog Rith Connery, Nassua, - al Catholicity As chaplain of White Cross Council commented upon an organization ho counted in the next_and “"";wl spent the afternoon the members of the gantzations would 18 not lag in uphold- i wnor_of m».rl men of the church would be en: ucry one. baving s 008 for communior ). Sussler, while making a call up encountered one of. wo mud holes and had to be . the country reads being at- pres- -~ gty 400 mer Mas pplied parish, Norwich ¢ in the village yesterday. ie Heap of Voluntawn spent end at the home of her par- D WITH MAKING iN HCME-!TILL .mqu at the | was home over the week end the works Satur ing sent to him gmilling outfit Friday In good condition; for the mnnu(n(lurr of whiskey, revenue agents and is now stored at the custom house, ry of the stil on the by Patroiman was “tipped off” nitsky had caused the stalled in his home and facturing booze. admission to the place a still and a bottle of wh e been manufactured by XENS PREPARE FOR ey Suppoecd | The booze seized at the e had a very rned sugar, which is used for oring purposes as the ‘was transacted. J rhz\lr appointed ag nominating John B. Oat and Walter Cowan who will report at the next r annual meeting to be hela April 2. After adjournment a migeellanepus programme was well given, The com- t Earle Christman, Mrs. Arthur Armstrong, Miss Gladys Meiér O. Bjerk, haying this part ““""'K in charge. The pro-|than intermission. In Saturday’'s per- Voeal duet, | forrjance ther were three interludes. After the first act, a Marionette at. traction, with E'izaheth Hall, Haven, as Polichinelle, wus staged, and after the third act, at the conclu- sion of the play, the ¢eremony of in- stalling a doctor candidate for a doc- tor's. degres ' was presented, with president of the faeulty of medicine, doctors, apothecaries, and others, con- | Management. tributing to the mirt® and solemnity | Structive manufactured yeliowish-white celor when it is fresh made, the burn Parnitsky will be held a prisoner at the New London police taken to New Haven for trial. On Bryan Dinner Committee Parsons and reading, Mva. Gbser- 0. Christman; wood puzzies, vation puzzles, word puzzles, marsh- doll dressing, sistman serving the three oookies and coffee—closed delightful evening. ¥ n \2\& \flrk at Atdine club dinner upon “Bewarg one of the committee of arrapgements was Francis P. former Norwich young man, prominent In demoeratic Mrs. P:IOSPITAL NURSES ENJOY Mmston—Edward W. Bill EVENING OF DANGING | °ffhe oceasion. his farm for a few days recently, Mr. Saturday evening at hall the Backus -hospital nurses’ dancing class taught by N. H.!a Turkish dance, Levy made the class lesson a special as it was the last F. Leon = Hutchins, Miss Durr, Miss Palmerteer and Miss Denison were guests of the evening, enjoying the programme with Miss |department. = The A, thirty Hum- YOUR SHOES Sohan Don'’t simply throw them in to the first cobbler you come members of the class. was the pianist of the evening. Fae salisfoction, heing your Ashore on Block lsland. Shoes to sur Shoe Repairing o ous position, The crew were taken GOLDBLATT’S SHOE STORE 44 Franklin Street Telephone 714-4 Opto allays inflamation, in- vlgor-m, tones up the éyes. Nickel Plating |: KINDRED FINISHES UNITED METAL MFG. Norwich, Conn, Prompt and Satisfactory Work AUCTIONEER Buccssser to W. B. WILCOX Phene 405-5 Nerwich or Phone 531.3 Embalmer Post Offics, Norwich Town . “rompt Service Day or Night m‘, WILCOX around Argan, who “imaginary_sick men,” Who tended by doctors daily and treated for 1 C.{1ll health, believing himself ill when in reality he is in very geod health. C. . ummw John w. Burke; mun- onts 3 ton prm e ox\j“} el ’Nell, John and with fire; wi Ole fan is in hil Resolutions were adopted to l‘lpe .’l‘flfl ‘thoroughly L b 3 h‘: C Freeman otmqau tor recolnitlon of Ireland by the Unit- Sm JAMES J. MEOAN w Branch of the bonds, Arlve ond in el in the uounm BETTER RAIRGAD SERVICE COUNTS FOR CONNECTICUT | our creed we live. id New En d sented at Comneeticut College Satur- iyt h) e s are trangporta sional un-utu';: interatate com- in French, was for the Mallt merce. Representative sented the follows uanummr-' Ass, “u ig diffieykt for anyone ‘who di notnrvco‘meclo-mmucnln ter- state and Foreign Commerce to Dreciate the complexity and varlety of i mmtarests inyolved ,to every one of which the committes ' desired to do Justice. and yet it often happened that what seemed to be justice to one in would work injusti ‘This state of facts compromises in many detafis of the bill and also forced. t the conclusion that x.h railway legislation must be. P marily the interests of the railways, not of their samurity the shippers, considered as separate sure foundation on could Be built was to eensider railways and water ear- and it is estimated that about 0 w(ll be .uuunmt for turned over to the University Fund as lation of Can: The story of “Le Malade Imaginaire” is a satire on conditiens in Paris in the 17th century when profe llon?.l 1im; ary gilments -of patients actyally healthy and well. !"ho play centers ‘eommittee to basis for all French custom and authority, has be- trothed' his daughter, Angelique, Thomias Diafiorus, the son of a doct d and a prospective doctor himself, order to have a doctor In constant n,t- tendance on him. Angelique, however, ioves Cleante and refuses to marry the pedantie, uninteresting Diafiorus. To- inette, the maid, contributes the hu. mor of the play, with her oonspiraeles to help the lovers out and cure tl Holders, nor ef clagses, The Which & proper great 1 amsportation machine’ machine’ and to legisiate so that that machine could be made. effielent at the présent time and so that means could be afforded to inerease the ehha to meet the upon leatl;;es of the Nll as to ry !votkfi.ns it A]I&!lult tion and the fol- s:ugd“{hl( Lent m;- a Were eclested for “thel time. ticular) lhe hmubh. soft e 'na text was Luke 1L 17—John answered, saying unto all, T indeed baplize you wit quhr but Hisre GGuMA Lo m(‘lluu- than T the latchet of 'hon 0es T am not worthy to unloose; Shatt Daptizs ybu with the Holy Ghost threshing floor and gather 8 wheat into hig garner; but the chaff e Bill_sswy| he will burn with unquenchablo fire. In part he i R serious thinking. We ecannot live’on a set of blooming misms. Unrestrained x;g- optipism brings us up against som: hard facts of life, which it does not lve. It cannot blanket and cover down everything in hard and toi human experience or in thé ominous hints of seripture. Ther some cnominations of $5] brosd apsses. where fear better fiuog{e‘ 21 walkc and ring some warning notes. ‘We had better take some close fl;ncn at life's grim and ghastly facts; take ourselves tnto Interlocutory out our exact relation to those facts We had better at this Lenten season Te-esamine some of our bellefs and deepest convictions, for according to Is it not a time to re-examine our Christological thinking? We have been for a half century thinking of a meek and gentle Christ, amiable and easy-going, ready to make easy terms for all classes, overlooking or palliat- ing human weakness and human ob duracy, loving -everybody with indl tinguishable affection, all but blind Qll e ] The stringent rules and conditions of ethical distinctions, with the result of Pre.|a soft, invertehrate Christianity that the 3 discipleship which must be met as & impresses nobody and fails to dredge the depths of the soul itself. We have | defense against fallure and = eternal 4 | been thinking of a Christ as the ut- terer of euphemisms, a Christ of the tist whose winning fan {s in His hand in unquenchable fire? Have we not been merging the lion with the lamb Sermon. on the Mount to “blow so- teachings to “burn society to rags." He runxlm' down tables, casting out dev- GOLDBLATT’S SHOE STORE 44 FRANKLIN STREET NORWICH, CONN. MISS RUTH OHILD ON WINNING DEBATING TEAM ~—Oliver Wendell Holmes. Mt. Holyoke college debaters were, - Toss. o “the" titer— SPRING. The assertion everywhere that the high values of goftly _cadenced volee, an amiable Molgred ploes eing who walked the flelds of daffo- & 3 dils and the gardens of llies of the | the undetermined. His ‘hiolerance of old Galilee. Is it not time to remind | FLOEEY CRF ‘L“,';“",‘,":,,‘}: e e e and Austeri” | prize only to those who take crosses rightier than the denunciatory Bap.|2nd shoulder burdens and submit to ice to anoth- | i sacrifices and yield necessi death. and who will thoroughly purify His| 1. t Fhaiat ekt floor and will separate wheat from |3l these yast areas of human activity ehalf and burn uselessness and falsity | 823, no Terlls on these batilefields of the winners Bat e e nard, Wellesley, Vassar, Radciiffe colleges. Miss Ruth C. .'{{:;‘, sunshine Chilg of Putnam was a member of Dis s aleiey the Mt .Holyoke team which debated| A e:uu n-u me; at Wellesley, suj tive of the que the regognition of trades union: strenuotis aspir- His dismissal of the unfit and The offering of the Ts there no place for fear on We have been thrumming this one and forgetting that He could flame ;‘a“;{dcgrf“‘l‘;; Book of Revelatiop for a lorth in “white hot glistening wrath™ ’ S Diterary men, nat theologians like L L s b ohn Morley and Lowell, tell' us there ity it Ll g is -explosive material enough in ‘the | JiStite and righteousness we want o r P is run at sixes and sevens, with clety to piecest Gilbert Chestertan | ¥ o° . e s tells there is firo enough in Christ's | o undErElnding of laws just and righty tells us again that he has heen going | £¢%°5 t0.be dependable. 1o the four gospels for facts and that L pRRerss WES O he finds no soft-speeched Teacher BUt | ooteq in the fixed order of the world “an extraordinary. being-with lips of | Ot 0 the fred brder ©f e Wors thunder and acts of - lurid - deciston, & A A are the divine love, as if it Dale taught us it is for_the.r Uines. justice, holiness, and We want gur life 8in ‘passed b: FOETRY PROW Fraz secs < Mpnn Lhe g W aEs the pum- So when the irbm portal shuts benind Ana"Sire forgets us In ity noise ana Visions ’t shunned the glgring noon- And gl maering starlight shows th @ates of pearl - o 1 come not here.your morning hour to A H"-.n-tl_l pligrim, ieaning on the 1 -ho have never deemed it sin to Yumunmwbymy&&nufinu “Though &Ymfiohnnu, 1 upd OF Tine SnotheYs task has 1t h«& "Fuldance that it dares not But, o my gentle slsters, O my brow- These thick-sown snowfakes hint of These feeble pulses bid me leave to once 1 ""3. welcome; evening Time a'l:'fl:l his tribute; stience now 1 Let ll: ]la! wvex the too long suffer- 0ugh -0 your love umtiring stil! be- “lafir: oW tells me—cover up the Ml“:‘: affirma- stion, ed, mht 24 employer: ssential te guccesstul The spring brings the Sowers collective bargaining. PENN. ELECTRIC ROAD MEN AFTER SHORE LINE CARS| ust Two representatives fro mthe Pen-| Of, bi Seer Taitng. argyle, Peon, Electric Railway were —Bellview. ;‘t"ue::yhmak oA bape o devs m‘“ over CArs that are lets, with o view of purchese| HUMORS OF THE DAY Their car bargs were| “T am not quite certdin tha lost by fire and considerable -relling dahx Ty @ 0w that right, A b, “We all stock was burned. They left for New e Joia e d T York 10 arrange Tor the purchise. SPRING HAS ARRIVED ON SCHEDULED TIME Spring evidently arrived on time as Edith zhall have her volce traineg in Saturday was the last official day of Europe.” That bave slept ‘neath the snow, locked it were Ie‘~ Are beginnin, Al now IIO And T bid me not stay. oung man to spend so much money you" said the mother. "NL mamma, I have no intentien of marrying him."—Life. Mrs. Howles—Tve decided that Angelique, daughter of Argan, Toinette, servante, interludes between the aots, chamber of | second acts which was the. cesstul attraction of the evening was Wwith a permliere danseyse and six attendant du The students, taking part in the dane were trained by Miss Florence anw erly of the physical education depart- ment and are mnjor students in_the|A. Sunday afternoon a good sized costume | audienee listened with intense inter- was worn, trousers, jacket, and long|est to W. M. Hume, a Y. M. C. A, vell, each dancer wearing a different v ,who has played for'the class, | color costume. The danee was most effective and artistie, typically Turk- ish. and was heartify. encored by the Turkish audience. tronesses at the play. to_Connecticut inventors guege block; Wm. H. Fergyson, New Haven, tree hoider; Henry New .Britain, padicok; Charles W Ostrander, th(qd adjustabl er; Edwin H ‘Weber, l.(oe;dm. 4uln greates lamp bracke u;rra%e M&rkfl-—r{h& Balts Textlls 8. mfls‘ ory M‘llfll’lifl-c!!l!' B. lha;:fmc.t mn pianos; The Ulmer wH' !.uuwr + Norwich, leather belting. MOTHER GRAY'! PowDERS BENEFIT MANY CHILDREN Thousands of mol‘hafl hlve found Mother- rau!’r weeét B g o ach ubles and ot ties from which ich ehildren these days, and exceliént results accomplished by its use. Used mothers for over 30 years. druggists everywhere, the matier of an supreme matters of rates and of la- hm\ were: fn" view. mwm gy of (iumw&hu‘: ’ fi g ol g K R S unduly and flnmly thl the no argument t nxm:-mn" angry God, bit alwavs like a.ged” followers that they sell thelr ¢oat and buy a sword for 8 long and desperate easy-going, soft-pedalling lives. inno- vqnuenduflunsputt-nm- hree years to show the eost of de- navieze of tag) and aad 1o work/ told us all the severe things about life, ‘,;"51. tor mauufltcwre ‘::-d a large| cipleship and told us that He had no part of its food tvr operatives, “It is in Bflefii ’zzl "{,g:“ iivay | overcomers e said-we must cruejfy our selfishness and seek His affairs Marie A. Taylor, New London, ia A1 Louison, younger sister of Angelique. Elizabeth Hall, New Haven, ELECTION OF OFFICERS| Reralde. Argan's brother, p at the| Marguerite Lowenstein, New York, large attendance at thel Sieante, Angelique's jover, the absence of ; e ¢ mhpe Monsiery Diafoirus, doctor, B A vice, prealdanc Mies ot een oy, Nvaok, X. ¥ '3 4 0, €| Thomas Diafiorus. his son, approval of reports special busi Marjorie Carlison, Tvoryton, Monsieur Purgon. Argan's doctor, Jeanette Sperry, Chicaga. INl; * Mongicur Fleurs#t. apothicaire, Caroline A. Black, coliege faculty Monsieur _de"Bonnefoi, notarie, Dorothy Pavne, New Haven, od. cars ,uy‘ m;'a,"‘.mm unto laying down our lives, ed by manufacturers with their best cooperation and efforts. “Espeefally in this time of trans- ition, when the ordinar ‘management are compl Agnes Leahy, Norwich, difticulties of cated by spe- ulties _due. to uece!!!a.ryf re- P r:mnds'a:dg‘efi },‘;’ck"“f;:‘fr" o;’,:- true or falge, are His teaching, so that the ‘utmost farbearance be shown to the roads and as littlé as possible should ‘be added to their ‘troubles and embarrassments by minar claims and minor dlspules over Helen Clarke. Omaha. Neb,, ‘21 | Matters which could . well he passed A featyre of the play was the French bv dnd whieh will “Our own great Nef Haven system has beeii and is still suffering for the sins and mistakes of former man- ement. Tiis 's only another reason 3 enoperation with 'YINg to correct the results of tnose time correct of the roads under exi result finally Anything more teansportation, or mare. eorriptin: The interlude number between the [Teilway management and the country, or menacing to the very constitution | itself, T cannot imagin: “fl TELLS Y. M. C. A. AUDIENCE OF NEEDS OF INDIA At the men's service at the Y. M. C, secretary from India, who described with the aid of the stereopticon life in India, in various 't us’ phases. tures iliustrated the hablts peaple, ‘espectally their religious hab- its; also the part lndlan soldiers played in the wor)d wal ks most lmpnrh.nl ime " to]d in an impres- the needs of India. He said there was much -poverty and illi- teraey among the people; 10 per cent. of the men can ru Though the millions largely M , vet silc: .ah‘%?-‘}?“""“ il The eostumes used in the play, Were The schooner Jere G. Shaw, bound|very striking and in accord with from Haiti to New York, is ashore on | SPirit of the 17th century. Block Island, having struck during a blinding snow storm Saturday. The performuance was most success- ful from every point of view and sreat vessel is reported in a most danger-|Sredit is due fo the director and to <l participating in te presentation. off In breaches deviges. The Shaw| Miss Louise Howe, Mrs. Robert W. wag laden with West Indies wood and | Perkins and Mrs. Joseph Henry Sel- with tropical fruits and the cargo is of great value, EYES INFLAMED ? If your eyes are inflamed, weak, tired or overworked; if they ache; if picture shows make them feé] dry.and strain- ed, gey a bottle of Bon-Opto tablsts from your druggst, rlissolve one in a fourth or a glass of water :l' wrl:te. und o den. of this city were among the pa- Df’l In‘;xlndr:rds thels thetr religion. teach s many lessons, and !.he sne&ker said that they are walting to ‘e ‘ghown- the way to. Jesus Ch 15;, and we in America mast show a inferest in these people whose poz- sibliities are so great. and more endeavor to give them our Christian religion. Several pictures of the Indian gol- @iers’ In the world 'ur were shown, and pietures of Y. for’ dm.'n ‘were SPECIAL TRADE MARK ISSUED TO NORWICH INDUSTRY The following patents Wfii!lued ‘We myst more latt, Bridgeport, eleotrie switch; Bcoru B. Thos. and C. E, Anderson, udmort, and use as sacket; George W. h froan two to four times a ord, (2) typewriting mu:hln Carlos, Ruiz, Hartford, valye grind. ing dovice; Curtis I’ Veodor, Hart- ford, inudicator for magazine : — Doctors say Bon-Opto t rtford strengthens eye sight §0-per cent. In o | Sr¥ant i Tleod, ' Hartford, week's time in many instanees. GAGER Fumeral Director C, A war work thrown upon sign | the men of !ndja “who fought wu{l the a new eq,&c.gunn of life and of them will ;mg back ‘fo Th- ese new conéeptis In clalin' Mr. e iation “d er in declarative form in parables V‘fl 91‘ read.- And there 'is that inferential ’ teaching, the overtones which underiie n uu! um T lur be. ewteahtor L i ive ‘the. ission g?a‘*fir. ""W Fo g I»mg é&‘“ yelfare e city, when the fl! !esl:latlan for the protection ~of Sold , chfldrml born out of Wedmck was dis- cent aof sacrifice and cufltless of cross- es, wou'd be interesting to know. No: Jesus Christ is' not an amiable person Had He been amiable He weuld have offended nohody, would never have been lied ahout or crucified. Now it was this sort of Christ who who laid down hard conditions of dis- manner of use for any but heroes and first and foremost, live, but live for Him, make a fortune, but make it for Him, make sacrifices for. Him, even It was He that told us that sin was dangerous business, both in this world and the world fo come.. All the se- verities of the Bible are His severities, all_the Biblical teaching about the separation of classes and about the | night to which sinful men are headed, we had betfer turn our sneers. away from theologians. We had better think of some of these ‘bedridden truths” of which Coleridge speaks, and Lent is a rood time. Our long conspiracy of silence had better be broken up. The hiéet is reappearing. A company eof B'hle students lately, when asked to ehoose their subfect. chose this ome Tesus was incessantly speaking of sin and guilt and the perfl of it all. We have been busy punging the record nd washing the slate and writing our verdict of 'human life and denying with endless reiteration that there is any such thing as the dsteat of Divine ove. Without appeal to medieval exag- geration or the more lurid and plain- spoken parables and dogmatic teach- ing of the gospels, we might look ahout us as simple observers of human life and then ask are the facts of lifa in harmony with those ~dogmatic teachings of Jesus? ;: £ 1. We need only observe the Work- ing of sinful life. The spoliation of all the tender and beautiful things In character. The deep furrows it plows in human faces and human careers. The fading of vision, the hardening of hearts, the petrifaction of feeling, the hiding of truth, the biind-staggering of the intellect, the eclipse of the spiritual world which once brooded over men. Or we might appeal to experience. The hunting, "haunting pursuit of old transgression. The coming back of old ghostly apparitions. The upsurg- ing of that unconscious world -the subliminal self in dreams and in shad- ewed hours, revealing a world of pos- sible evil which s the most frightful thing in life which may well drive us to the Fountain of Bleod and of Life, from whence the cleansing alone can com, 2.- Then there is the aminous test!- mony of science. Science is a close obgerver of the facts of life, busy gathering “facts and dedueing laws ‘which are a bit discongerting to a self- complaisant eptimism, It tells us with | knitted brow of the tendency to the ! fixity of type. Telling us that where | there is ervor in the !ame there is the ' stroke of judgment and that in nature | there are no backward steps and no | remedial agencies ahd no reversal of | processes. Her laws do not restore the lapsed: The tyranny of type is.inex- arable if you are shut up to nature or | nature’s religion. Huxley will tell yon that the fixed order of natire may well inspire* fear and give us concern. Seci- ence blows a trumpet as loud and re- sonant as that of the angel of judg- ment, We wopld do well to examine our religlous creed and see i 1t squares with the cosmos. I Then there 15 the teaching of the didatic utterances whieh @i may all his teaching. on all subject TIis declared migsion te sin and’ its conse- quent dangers.. The danger aignals He places everywhere by the . roadside. e Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA Where the. jots, and titles count. and it ils, “vaisine ‘the dend. acting like an | HBETE W€ SR8 BEQ SHCQ COVRE ARG ternly recoenizes. calling Himself a sword of slaughter | ¥ 1 ere to restore a kingdom of order and and a leaping fire, demanding of His A LA R B g o the submissive sublect, but He will ; cast out of His Kingdom everything campaign. ‘Whit He thinks of our (go~¢ ORF 00 18, SCOACH some who are not entering His kine. dom- and will not if they- resent His conditions and woe he to him who re- sists and refuses and then dies in his at all.‘for aminbleness 1 weakness. | 5o ° Thé great Tvanee! provision for all nerils, baimy air helped the ‘big storm of indications are that the will 500n be green and trees 3004 budaiug- _Presented Daniglson Petition (Special to The Bulletin) Washington, Mareh 21.—Among resented in the senate by carge P. Molean was one from Little Bobbie while at the Killingly Womas's club of Dan- N ielson favoring the passage of an wet bu ter and poiitely said “T} to provide for .the promotion of voca- tional educatinn; of God makes | these menaces and The neril 1s not the last word. The grace of GoA has brought. salva- *ion to all who believe and can save to the uttermost all who come unto God by Him. ties; to provide Black Hall-Edwara Hopper recent-l ly slipped on the ice and cracked his e e Picture Tells PROVIDENCE il Var; ;“. hes Oils an rus! 5 Franklin St Preston Bros. Ine. AND FOCKFT 40 Frankiin 8t, B We Cain Chairs n the finest way s Need a Plumber? 2t wholesale and nu.on a'mw Ma 23 Viater Street Telenhone 8578 e C. B. ELDRED 42, Broadway GLASS — PUTTY — .PAINT Hardware — Tools — Cutlery Examine our line of Aluminum Ware THE HOUSENOLD' Bulletin Building, 74_Franklin Street MOTOR FREIGHT SERVICE (All Goods Covered by Insurance During Transit) NORWICH-—~PROVIDENCE—NEW LONDON—~PUTNAM FALL RIVER-—-NEW BEDFORD and Connecting Points EqUIPMENT—N!NTEEN ?IEHCE ARROW TRUC '3 E. P. WINWARD & SON 17 WILLIAM STREET 135 WATER STREET NEV/ BEDFORD NORWICH 492 SOUTH MAIN STREET PROVIDENCE Phone Union 3842 188-142 D"RFE! S’Im Sunday’s warm gunghine and Ho_les—“Certainly; but isn't therc dwindle the some place in- Asia?"—Boston Tran- iles and thick ice that have seript. sidewalks since ypy Gth, and trivotous things and take an interest dear, you ought to pass u in deep subjects. Take hist instance, Here is an interest) The lady was & trifle ginterested. “How ~ was it trmmed? she in- inquired.—Kansas City Journal, a friends house was given mplece of hread =i ok you." Bobble,” = said - the “That’ ght, to provide-for-eo-neich or; “I like to hear little boys operation with the state in promotion say ‘Thank you.” of such education in_agriculture and the trades and ini for -eooperation with the State in the the bread. preparation of teschers of vocatio- al subjeets and for “he supervision ‘of the appropriation for these purposes. “Well,” sald Bolbie, “iIf you want me to say it again put some jam on Exchange. |, tWell," said her husband, “dig you ]XAI» the house? i “Which ene?" “Why, the one that was described as averlooking a splendid garden, richly adorhed with statutes, in which we- would be at liberty to prome- nade? i d4id not® she returned in dl gusted tones. “It was a cemetery. ~—Boston Transcript. A headlin runs: “Why don’t bache- Jors ma That's so—why don't they? Come to think, we have never et geen 8 bachelor who was married. t's remarkable!—Exchanges Any drink that makes a man “kick the bucket” has a Ittle too much “kck” n t—Syracuse Post-Standard. “k.ck in iL—Syracuse Post-Standard. “He was ber third husband. Pgor KALEIDOSCOPE Bones of 100" mastodons and twen- ty elephants were dug out of one bog in Kentucky. German is spoken with greater pur- p'}' in Huour than in any other part the country. 4! The bull and the cow are sscred animals to the Hindoo and are never killed for food. A single bakery in London bakes more than 70.000.000 two-pound loaves of bread a year, An Austrian inventor has given a piano a slightly curved keyboard so a player can reach all parts of ft with equal eflort. The inventor of a new motor for alrcraft says that twenty power im- ;uu-i are imparted at regular inter- vals for every revolution. unu» river n put in oper- t Astoria, Ore. The mill has& dany upully of 4,000 barrels of flowr, The first manufacture of paj flom Hifien rags has been attrii to the Moors of Spain. at dates nu- from before the tenth century to the year 1470. Out of every 12500 men, one may be spared to see his hundredth birth- day, while nearly three . out.of the same number of women will complete their centiry. - Awmerican interests are planning to iobtain electric power from a water= i all-in Venezusia that has o drep of 3,373 feet, belleved to be the second | Mighest on the continent. A ¢ompact but -~ complete tieket selling booth on wheels, which can be moved by a horse (0 anv point where 1t is needed. is the invesiion of a resident of Oakland, Cal. The worid's production of crude pe- ?o]eum in thg iast sixty-two years as exceeded 1000900000 metric tons. of which the United States has vielded more than 61 per cent- |, The first church oremn in Boston was put into Kine's chapel in 1731, it that for seven mo-th . packed In the vestibhle of the oh! Textile “mills at - Lod's Po" reported by the Prit'sh ee commission 10 he en—parasical damaged, and r-valls o almost immedi~ o * | ton were obtafnable. 'The tensus taker in a littie westsrn town, at the solicitation of the Wwaited ¢ #everal hours before o) his lists for the birth of a babe. The population figures of the village were thereby increased from 399 to 400.