Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 15, 1909, Page 4

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Harwich Bulletis and Goudies, 113 YEARS OLD. Entered ot the Postornoe at Norwioh. Conn., cs secCnd-c.ase zatter. Eulletin Editorial Rooms, Bulletiu Job Office, *5-§. imantie Otfice Rtoom 2 Murray Blds Telephone 210. e = Norwich, Friday, Jan. 16, 1909. THE SECRET SERVICE HUBBUB. The people of the country are rather surprised by the fuss congress is mak- ing over the secret service, and won- dering why, in the first place, the servants of the people should have refused to voté money for its support. The segret service is a corps of trained detectives at first intended for detection of customs frauds and coun- terfeiting. Other departments of the national government made use of these experts to detect crime wherever sus- pected. Congress refused tq allow fur- ther appropriations for these later uses and brought forward three reasons for its refusal. First, that the service was intended only for customs frauds and 6 prevent counterfeiting. Second, it was expensive. Third, and they first stated this themselves, as the Con- gressional Record shows, congressmen suspected they themselves might be investigated. ‘Why should honest men be afrald of détectives? Why should not the gov- ernment be free to ferret out erime against ftself and the people wherever it can find it? Thers is only one good reason why an honest representative should fear sueh a system, and that Is that they may be used against them as the de- testive system s said to Thave been used against Congressman George L. Lilley; and this would be a good reason had not com- mittees of congress been using detec- tives to shadow, annoy and report their own colleagues to sustaln sus- pected motives. “This is a wrong use of a detective agnecy, whether it is done by congres- sional committees or the administra- tion, and The Bulletin blames no one for being atraid of and opposed to such a use of detectives. The correct use of a detective bu- reau s as important as necessary, and there is no reason why the adminis- tration should not be encouraged in hunting down a wrongdoer whether he 18 in c ess, in the departments, in | the mints, or the postoffices of the country. It has been very properly inquired since some meémbers of congress have alleged that the dignity of that body has been seriously impaired, “What Iind of a dignity is it that cannot stand the limelight?” ‘What would ‘be said of President Roosevelt should he veto a bill sup- perting the secret service simply be- cause the detectives had been shad- owing him? Congress and the people would re- gard that as a very suspiclous ecir- cumstance, wouldn't they? If he ¢ elalmed his dignity had been insulted 4t might be thought that his dignity ‘was not what it should be. # All congressmen are not irrational. Bome of them must be taking the right wiew of the present situation. LINES OF ABSURDITY. ‘We doubt If there he a nation on earth so governed by fads and whims @s our wn, Nature s said to abhor vacuum and it would sometim seem as if there were hardly any sibllity of silliness which some Amer- doans did not embrace, One of the latest of American fads Is the breakfast” habit. We may well imag- dne that the notion was borrowed from the French, who sit up all night, dine jate and go have little inclination for food until the noon lunch hour. . But for people who retire at a s eonable hour and have to rise early Hn the morning and work in our stim- ulating climate, this “no breakfast” doctrine is the sheerest nonsense. Under normal conditions one's tbreakfast should be one of the best /meals of the day—the foundation, so o speak, of the day’s labor. It is only two weeks ago that we met a youhg lady who works for her living, who sald that she never ate any breakfast. 8he had somehow got hold of this fad @nd was pursuing it. Whether she has continued in it we are not informed. But if she has we are perfectly pre- @ared to anticipate her as finally anae- mic and forced to abandon her fad. There seems to be no limit to the crankisms of people, It needs only the merest suggestion to carry into any given line of i Newburyport News Bditor Smith should try things be- | fore he is 50 positive of their absurd- iy, The editor of The Bulletin has been without his breakfast for fifteen years and herome anaemi and those who know him best declare that they believe 1t has sa wnd these opinions are those who will not adopt the method, which has ten thousanHl times proved to be deneficial. Many people have been u able to thus deprive themselves be- cause they regarded “breakfast as the Dest meal”; and man is so given to dndulgence that many have backslid- den after having been greatly benefited By the practice. The people of Greece eat but two meals a day and more centenarlans are to be found in that country than in any other. The “no breakfast habit” is all the rage in Chi- na, Australln and New Zealand, well as in parts of this country. 18 not an absurdity, brother, for good results are self-evident, has not 1t its Bvery man does not find pleasure in ®aving his name in the paper. Tt Jooks well n a marriage notice, but there are many places in which it is positively annoying, The energy that finds out things wrouses the most intense antagonism from the respectable sources which bave things in concealment that will mot bear the light. & measure before its allow a saloon with- £ & schoolhouse. Such most city saloons Senator ?n was annoyed by the Rooseveltlan word-hinge. He wouldn't be satisfied with the hinges of Hades, if they did not work double, Since France has gone back to the guillotine it would not be strange It ' #many good heads should fall into the | @asket before it is again abolished. | The snow of Thursday morning right, it it is ot destined to with ug long, JOINED THE CALAMITY HOWLERS No one in Connecticut need be sur- prised to learn that George L. Fox of New Haven, the active persecutor as well as prosecutor of Lilley, has joined the opponents of the Panama canal, of whom Pouitney Bigelow is a con- spicious leader, and pronounces this great and popular enterprise “the monumental folly of the age." Criticising Mr. Fox's conduct, a Boston paper says: 'y “This is no time for Mr. Fox's ‘ar- ticle. The United States has embark- ed on the good ship Panama, and it will complete the voyage even if its st reaches the six hundred milloin dollars which Mr. Fox estimates, What it the expense of the canal's mainte- nance does greatly exceed any possis ble earnings from its operation? Who will call for a retreat? It is entirely possible that we shall become more ( sympathetic as we go on with the French company which proposed to Juild a sea-level canal for one hundred and two million dollars, actually sink- ing on the less expensive lock con- struction two hundred and fifty mil- lion dollars, only to find that this was 50 little nearer a successful consum- mation than when the work began that it was ready to sell out to Uncle Sam for forty miljion dollars. We n eventually acknowledge that graft and incompetency were probably not such large factors in this total as we once thought they were, The United States wants the canal as a military necesi- ty and as an adjunct to its commer- cial development, The price in such ircumstances is of relatively small account. The American people make very little criticism of public expen- Gitures. This was therefore a good time for putting through so stupen- | dous a plece of work.” IRISH LED IN IMMIGRATION. The report of Commissioner Bill- ings of Boston shows a great falling off in the number of immigrants ar- riving at that port in 1908. There was a-total of 3 9 allens landed in the twelve months. This was a lrn‘m"n-‘ dous decrease over the previous year | when the total 80,244, The figures | for the different nationalities show that | once more the Irish race leads in the number of arrivals at Boston, just as it did a few years ago, with the English next and the Italians relegated to third position. The continental races | | stood the burden of decrease in ar- rivals, the percentages of falling oft last year over 1907 being Poles, 90 per cent.; Hebrews, 70 per cent.; Greeks, S0 per cent.; Italians, 64 per cent.; English, 45 per cent.; Scoteh, 52 { per cent., and Irish, 38 per cent. The chief factor in the strong showing of the Irish race unquestionably Is that about two-thirds of the Irish arrivals were women, most of them domestic Inasmuch as the head tax levied on | allens last year was $400, the head- tax receipts of the Boston station were $130,636. More than half of the num- ber of aliens landed declared their de- tinations as places in Massachusetts, | the exact r Island got mber being 17,901 Connecticut 3 Rhode Ver- mont 264, Maine 543, New Hampshire 442, and Ne York 2,060. The remainder were destined to ev- ery be % state in the union md for Alaska and v represented cotch numbered 1,818, 1,940, the Hebrews 1,330, the English 675, the Irish 6,845, the Italians 6,038, and the Greeks 309. and four were 9 for Hawalii. nations—the the Portuguese EDITORIAL NOTES. Taft was not surprised by the 321 votes the electoral college passed over to him on Monday. | it The fine paving upon which a good | horse cannot find sure footing is not 0 good as It looks, s that “no lady ever 1l he- please prove that hira was not a All things congidered, It must be mitted that Senator Tillman mani- fested excel self-control in his own defense. Many legisl measures are” de- signed to improve the estate of the designer rather than to improve the statutes. orwich has never caught the fever f a boulevard, yet; but it is more | than pr: ble that it will get a seiz- ure some da, Californi; passing legisla- tion, and classes fay it will *find it some day wor cetrimental to their interests, All the good old stories about Abe Lincoln are being brought out once more for revenue a y never brought more money. It the Con try h evidence takes an interest in it, nnot be said that nobody ressional Re reads The coun Roosevelt nat The Indiana editor who advises con- gress to ignore the president has not vet awakened to t ct that Roose- elt cannot be ign Happy thought for today: The world will have it that while a go-as- you-please boiler I8 a failure, a go- ou-please man is a succes: Billy Sunday is of the opinion that Chicago corresponds to Hades, and since a minister of that cit vs hell 18 on earth, per npaithe is right. BRANDEGEE'S ELE&:'IZION. Won Against Great Odds. Upon the result Mr ted Brande, be won it a odds, against and wor opposition, y manner which was both clean And it is more probable would rather have lost, while puttire up the kind of fight than to won and had laid at his door son of the methods which were doubtl. off had t control. used inst him—and whic Hill would have heade ttle not gone beyond his - as the state Is co: be congratulated. erned, it Ansonia A Reputation Above Calumny. Those who voted for Mr. Brandegee 1 rest assured th o0se reputation 1s abo oven if his record is not ny conspicuously brilllant achievements. It not vigorously dis- puted by his friends that he had not made the most of his opportunities in the halls of tae senate in Washing. ton. But as to the ability which he possesses there Is no doubt.—Middle- town Sun. Too Unfair for Success. 'he hunt on Senator Brandegee of Connecticut scems to have been a litthe too ho and in spots unfair to give it the best prospects of success, especially on its newspaner side. Congressman Hiil would have made a better senator, but some of his supporters were not as wise as serpents. The people like fair play, and the dispositién (o boss needs to be curbed. But perhaps the success SOME BIG CROWDS ARE CON- SULTING STOMACH ORACL Cooper Says General Sale Has Made No with the babyish pretty girl. “It seemed perfectly good Th irl P oo candy. 1 gave it to the cook” mouth and ‘fluffy hair tilted her chin b e—" an stut- a trifie higher as she greeted the young | o E2Ve— the youns Q: man wito had just entered.. He had| “Yes” said the pretty girl, \With ris- ing color in her cheeks, “as it wasn't for me, and I didh’t know to whom it did belong, I couldn’ eat it. So I gave it to Nora.” jauntily raeched for her whole hand, and what he got was the mere tips of her fingers. SHm e said as the titted ohin | "rile Yopng man looked at her speech- = ¢ Call took another tilt, “My,"but you're al- | jegg N tiis ot he allers. Utudinous hie” ecening!” e added. Nandkerchiet she fiasned s, sard which Difference In Number o “Wiat's happened him, and he - "The pretty girl languldly. seated er- | 25, Sllently” extended fo Alttough the much discussed medi- | boing treated by six different physt self and brushed from her skirt a speck | *wihat card” sald the pretty girl fm- | ¢ine is now on sale at all druggists | cia SR o Of dust which wasmt there. “What | personaiie “wae with the candy. it's(in New York, there has apparently | -y trouble has aigest and rheumatism. I was also generally run down and suffered trom nervousness. 1 also had paipitation of the heart, caused by gas that would form in my stomach as soon 25 1 aw anything. It is impossible to describe how miserable I have been these years, or how hard 1 have tried to get been no let-up in the crowds that are calling at the store where Cooper is meeting the public. 1In speaking Monday of his extra- ordinary success in New York, Cooper #aid: “The majority of the people who are now calling to get my medi- cine have been sent here by friends. lid you say?” she inquired, with faint Interest The young man saw that the case was serious, “I say, Mabel,” he pro- tested, “what's wrons “Nothing," said the pretty girl, and stared at the radiator. The young man changed his position your calling card—and you've written on it, ‘Coals to Newcastle—sweets to Vera! I suppose you send out candy boxes by the half dozen at a time in- sted of just to me, as you've said! You've just ben decelving me all this time! And I don’t know any one n-n- | named Vera—and I don’t w-w-want to i “ ; ; I got this medicine my n clearcd his throat. “You act 0— | and I hate her anyhow—and don't you | There is nothing the matter with nine | well. When 5 quaer, o sald, , argumentatively. | aace tre o swplalnt The ecok got Ve. | out of tem people who are. in poor | health was completely shattered. My Not liké youself—ydur own sWeet, | ra's candy, and it served her right!” |health but stomach trouble, brought|husband has ma about by over-feeding and little out- | trouble for a door exercise. I can proye“this in a few weeks to anyone who tries Coop- er's New Discovery. As soon as I have proved it and they no longer feel tired and dull and nervous, they tell The yeung man was_staring grimly at the card. “Oh—er—I see!” he mur- mured lamely as his brain whizzed, seeking a way out. “I'm glad you do!” flashed the pretty girl. “So do I! I see you don't really ar. It got so bad this past winter t{:t he had swelling of the joints and limbs. When I first brought the medicine home he said that I was foolish, as it would do me no good. After I had taken it for two " said the young man, | v ch better that he 1 that ‘I must have dome | pare a bit abour me—and when vou | their friends about it, and that beats | weeks I was so mu ; rome:hing. Or that you thini T've done | said T was the only girl in the world | anything I could say on the subject. | got some and n:fienalxol:goic‘.“g: thing. Well, T haven'tl You'ré | you were fibbing—and 1 don't care| “I thought when I put my medicine | 3ot better "'f;’,’ o o dead wrong! Tell me what you mistak- | anyhow! But needn’t try to ex—"| on sale generally in New York there | he was mt]ln! & m el g oy k It is T have doné and I'll Ncw, Mabel!” insicted the harassed | would be a let-up at this store, but | ing had all gone away. "t took TF | young man. apparently there are just as many | weeks before the rieumatiom end The pretty girl eyed him coldly. | * “Oh, you needn't!” repeated the| calling to talk with ‘me as ever.| nervousnces 1o0f mb, O CACUEL Ottt “You ean’t explain,” she told him in | young woman. “I gnow all the things| People have not yet realized they can |and felt bet -ra; X T her cvenest tone. “You did it and|vou'd say—that Vera waé some girl|get the medicine wherever _they | week I am now pertectiy VA S TUE # a1l there is about it! I'm surpris- | vou were under obligations to for a|choose. I shall continue to meet the | heartily and "f v lll"‘uet anl: o » think that you would even try to | party invitation or something and the | public at thls store during the rest|ach. 1 have gaine flesh and feel strong and energetic. explain st andy didn't mean anyth®T# more than | of my stay in New York.” He “But 1 can!” interrupted the young | that—or that she was your cousin—or | Among statements made for publi- | MYy husband ‘,fi,a“:‘;{",;";}?:r"fli‘:;mfln main determinedis. *If youll only stop | that it was a bet or something 1ike | cation on~ Monday by New Yorkers S no longer troubled with indigoction long cnough to tell me what' Why, T've | that! I know just what you would #ay | who are strongly In fuvor of Coopers |2nd sleeps as he hiaf not Beer ADE (0 thought of you every minute! I—Say, | for an excuse’ I'll never forgive you!" | theory ana medicine was the foliowing | for @ long tim or. We think this didn’t you get that box of chocolates I by Mrs. Charles Trensch, of 37 Des- | ten vears yosueer. & sent yom yesterday?" “Now, Mabel” sald the young man, | j;rosces street, who said: *No one | medicine is marvelous. T pretty girl surveyed him as| “pa sensible!” ¥ Cooper’s New Discovery is now on though he were a new and not partic- ularly druggists everywhere, sale at_ leadin; v £ upon request, The pretty girl stopped twisting her oroniet: ae ald v We will send free, handkerchief. “Well” she said vehe- s inte ing specimen of insect 1 g0t the box of chocolates,” she ad- | mently, “why don’t you explain instead treatise by Mr. Cooper, ‘deicrgb}l‘ns,;g: greed. of Just sitting there? How did that|yearg’ constant sickniess, and my hus- | frue cause of most Il health =whe “Well,” sald the young man, who felt | card to that Vera thing get in my box|jand is also in perfect health after | Cooper Medicine Co., Dayton, 9 e had s truck the trail at last, “they reren’t joaded with dynamite or arsen- ic, wers they? Didn't the ribbon they gere tiedup with match the dress you of candy? What's your excuse?" The young man surveyed her gloom- fly and _gave up the struggle. “The reason that card was there,” he said, Rome will inhabitants. be 1933) when once a million will re have known in time the senator might hav in the caucus.— | . s e had on when thev,came? Or maybe | “was just because I made a fool mis- | had thrce more ¥ores Whole quarters are to be demolished you didn't like the pattern of the lace | take and mixed the cards up. That's | NeW Brit : tunnels built and ylewpoints marred. paper over them? Confide in me!” why—if you really must know!™ T S R Dr. Albert Zacher,/in the Frankfurter “T'd joke if 1 were you!" breathed| The pretty girl gigarded his a long WHAT THE PAPERS SAY. Zeitang, notes that art circles in Rome the pretty girl, resentfully. “Nothing | instant. “Well!! sN& breathed, “Well! are greatly stifred, but that, he main- is serious to you! Tt's just what I|Of all the frankne: Anyhow vou were His opinifon is tains, not enough. el s fhe.vou | R te1) vme a#hi6 Veta s and an abos: hat foreigners must raise an outcr: “Mabel,” sald the young man, stern- | Now, tall me who Vera is and all about| 1t Charles F. Prooker is to be the || e Rome, like other Eu me American}: “Therefore a enprotest! The Alma Urbs is in danger! Let no one object that the well tell me first as vhat was wrong about that can- We'll talk a Is she prett ot a bit!" her. er, chairman of republican na- | 1 committee, Jt is superfluous for | yry in this Naugatuck who | ut foregiveness lat- | next tion 11 d the wise young he candy was all right,” said the man in renewed hope—Chicago News. | know him and his career to say that|jiaijang will proudly resent foreign in- no better choice could possibly be | ren ith an Italia fara da se! I SRRy s - made. Mr. Brooker represents first of | ahs ‘Rome Js our city—for won {n puiling Governor Lilley througn | spring forth kinetic energy of real|all character, then Dus ability, | elongs to the whole civilized ibgo far to even up the record of the political year across the border. As | for Frank B. Brandegee, he ought to | merit hefore his six vears in the sen- ate have been completed. This is to be hoped hecause ff it happens the peo- then patri selfish inter principles_and not | Science Not Sport. make the most of his mew chance In | ple of this state and nation will be|honors. He has been an influence fee ; the way of sincreased industry and | the gainers—Torrington Register. Sutive nationkl shmbaietn MIBE 10 | TR an oo e thore breadth of view In public matters, i was one of the thr ou ad | for the school childre - 2 Springficld Republican: Abundant Attractiveness. most to do with the management of king Mr. Roosevelt not to kill 5 Sk Mr. Brandeges had it In him four | to cararalan of 1904 that — elected | in Africa. They don't seem A Foregone Conclusion. years ago to fill a great office well. | hoocovell: had perhaps an even more | heard that it's to be a purely Presumably he still has the power, and 1 for the benefit of It has been as nearly as possible a important place in the camr ientific_expedi foregone conclusion from the first that | the opportunity is renewed to him by | 1a0¢ go atural, since | the Smithsonjan institution, with a Frank B. Brandegee would be elected | kind Providence. He is a man of | choe i Connecticut little_side amusement thrown to succeed himself in the United States | abundan personal attractiveness and| eounted for so much i senate. The legislature of Connectlout | ho mean Intellectual ability. Connec- | fheiands suppors for ¥ be expected to do the right thing X; it has a Y'U!h; n“] d”'“ar:? h"( »hi’“ i There | 10! deal — en the right thing is as clearly de- | that six years from now, e is a | wneth Joker would be SRR AT .. i d as {6 was. this case, Elere was|candidate for re-slection, e shall | Snother Mr. Brooker ' "furke in: | He—Would vou like to take s svin a brilllant young man who had already | have some stronger argument In his | jerects (0 t Diacs of | ¥ith me on the bridie path? '8 served his freshman term in the sen- | favor than his desire for a chance. If| ihairman nt the [ Church or parl vl Ao ate, and had arrived at the point where | anything can wake him up, it will be |, opapitity Wares — - he ‘might step out and assert himselt | the protest that his present re-election | Puri” Amertcan. | - in that staid old body so jealous of its | has encountered.—Hartford Courant. i Wb Does lt cure old_time traditions. This young man | Offensive Things Said.” e st in. Home ! had filled out acceptably the unexpired,| 1he campaign has ben’a clean one| 1ne World's Interest i B term of the late great Senator Orville| on the Brandegee side and it has been | . Sicilly, b Bty Not because It Is Sarsaparilla, H. Platt, and shortly before the time | £i1e° Cloan on M. Hill's side. Thera | Rome e ruified? Con t but because It Is a medicine of for a new election. a movement Wwas | ware some things said about the New | has seized the lovers of the pictu - oy sprung to leave him at home and fill{ y snaon senator that were a bit offen- | esaue and the antique in that city peculiar merlt, compose: his place with a man who had just| cive things that ought not to h cause of a new plan for demolishing | gnan twenty different remedial foen To clepad foc his eI (0 feari kat, And Wiille: they "eyinembN the f8maing of tho ""| agents effecting phenomenal the house of representatives, the Hon. | gig not affect the vote, they must have ] (he Rens cures of troubles of the blood, .| stomach, liver and bowels. Thus Hood’s Sarsaparilla cures serof- Shenezer J. Hill, & ve soned by long experi. nd a Ameri Aug! million predicted that spulation of v able man, sea- | 1ce in the hous: der in that body.—Waterbury n. annoyed and possibly hurt Mr. Bran- degée personally. Such things should have no place in a political campaign. w Britain Herald. 188 In it would e a p 2 3 . in reality, it is 560,000, Within the last | ula, eczema, anemia, catarrh, nervous- A Serious Mistake Avoided. Might Have Made a Difference. | {hirty years so many ch 1have | poct that tired feeling, dyspepeis, loss The state will retain in the house The Hartford Times says that Sen-| heen made that seve cts have | D055 . i!d’ the system. an abje member of the ways and|ator Brandegee is a decendant of become unrecognizah new plan \ of appetite, and builds up the sy: -~ meand commitgee jn Congressman Hill, | cob Brandegee, one of the early set-|is intended to provida for the time | Get it foday ia the usual liquid form ox whose speclal knowledge of the tariff | tlers of New Britain. Had that been| (which at the present raie of increase | chocolated tablet form called Sarsatabs. will valuable asset for Con n the new congress which v the tari; ecti- Il re With Mr. Hill a new in the senate, and a new man in house in Hill's plage, Connecticut interests must have suffered. It would have been practically creating two ecancles in the congressional delegation. It might be years before the state could get anothier member of the way and me committee, to say nothin of a member so admirably fitted for the position as Mr. Hill, thus making the defeat of Brandegee and the elec- tion of Hill a serious and, perhaps, costly mistake.—Meriden Record. A Genuine Vote of Confidence. New Londey is gratifiea that its townsman will continue for a long se- ries of years in the senate, a term in which, liis friends are confident, he will Overcoats develop ab v and useful: sat- isfactorily that his future will be as- A LOT OF $15.00 AND $20.00 OVERCOATS, CASH OR CREDIT sured. W extend to the senator the congratulatio of his fellow towns- men. His T is opening wider and his opportunities will be many to prove that tha vote of Tuesday was a genu- fne vote of confidence.—New London Telegraph. A Fit Man—A Clean Record. There is rone who can say that nator Brandezee not a fit man » Unjted States senate; for he is n record and clean ehar- fact cannot be questioned ung and may be possessed of potential strength from which shall “BABY AND | WERE GURED BY FATHER JOHN'S \ “Baby Had a Cold and | Had Lung Troible. Now We Are Zoth Strong and Well,” letter from Niagara Youths’ Overcoats A LOT OF $15.00 OVERCOATS, ALL SIZES, CASH OR CREDIT $7.50 Women’s Coats $10.00, $12.00, $15.00 WOMEN’S COATS, SPECIAL VALUES, CASH OR CREDIT |] $7.50 Boys’ Suits LOT OF BOYS’ SUITS, $4.00, $5.00 AND $6.00 VALUES, TO CLOSE OUT $1.50 re Fa ge Colquhow says: T was T Rele T i O ago | ALL OTHER GOODS MARKED AT HALF PRICES. with lung trouble and was not able to do any work at Finally 1 decided | to give Futher Johw's Medicine a trial and it has helped me wonderfully. I recommended Father John's Medicine to every one who has a cold. I am sending you a picture son. He had a bad cold, and 1 give great praise to your medicine, for it stopped his cough and cured him. I would not be without your medidgine in the house for I think it is wonder- ful.’ (Signed) Geo. Colquhow, 746 10th Steeet, Niagara Falls, N. Y. Remember, not a’ patent mediéine. No polsonous drugs or alcohol. Fifty years in use Prevents pucumonia and consumption, f myself and 29-31 Shetucket Street 29-31 Shetucket Street MONDAY, January 18th TAYLOR 'STOCK CO. MATINEES: Monday “ .. s ...From Farm to Factory Carmen THIS WEFK—EXCEPT TUESDAY. The Fenberg Stock Co. PRESENTING LATEST NEW YORK SUCCESSES. Friday.... ..The King and Queen of Gamblers Batvrday......The Hawk and 3he SJve e W P .Lost to the World | Friday.......The Milllonaire’'s Ravengo Saturday. .The Life of an Actress (Drides: olc“' 20c and 30c. Matinees | geats now on sald. 1 ailew’ tiikets Monday might, i6c. | o Cur® 10 411 pofnte atter the perdortesd Cars to all points after the perform- ancy OIS | i bt bR Roderiek Theatre , " ""“"n"“"s. suva o mowwema. e (YAl and Receplion TURES and ILLUSTRATED SONGS. 0:’“"‘ '. J““r’ “‘.' Change of programme every Mon- day and ‘Thursday. with the- first children dancers in the Continuous performance from 2 to| State. They will take part in % 5 and 7 to 10 p. m. Solo Dances. ADMISSION 5 CENTS. Don't miss the famous $10,000 Meve 327 Main Street, opp. Post Office. | elty Snow Dance. A Sure Hit. 4 janl4d jan7d J SHEEDY’S "ot ety 215, 7, 846 January VAllflflllI.[ EDGAR FOREMAN & CO. PRESENTING THE HIGH CLASS .lld BINGING COMEDY PLAYLET, b 1 “A DUEL OF HEART. M“““E MAE CROCKER, MISS JUNE ROSSMORE, Pletured Melodies. Singing Comedicane. r'umfl[s RENO AND SMITH, Astonlish! Acrobatie D Ladies and Children PICTURES CHANGED JAMES F. DREW Fiano Tuning and Repairing Best Work Only, ‘Phone 422-3. 18 Perkine Awes swr-y. Maher’s Schoo! For Dancing, T. A. AND B. HALL, €2 Broadway, Norwich, Conn. Dancing every rxmnhy :;x: aturday When vou Phivate loatons i1h Welts, Two-stesy. IT y Et’; ‘u(lnny ‘h7wxur Classes ndwl; happen upon clephons 411~ pol EXPERT TUNING a loaf of bread that|.. ' rovas, ihe olane. 41 % ok Fuarasteed’ tastes “like more,” it’s o 3§ ot i most certain that the|mame xies neyang schoot ot Fiane Drop a postal and I'l] call. flour is responsible. | c=is Phone 518 It’s safe to assume F.C.GEER | TUNER nine times in ten that 122 Prospect St, Tel, 889-5. Norwich, O\ the name of that Flour is Cut Prices on Parlor Stoves and Ranges. ereso a The balance of the stook will be sold at reduced prices. Buy now and save money. PARLOR STOVES 25.00 Stoves reduced to 00 Stoves reduced to $15.00 .00 Stoves reduced to $12.00 Stoves redueed to buys a 17 Jewel Hamilton 31375 Stoves reduced to movement in a 20-year gold o “m‘:’xd:::t:"‘.' 2 $2.75 Heaters reduced to ... .78 $10.00 | m nouriaan buys a Waltham movemen 62-66 Main Street. in a 20-year gold filled case. | Telohone 184 S FERCUSON & CHARBONNEAD,| ™. a seseomm e e s'un' Tr-v-la: :A:..o.u.” Livery commested, dec30a SHETUCKET STREEY. Caterer and Restanrant, M__ DELICIOUS §7 Broadway. ! """ PEPSIN GUM no=27d THZ GUN WITH THE LASTING PEPPERMINT PLAVOR'S O ALUMINUM BOXER. Dr. Louise Franklin Miner, 6 @ NERVE SPECIALIST |y vmm Room 23 ., . . Ohannon Bullding | FOR THE BREATH. CLEAR THE THROATS, Office hours A0 to 8. Tel 660. 10° ALUMINUM BOKES, P { GTON TAFFY STERILIZED & & 10° TURES. q SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE. 3 5¢ a bottle $1.50 a dozen | Ll T ons A & ot o e ol 863 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. DUNN’S PHARMACY, f Is There Anything the Matter 50 Main Street. With Your Feet ? jansd goo mé. TTa compernion sith S vtk massage troatment. SCall Al sot DO IT NOW S e T ob, is the bhest thing any Dforfly owner decid 734 u"nln‘fllool‘:oflm. can do. Don’t wait until cold, bad § weather comes before making n sary fall repairs. If you have new ¥ work begin today by geiting our s | A Fine Assortment of YOUNG, o S waed «... MILLINERY . wl{mr Jo8 wln’:“w‘ ut y‘ou;;,\;n.: at ifttle prices. g 2 i R 1 A RSP S I

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