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ards every day in the mation of this unfortunate clas e abscrintion price, 12 @ week: S0 4 month; $6.00 a yea lem, Conn., cs ewccnd-c..es xatter. Bulletin Businass Office, 480. ‘Willimantie Office Room 2 Murray Bldg Telephone 210. Norwich, Saturday, Jan, 23, 1909. bust health simpler achievement than to reclalm a rounder. sesssennessasens: H iThe Circulation of i The Bulletin. liwass N Mot T The Bulletin has the largest cir- # | this respect; and those who have been icululofi of any paper in Eastern }|in the hospital werk aver that method %Cunnectlcut, and from three to fou: is no worker of miracles. 5 Yow it is belleved that the farm Umes larger than that of any I w it is v colony for confirmed Inebriates is the 9 o over §| COlony 3?;;';"2*:» e e Nor. §| best and most promising recourse for . . 4 success in treating these cases. The wich, and read by ninety-three peri| .. il o commit confirmed inebri- § cent. of the people. In Wind ates to the farm for an indefinite pe- % it 1s dolivered to over 900 houses. | riog and to work them steadily in the 2.n Putnam and Danfelson to over ¥| open al 1,100, and in all of these places : The best work possible is belleved % is considered the local datly. | to be in taking cape of the boya It is Sonmecticut has forty- 3| alleged that the person who has nol n::"l::r‘u P S irad and sixty. || created the drink hablt before he is . 2% is not likely to. To protect minors five post office districts and forty g St A __ H o keep them from cultivating a one rural free delivery routes. irst for liquor 1s the surest way of The Bulletin is .Olhd :: _;"9;)31 sing the number of inebriates, % town and on all of the y routes in Fastern Connectlcut. who, a New York justice declares, CIRCULATION are “a greater social menace than Sioneses MR 5,920 3 1907, aver-g-u.m.4..,...7'|79 TRYING TO CAPTURE A NATION- AL PARK. San Francisco comes into play too as a disturber of the public 1901, average r nearly fifteen years the author- there have been attempting to t possession of the Hetchy-Hetchy valley in the Yosemite national vark with its lake for a city water supply. The is about three and a half miles long and of width varying from one-quarter to three-quarters of a January 16.... which It is an almost perfect dupli- | cation, it is, perhaps, the most beauti- | ful tract of land ir the people’s pos- | session, The Hon. Blihu Root does not take| There are fourteen other sources Xindly to inquisitive factions who de- | from whic an ¥ isco can ob- mand that a senator should clearly|tain a water supply. Secretary Gar- define his position for the benefit of | field does not contend that this is “the the people, best and most available supply for The Rural New Yorker, having chal- | the city,” as he had it in the first lenged him upon agricultural interests, | copy of his decision. revising it, he, In the course of his reply, said: | he struck out the words “the best and T do mot want to go Into a kind of | most,” inserting in p:n writing other eivil service examination regarding my | words to make it rcad “a desirable fitness for the senate. It would be|and available supply hard to put a limit on that sort of| In order that the grant made by process If it wero once begun, and if | Secretary Garfield may not be revo- carried very far it would result in|cable at the pleasure of any future what T think would be the wrong way | secretary of the interior, a bill has to select a senator. It seems to me|been introduced in‘o congress by that the way to do that s to select a | which the city hopss to secure the man who is so well known to the peo- | possession of this val'ey forever. ple of the state that they can have( Since this would shut out all camp- confidence in his good sense to find | ers and tourists from this magnificent out what their interests are and his| national reserve, a protest has been Joyalty to promote them. When men | raised inst this disposition being get to answering questions put to them | made of such a valuable plece of prop for the purpose of determining wheth- | erty. er the people shall favor them for of- Why should the government convey fice, the temptation s very strong to | without cost to San Franciseo public make the sort of answers that the|property with water rights valutd at people are supposed to want, and I|$10,000,0007 do not think it is at all certain that| i the best and most honest men would | TWO WAYS OF BEING CORRUPT. ¢ome out at the top of such an ex- The tilt between ¥resident Roose- amination.” velt and Senator Tillman has led Col Elthu Root fafled to meet the ex-|lier's Weekl lose its investi- pectation of these inquirers, of course, | gations o outh Carolina_state but he was elected and will stand|dispensary, a great moral institution Righer in the estimation of all other |for which Tillman stood as sponsor, slasses. Subserviency does not fit men | and through which Tillman was bene- ¢ large capabllities. Their Integrit and the whisky firms in five years robbed ce millions. Collfer’ pnd scholarship and public record ught to be enough to satisfy the peo- | ple. EVIDENCE OF RACE SUICIDE. no evidence that Tillman money by this wholesale No one attempts to deny that the hi was political. @ay of large families has gone by, | The dispensary graft held all the small and it Is a fact that familles with|and oliticans true as steel peven childten are not as common | There is evidence, ver, beyond Jow as were families with twelve and | mere probability, to Indicate that Till- Bifteen two generations ago. " knew what was going on. Long A writer for the Atlantic Monthly upon this theme, calls attention o the fact that In the days of Pra Jin the average was six children in the American family. This writer for the before the original commission began ts work on the great moral institu- Tillman appointed an acquaint- med Font to the state constab- slary, which existed to protect and U tlantic, noting | police the d ary. As Font rose the steady decrease here, = that | § he learned the taking 1900 as indicative there are :n | wor the dispensary a three-fourths as|and he wrote Tillman a letter charg- many children in proportion to hus-|ing most of the corrupt practises bands and wives as there were forty | which have since been proved, Till- years ago. This statement is added an anded that letter over to his “Were the old rate of the middle of | nephew, James H. Tillman, the man the century sustained there would be|who shot N. G. Gonzales, and James 15,000 more births yearly in the state | Tillman pigeonholed it. After the com- of Massachusetts than now occu 5 0240 I iae of '« contury the Dropor-| tho Gy el orod How. rottey tion of our entire population consist- | when no politiclan was so h A ing of children under the age of ten, | jegend it. Jai has fallen from one-third te ome- | po o quarter. This, for the whole United States, Is equivalent to the loss of | mission of 190 » hardy as to , James Tillman, with some f virtue, turned over that let- ter to the commission. There are two . s eamvaunt vays of being corrupt in politics. One e is to take the money yourself; the THE RESULT OF THE EARTH.|otier 1s to shut your eves and ‘lot the 1 ys have their bit.’" A QUAKE. | iR TG IE The great earthquake In Italy has | EDITORIAL NOTES. #0 unsettled affairs in a large Tegion | Ir the truth is told about Fe X of country that the suffering Deople | hat is a piace where. meohiiion oo must find new homes and means of N xadbit sl i subsistence elsewhere; and it is es- 7 i timated that from 150,000 to 200,000 Iowa has glorified work by naming ¢ will seek homes in this country dur-|a town af-er it ¢ find ing the present year. Sk Bl el It is not strange that the turn to —————eeee— the copntry from which their coun-| If congress will get right down to trymefi have sent millions to the old < it will no r feel the smart country every year for many vears; | of the Roc thrusts. and which has been estimated to have - — reached about $60,000,000 in a single ording to Horace Fletcher, only year of late. The country which could | sweetness waits upon digestion; bil- respond so quickly with millions to| fous words are a check to it alleviate distress must indeed be an ol inviting land. Edgar Allan Poe does no care To view of these statements, it is| whether some swriters think. that he wnought possible that a million and a | belongs to literary set or mot. half of aliens may seek homes and e - % employment in America during 1909, chusetts which, consbwring the prnspfii(s. is n{'\ffi;mu"” the greatest menace unskilled labor | are has been called upon to face for many years. The recovery from the panfe has been steady, but slow, and the build- ing of railroads and construction in general is at a low ebb, 8o that labor does not seem to be as abundant @s the influx of such an additional population woul® require. There is a great demand in the country for faithful and efficient| . workers in the agricultural districts,| T0¢ BIfl Whose father's check fs and many thousands of them could |2°0d for a million does not have to find employment in the agricultura] | P4"K on beauty methods to get a states. beau Since the country always has been| able o take care of it immigrants| The Mexican fs regarded as the it is not likely that 1909 will mark|™missing link. He can dine with a an exception to its ability to care for | M4k man or with a white one with 4 equal grace is having a season sleighing and the sleighbells e a-jingling in all parts of the state. Happy thought for today: who find pleasure i of Those the misfortunes erable themselves. President Roosevelt has added 600,- 000 acres more to the Humboldt na- tiopal forest preserve in northern Ne- vada. | Crooks can no longer find refuge in| A Philadelphia defendant in a MHonduras, for under the latest treaty ( breach of promise suit was charged #hay may be extradited from there. | with having ecaten hundreds of sup- DEALING WITH THE INESRIATES Some one has said that “the round- er is the finished product of the sa- 100n”; and with more than 200,000 saloons in this coantry making drunk. ar, the refor- has become a great ind abiding prob- Dr, Henry Grahem Furday, who is Enterea 3t the Postormn Norwiel. | . the head of 3 New York mission settlement, declares that it is a more difficult ‘asi to reform a chronic Bulletin Editorial Rooms, 3 drunkard than it is to cure a_tuber- Bulletiu Job Offlce. 35-8. culosis patient in an advanced stage of the disease. To transform a con- — —= | sumptive into a person of fairly ro- strikes Dr. Furday as a Most of the states are moving for the establishment of immense and expensive reformatories to try to stem the tide of ruin which flows from the H o 7,500 mile, Next to the Yosemite valley, of said: “The kingdom of God is within vou”; but His hearers did not wider- who writes better than I can says: you see children building a sand cas- sand into sh; built and the moats are made and the towers are up, and the whole thing is finished, the joy ceases. All you have to do then is to wait for the tide to come up and wash it away. Heaven is in doing things. Karth is Heaven when jove ig in the heart. When peo- ple are only going to find Heaven aft- er they nre dead, they have missed the 'bus!” The joy of doing is Heav- en, for from it only can come the joy of being. Do not expect to find Heaven upon a map—it cannot be charted, Once in a great while we have in winter a reign of Crystal, and then we witness a_sight which excels in its glittering beauty the variegated hues of autumnal foliage. When the trees und the shrubs are arraved in jewels and the whole landscape is a-glitter with the shimmering colors of ~the nbow--when from the trees and the shrubs flash the most beautiful greens and reds under the sun’s magic touch, then it is we realize that the jewels in the crown of no earthly King com- pare for brilllancy, for limpid splendor, with these evanescent creations of God, The Crystal King divides hon- ors with no one when it comes to clothing in pellucid beauty the com- monest_objects and imparting to them the radiating quality of emeralds, car- buncles and diamonds, It is from such scenes as these that the mind of man has been able to imagine scenes in fairyland—to dream of the delights of Heaven. We men expect our mates to take “the stitch in time to save nine” while we decline to sift the ashes or to cut out the beer in the interest of economy Now a one-sided economy can never be ship-shape—ean never work well anywhere. Some of us men o expect the women to mend their vs mend our own ways just as we mend the fences—not wlien we can do it with a hammer and a nail, but when it is necessary to send for a carpen- ter. Thrift is only the outcome of Jonest co-operation. The family upon which the domestic harness sets com- fortably and which keeps up an even pull for better conditions is the one that gets on. Turning odds and ends to an account is not solely a woman’s work, brethren, although many dul- Jards think it is, Hard-luck stories wre always heard in the family where the pull is not even—that family is an incubator for hard luck. Get consist- ent and then insistent and you will get on better, A great many reformers would have all men made after one model. If the Almighty had wanted that kind of a race He could have created it. There is nothing that would be more dis- creditable to mankind than a dead such a condition, just as nature is in abhorring a vacuum. The man with- out talents or any marked ambition is likely to find obscurity in the mass. It is our peculiarities and distinctive abliities which individualize us. It Is e ( ¢ of every man to be true to hmself and to be loyal to his own con- victions. He bullds up his own I-am- ness by consciousness of his own abil- ity—by faith in his own power. It is differentiation that makes man inter- esting. There are few duplicates in nature. The average man is spoken man is hard to find, and when found is not worth discovery. The man of character and purpose—his own char- acter and purpose—is what the world needs. When we see the well dressed chil- dren of today on their wiy to school we w er what has become of the boys who used to wear suits whittled out of the clothes father used to wear. There was a time, after the civil war, when those old en-gray _colored overcoats da ore on the Potomac were made ind worn with pride or three boys In the old clothes men got 3 galns in those good old days when the least worn part of dad's trousers used to be mada into vests and jackets, and when one pair of | hoots were expected to fit half the family. Tt hse BTOV ng boys were hap- | py 1ads. if they did not look so slick e of the boy W as the bovs do now, have made great me b o gets into a family with a line of boys head has a poor show even now for w clothes, but he has got a living h' all the rest of them, and s not =0 uncommon that he that as last gets to be first. If _man is the only creature that hyena #nd the laughing loon, or the horse laugh? The laugh represents surging emotions, perhaps, but T have often asked myself if there Is any- thing =o dsti to man’s haw-haw, why the ass was set ever against him with his he-haw! I never could an- swer this self imposed inquiry. There are many kinds of laughter. and per- sons who lose control of their emo- tions sometimes laugh when they should cry. A ringing laugh of jov beats an ordinary laugh of amusement to death. A laugh is sometimes con- taglous and will spread faster than the measies can: but it is of short dura tion, and in the concrete it is simply representative of a merry soul. It is a eenial Infuence, but it Is ephemeral —it 1acks staying qua There never yet was a man who es- sayed to kill time who was not in peril. Killing time is a fool's occu- pation. As a plain matter of fact, time kills all who att pt to trifle with it —time outlasts us all. Time not only makes the head hoary, but It makes places vacant and even makes ages ient. Every person who ever ven- tured to kil time has not only been a failure in that, but in everything else he has undertaken. Halley's com- pers at the expense of the fair plain- tift, but he got off for $500, A negro 104 years of age registered as a voter in Philadelphia the other day. He has not lost his Interest in public affairs, The cow in most popular demand just now in Atlanta is the one that gives near-beer. Straight milk 1s not in much demand. The pledge of a purse of $75,000 has put Jeffries in a talking mood, and it is certainly an incitement for him to re-enter the ri An Italian historlan has just told the Chicagoans that Cleopatra had a visage like a rofled mother-in-law. How does he know We are now told that catching a cold is catching a germ from the un- ventilated rooms we occup: More than likely this is so Taft, in his talk to the girls, did not tell them matrimony was their only resort. He said they could be suc- cessful without marrying, {THE WA Wi 1ALAS 1§ That is a very old question of yours, Jane: Where do I suppose Heaven is? That inquiry was made and an- swered 2,000 years ago by One who stand, and most of the world has been asking this question ever since, One “Heaven is here and now; Heaven 1is a state, not a place. Heaven is in getting there, not in being there, When tlc on the beach, you realize that. The joy of digging and piling up the wet pe and form, is where the joy comes. When the walls are the level. Man is warranted in abhorring of by statisticians, but the average T hy do we talk of the laughing ability to write powerful stories of ab “What's your opinion of this heredi- ty?" asked the bill clerk suddenly of the cashier. “Is there anything fo it or Is it a fake? I see there's quite a burch of the high-brows fall for it.” “I am of the opinion that there is much to sustain the theory, my young friend,” said the cashler. ' “There is little doubt that. the good and evil qualities of ‘the human race are trans- mitted from generation to-generation. It is true that environment has its ef- fect also. I have noticed a marked amelforation of certain regrettable tendencies of yours since you have been in daily assoclation with me, for instance, but we are largely what our ancestors make us. Now, my great- grandfather, my grandfather and my father were all men of remarkable beauty physically and their mental powers were far above the average. Of myself I say nothing. Modesty was also a marked characteristic of my father, my grandfather and my great- grandfather. “I know they say it skips a genera- tion every once in a while,” sald the bill clerk. *“That may account for it. ‘Why this sudden interest in a sub- ject entirely unconnected with the of- fice routine, Johnny?" asked the cash- ier. “Are you beginning to notice any of your own little ldiosyncrasies? 1 don’t want to pry into your family history, but you understand, of course, that dur proclivities are not ne ri- ly afforded the same opportunities for development in successive descents. It you have an ancestor who suffered the | extreme penalty of the law for sheep | stealing it doesn’t follow that you will be hanged for a like offense. You m have a penchant for petit larceny and yet circumstances may render petit larceny unnecessary in your case. Cheer up, my dear boy. “It's hard to be cheerful when you get to shooting off your mouth,” said | Yo! the bill clerk. “I'm not worrying about | can’t keep Arabella in a_cool place | myself, though. What I was wonder- | sealed up in a glass far. ing was whether a fellow took after |to change: but male or the female side of tne|ually that you'll never notice it. so go | right ahead.” “You're about the biggest * said the bill clerk, disgust- | Chicago News. house. B i, T s e g, taking into oconsid- b e e+ ne. w i and desire, Ome e o reiors going | HIGH CLASS MOVING PICTURES into the temptations and scruggles of AND ILLUSTRATED SONGS. the day will be equipped to fight the d.'rne programme for ]Thurld-y Fri- % and Saturday will ridal ating bovks—anily’a frés. | AT snd, Setuedey will ve ' “Eriéel| wepk OF JANUARY S5tk tion of the good and helpful volumes | ya)igtic Seance,” “Magic Vapor,” “The Ira W. Jackson Presents that have lately been issued, but in | Coward.” LARA TURNE R such books as these and many more| Mr O'Neil will sing the fantastic In- CLA - ! t be linkea with them, are|gjan pallard “Rainbow. and a Superb Cormeny In Repertolre. quickening for all who Will| "ontinuous performance from 3 to | Mon. Mat—The Artists Model THE PARSON. ——— PERSUNS TALKED ABOUT. Dennis Sullivan, who for many years made shoes for the governors of thode BUY A BOTTLE OF Tours, Ev in Providence, ( A t ON HEREDITY. his father it he gets to be a man and doesn’t use a razor. probability s strong that by the time she's 20 she'll be taking a certain in- terest in dress and dry goods adver- tisements in the papers; eration a Wi Teahe's & ginl the |, F1ve interet thoughtfully. “Well, I don't know what “Bend the energles of your massive intellect to the invoice file,” suggested “That's something you can manage without any’ great strain. When in doubt try to do something to earn your salary. “Do you think we change as we grow older?’ persisted the bill clerk. Td hate to discourage you by say- % that 1 didn’t” replidd the cashier. the cashier. aged 85 years. A Methodist pred-her, Dr. E. W. Al- derson of Terrell, Texas, took the prize {on golden Wyandotte chickenh at a re- | ppae § WILSON, 78 Franklin | *Sondiy evening, iadies might. 300 Yowll have considerably more |cent poultry show sense ten years from now, in all prob- Wisdom_ increases and follles fall from us with the hair on the tops of our head: sweeten and our hearts soften. Age is a great improver, my son.” don’t know,’ Madame Emma Calve, prima donna, has been under the care of a throat| THERE Is no advertising medium in specialist in Savannah for four days, | Eastern Connecticut equal to The Bul- tren Ao i |although her condition is mot at ali |letin for business results. £aid the bill clerk | Joseph Schmldt, 64, is @ pupil at one of the public Fairview, | is one of the Washington | ploneérs and is just learning how to | that 1 thought was improved by age. They get crankier and gabbie As for girls—women 1l tell you about “I ‘expect she'll turn out to pe a great deal like her mother. have the same double chin and a sim- ilar_false front and artificial unintéresting | things in the same way, without tne You take the some evening when sk him if the young w doesm't romind him a great deal of her she was a girl. John D. Rockefeller and party, num- - bering 14 persoms, have arrived at Au- an I l an Ga., for a stay of several weeks. | JACKSON AMUSEMENT 0. p y ' The party includes Mir: : and Miss McCormick S. L. Spellman least doubt. g ! L. R. Wilfley, former judge of the court at Shanghal, Chi- i ncisco trom | 66 " t on the liner Manchuria en Cew York, having resigned his | 9 fon voluntarily, United State (na, has arrived at San F) mother when, ! realize that he's | That's the only com- - Crichton-Browne, the } Ny excellent cast of 30, including PLSA RYAN, famous English physician, is not In tav- | lf Grau, Sam Reed, Ralph' Morgan, Marle Gerard and Lily Hall. or of teaching childre se their le with their right the course of a lecture, he | nst am- can’t get around heredity 5 | | hands equally Some- | PRICES. | time ago, in | made gome strong remarks a bidexterity. She's bqund I come so grad- “It depands on whether a fellow is a | girl or a boy” said the cashier. “If |ever saw. he's a boy he'll have whiskers just like ' edly. ven Hedin says that the great- | It of his recent journely to Thi- of a mountain ERTR et which is making 500 miles a min- ute,” can't peat time. Time has moré than four dimensions, and there ls no evidence that it has an end There was a time when the sea boiled like a cauldron and the earth was redhot, and the atmosphere was not. Time crly relative, perhaps, but mo clvil engineer has been able to measure it —it laps over everything but eternity. William, what ever made you think I had anything against ancestors? Do you know that 1 had to have them— that I couldn't help myself. I have traced the line back to the dark age of my family, and I do not remember discovering that one had been in jail though as human beings run, several of them may have deserved to be. 1 haven't anything against ancestors, and I would as soon you had 10,000 to my one, as not. I do not care how proud you feel of them; and I hope you are striving to make a record that will make vou an honorable rep- resentative, of them; but some people have a habit of rattling ancestral bones to attract attention to them- selv they are not capable of homoring. I have no respect for these rattlers of ancestral bones, Willlam, and I am willing all the world should know it. A good prayer is that we may be blind to the faults of others and be wide awake to our own weaknesses. Then instead of thinking what a bad neighbor we have we may find our- s wondering if he really has a good neighbor. ~DIid you ever think how rarely we hear anvone speak of | the faultlessness of others? It has been said that “When a woman boasts | f heroic work as medical of a perfectly faultless husband it is always safe to ask gently, ‘How long has he been dead?” By this sien it would seem as If all the favltless hus- bands, like the good Indiaus, are the dead ones, A man will look at a wo- man and say that “chalk and rouge give a pretty glow to a plain face"; and then a woman will glance at a man and remark that “a_little co; ceit covers a multitude of masculine imperfections” We have no trouble in lool looking in, If we only could see our- selves we should see that we are not so different from others NOAY MORNING TALK 3 “oseesceesisrcecenecsisassasanasessasesscans: FIVE GOOD BOOKS. Since the first of last September hundreds of books have come from the presses. What becomes of them all? * Will anybody be reading any of them a hundred years hence? What proportion can be classified as real literature? Such questions as these are for the critic and the professor to answer, but a parson may venture to seleot a fow from the great abundance and tell how they have refreshed and strengthened his spirit. And when he speaks of good books please do not expect a catalogue of “goody goody” volumes, but “good” in the sense, of virile, pulsing with life, charged with ozone and tonic. I begin where nearly every man be- gins who reads books today in the realm of fiction, and 1 selected two of |the great outstnding novels of the ar, one by an Amierican woman and | the other by an English woman, both of whom, in my judgment, liave = peers and no superiors in point of sorbing interest. Both of these work: are altke In being essentially painful | and in having as their chief motif the portraval of the influence of woman's passionate love and devotion poured forth without stint upon a man east leagues below lang, west, whi “Lewis Rand” depicted a Virginian of a cent her in the mo: Its passes average higher than those of the Him- the fatal flaw in w Dr. Zaharin, who has just died In of over ost famous eccentric of when he Czar Alexan- Zaharin his of his all all thrown of in in the next room, ntinu- Ancient Oratory Recipe. t a speech, ngratulated upon its oratory. What is your recipe for one of the love $1,000,000, w In both stories we how the outpouring of part of a j fection on the of conscience, may at last lift up and to some extent redeem of the man on whom t! 1 to be kept out of the t love Is lav- tories with a new ing, arrived and save it different kind J. Dawson's his dream of what a Christian minister mi if he were only %, or ‘to secure positions in life | Geim the t brave enough achings of his Master e es natural,” ough, one | fi ke | for it, old Job Walmby's, but it filled case ants to be a public speyker, | rangements made by phone 422-3, or . /13 s Tockhe $10.00 J. J. KENNEDY, 117 Main St a am'm. t mov 4 [ it thable and open buys a Waltham ement| - yanisa comes, tak’ a 1 industrial rel heart-searchi on the part of men who stand in pul- | may never go as far as he to see It, but it is already | And yet a little “A Soldler of tains the spiritual dynamite on we must rel desirable soc e-tenth the sup |in a 20-year gold filled case. | afoor. S ECUSDN B CHMRBONREN, ™ e As to the Port of Charleston. ver a prom- just what he helieves and why, tells it so sim so modestly the book just faith it is t a charming professional ng to an Oxfor wilds of Lab the eruiser North Caro- on n about it? t took him and all the | the start for Panama, Tt is a faith strip- ng out—we lack the art of | adornment, Christ, one fesslon and much of pra shy of plous talk but vers igence when there job to be done or a bit of every kindness to be extended. It is easy to pass from such a book the profitan] A Narrow Escape. torob Tom [ 5¢ @ bottle $1.50 a dozen Mr. The most highly refined and healthful of baking powders. Its constant use very American household, its sales all over the world, attest its wonderful popularity and usefulness. in almost Dont Discharge'»th‘é Cook GOLDMEDAL FLOUR The better the Flour; The better the bread. The better:the bread: The better the baker. WASHBURN-GROSBY CO. THE VERY'HIGHEST QUALITY: Mgop iy e R es. Mat ddern Lady Godiva. ADMISSION 5 CENTS. N Fove—Why Men Tempt Women. 327 Main Street, opp. Post Office. | t»'lnt[—l‘l‘hs Girl the Man and the % 2’ Dev! 'he Hains-Annis Tragedy. Jan21d Wed. Eve—' Thurs. Mat—The Hains-Annis Tragedy. Hivorcons. N Little Chila Shall Lead 5 and 7 to 10 p. m. Them. Golden Wedding Whiskey |5 %30 e Sat. ve—The Days of '61. ciben 106, 206 30c. Matinees 108 and' 20¢ . seats at 15¢ If resérved before 6 p, m. dec29a Soats on sale at the Box Office, Wau. e an House and_ Bisket, Pitcher & "s on Saturday, Jan. 23, at 9 o'cloek. to all points after the pertorm Nm Saturday Matinee Sam & Lee Shubert (Inc.) present here for the first time out of New York A farcial comedy in three acts from the German by Clyde Fitch, with Robert Demster, Albert Evening, 25¢ to $1.50, Matinee, 25¢ to $1. Seats on sale at the Box Office, Wauregan House and Bisket, Pitcher & Co.'s, on Thursday, January 21st, at 9 o'clock Cars to all points after the performance. jan214 SHEEDY’S o7t Samary 29 “Ufl[!lll[ l —— A BILL OF QUALITY —— THE APOLLO BROTHERS, European Athletes and Weight Lifters. ““vms The Greatest Act ever seen in the city, ARMSTRONG AND ASHTON, “The Boy and the Girl" PAGE AND MONTMORENCY, I’Imuflfs The Neatsst and Most Commendable - Muilflj Agt Before the Publk "y " FICTURES CHANGED ADMISSION u Ladies and Children 2.0 - 82 Market St, opp. Sheedy's Theatre, buys a 17 Jewel Hamilton DANCING PARTIES movement in a 20-year gold Every Wednesday and Saturday Evenings. | New class now opened for pupils. Ar | Private Lessons any Hour, Instruction for Director of the Academy Musica Franklin Square. Prepare s for admiss line ey 274 Washington Street. ) g | jan16sTUS hich means,” | Tuning and Repairing Best Work Only, ‘Phone 422-3. 18 Perkins Ave. sept23d STERILIZED PP DUNN’S PHARMACY, Maher’s School For Dancing, T. A. AND B. HALL, 50 Main Street. 62 Broadway, Norwich, Conn. Dancing every Friday and Saturday janéd | evenings.” Baker's orchestra. Private lessons in Waltz, Two-step, .. at any hour. Classes now open. DO IT NCW | Telephone 471-5. oct20d | 1s the best thing Einy pro?crly owner {can do. Dom't walt until cold, bad weather comes before making eces- EXPERT TUNING sary fall repairs. If you have new iéu "asl” Sein . Work begin today by getting our fig- | **V** .\n",f{(’él'.'.r.xi{‘m.""‘““' - | ures. A, W. JARVIS, STETSON & YOUNG, o 15 O - avgsia Central Whart. | X ocwion Ooen T - | wraduate Nilew Bry ool of Plan £ R =T Yo S e h A M A BARBER Drop a postal and I'll call | o o " l declsd "Phone 518-8. Machinist 25 Chestnut St. WM. F. BAILEY (Successor to A. T. Gardner) F. C. GEER TURER 122 Prospect S, Tel. $89-5. Norwich, Ct 0 mistake will be made Hack, Livery| in selecting THIS school | as the one to attend, d | N THE NEW LONDON- Boarding | Business (Ollege KA Bru. , Pn. New Londo Stable pmAp Ry 12-14 Bath Street. ' HORSE CLIPPING A SPECIALTY. Cul Prices on Parlor Telephone 883. apr2sd Stoves and Ranges. The balance of the stock will be ° sold at reduced prices. Buy now and ave money. PARLOR STOVES 5.00 Stoves reduced to ...... $19.00 DROP IN AND HEAR THE $ $18.00 Stoves reduced to $17.00 Stoves reduced to and $14.50 Stoves reduced to .... $12.00 Stoves reduced to .... e § 875 Stoves reduced to . WOOD HEATERS $6.50 Heaters reduced to . $4.00 Heaters reduced to . .75 3.50 Heaters reduced to ...... 2.75 Heaters reduced to ...... $1.75 layed by tho composer M. HOURIGAN, ROY C. PHILLIPS 62-66 Main Street. PEIFFSA ) Telephone 123-4 Jani2d i ? | ness betore the public. there 15 no me- 49 Main Streer dlum better than (1o gh the advertise 1d : 7 ¢ g columns af The Bulletin, deca: