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' 16 Thames Street, Cycle Club’s Banquet— \to City Missionary. - ltnu the formation of the Westerly Warrow Fabric company there is local E:amt in all that pertains to the pro- ct of the proposed new industry. Just ®s the Westerly company is planning for the manufacture of narrow fabrics by the very latest procegs, comes Te- ?on from Roakland, Mass, to the ef- that a movement 6 merge all the manufacturers of narrow fabrics in the Onited States is under wi The promoters are sald to0 have some of the fnr.ur mapufacturers with them, but many of the smaller concerns ®ot In favor of the movement, fearing that 1? a combine is formed the small Caotorles will suspend operations. Elijah Taylor ended his life by a self Inflicted wound at his home, In Mo- ehanic street, late Thursday nightafter mbout eightson months of continual dissipation. He was for a number of years employed as & machinist at the C. B. Cottrell Sons’ plant, but by renfi mon of sickmess, caused by excessiv drinking, he left that employment and mince that time has ddéne but Iwtle work, and became & burden rather than @ heip for his wife and children. His n, Arthur, died about two months wgo, and he seomed more depressed than usual since then, aud endeavored to drown his sorrow by increasing his desive for strong drink. Mr. 1 - was about the streets of Thursday, a8 usual, and it is ¢ during the day and evening ank two bottles of Harthos 18, (hm(\‘ll in water, d# a substi for whiskey, as of late he ting whiskey in 15 he was an unwe ces where liquor is obtain- nitiated. ‘When he reach he- was intoxicated. pe enti, n of ts to-gake his own Iife » went into his room and to bed, and th was nothing unu- in his actions to arouse suspicion ol mily During the night Mrs. | Tayl rd unusual noises in her | huibar om, and she went there 10 iny an er what assi she could to Her husband, suppos- hat he hau a sudden attack ot s. When she entered the room was_horrified to find Mr. Taylor ng in bed with blood flowing from a nd in his throat, self-inflicted with | carving knife, Taylor aroused the membe: the family, and Officer William H. Cas ey swmmoned Drs. Payne and Pagen, Sut their efforts to save the Taylor were uravailing, within half an his throat. Dr. George D. Stanton, medical e er of the town of Stonington,view he body Friday morning. His opin fon was sulcide, committed. while de ceased was of unbalanced mind Before Mr. lor yielded to @rink hsbit he was a good husband and Ehe and he died bour ofter Be had cut relieved by a sin- e Sooe ol ofiuos e Fegular medy will form of m.m. " Colda, hoarser ‘ness, bronehitis, x‘-lndlb- s of T i Abmhvu \n mfim of hv-i- REL!JELE TLSINESS ~CIRECTORY §. ¥. CONANT. 11 Framkita ‘Whitestone 5c and the/J. F. C. 100 Cigars are the best gn the markst Try them. The Norwich Hukel § Brass Ba Tableware, Chandeliers, Yacht Trlmmings and such things Refinished. €9 to 87 Chestnut St, Norwich, Conn. oct4d treet. Secesesnsecesorsssssessscsssozacssoesercenses NEWMARKET HOJEL, 715 Boswell Ave. First-class- wices, liquors and clgass. Meals and Welch rarebit servec to order. John Tuckle, Prop. Tel 43-& HAM AND CHEESE. The best place In Norwich to buy Pressed or Minced Ham or any kind of Cheese is Mrs, Thumm's, 78 hnklln Street. Others have learned y of no ore else. A trial order I( make you a permanent customer. DO IT NOW s the best thing any property owner can do. Don't walt until 0id, bad weather comes befors making neces- sary fall repairs. If you have new work begin today by getting our fig- at A ‘\e partition. d pails of water extinguished Elijah Taylor Found in Bed With Throat Cut—William| Fowler Badly Scalded—News from the Courts— D. A. R. Chapter Vofiu $50 father, and his trlenv;. mourn his downfall and untimely end.. He wis e member of the Sons of Sit. George, carried a life insurance pnll tm.- a small amount, - He Is survived by Mrs. Taylor, o son and two daughters; .hs have the sympathy of many friends, m, Fowler, employed in the lunch cart near the bridge, had & nar- row escape from scrious injury and under peculiar circumstances Thus night. " He had an order for ten gallons of coffee from a local socfety that had a supper in & nearby ball, and intended to make the coffee iu & ten gallon milk can, After putting the boiling water in the can, be added the coffee, placed the big wooden plug In the mouth of the can, and then placed the can. on the stove for the contents to boil. And boil it did, with o vent for the confined steam. When the can_began to show signs of eruption, Mr. Fowler struck the plug, to unloosen it. Imme- diate’y the plug was forced out by the escaping sieam, and with it came a torrent of boiling coffee. Mr. Fowler was severely scalded on the left arm. and forcarm and in groping for the door, to escape from the cart, he thrust his feft hand through a pane of glass, cutting his band and two fingers se- verel He was attended by Dr. Scanlon. Mr. Fowler suffered considerable pain, but his injuries are mot of, the character that will conine him to his home. In the Thifd district ourt Friday,| Judge Oliver H. Williams, the contin- ued case of John Corrono, charged with an assault upon Johm Curio, was di posed of and without the testimony of | the complainant, who has gone {o parts| nown. Corrono was found® gulity. 1d grdered to pay a fine of $5 and sts, which by reason of several con- trivances reached $20. This added to tiim sum previously sald to have been paid by Corrono-to Curlo in settlement of the case, as he supposed, will dimin- ish Mr. Corrono’s banksaccount about The liquor cases agalust Oliver B. Gavitt, Edward Gilroy and Charles ton, with all other cases on the ket, were continued for one ‘week. Grand Exalted Leading Knight J. D. Shea of Springfield, Benevolent and | Protactive Order of Eiks, was in West- Friday” Investigating a matter of ial interest to Westerly lodge of It is said that the investigation is with reference to the appointment of a deputy for this distict. The Westerly Cycle club enjoyed the 14th annual banquet Friday night. There was entertainment’ at the club rooms from § to 10 o'clock, and then the members and their guests made & short street parade, headed by the Cy- > band, terminating at Hibernian hall, where the banquet was served. After the banquet the entire party, number- ing over a hundred, returned to the club rooms, where the festivities were continued. Mrs. Kate Davy, who resides in the basement of the Dr. Scaulon house, was in danger of losing her life Thurs- day night, but for the timely discovery i in the b ment by Mrs. Scan- fier attending to the 4, and about an hour Scanlon detected smoke and made an investiga- She found the floor near the fur- in the house tion. nace ablaze and the fire creeping up The application of sey- the flames, before serlous damage resulted. Mrs. Davy was found in her room asleep and nearly suffocaaed by smoke. In the superior court at Kingston on Friday an absolute divorce was grant- ed Ida F. Burdick from Byron D. Bur- dick ef Westerly, on the ground of de- d non-support. Fred N. Rob- was divorced from Bsther Rob- on on the ground of desertion with positive refusal to return. ! in the case of Joseph S. Joseph Guarino, a suit on book account, stated that the ca in course of settlement 4 fore no trial would be At the regular meeting of Phebe Greene Ward chapter, Daughters of the ,x rerican Revolutios Mrs. LaClede Woodmansee w ed )\lnormll, to h sed by es L Gat moved to Boston. Mrs. Samuel H. Davis was chosen a member of the board of management. The sum of $50 was voted City Missionary Alexander ith to assist him in his work among the po: destitute. Announcement was ma the entertainment com- there would be whist next exerclses enlivened the meet- ging of the Star Spangled Ba e Mrs, A. Robigson; readi of the prize essay, by thé winner, .'\nv ,lunlu('k Causes Leading to the em, Penelope’s Christ- by Miss Genevieve Bur- c on William H. Taft, by Davis, and the singing of The méeting was held at the of Mrs. Elisha C. Burdick. social hour followed. Local Laconics. iggs dfed Friday at away in her 82 year. Representative Langworthy of West- v Dresented a petition for local option in tagatjon. Government Inspectors visited West- erly during'the week and discovered cases where oleomargarine was offered for sale as creamery butter. At the session in W, voted hold the sterly 1 annual conventi wre: l!n F rth DI ~4n ict Rhode Islang \\ m- augild Central Whart, the Carclina union, next June. $15.00 ‘buys a 17 Jewel Hamilton movement in a 20-year gold filled case. $10.00 buys a Waltham movement in a 20-year gold filled case. FERGUSON & CHARBONNEAL, Franklin Square. dec30a Pictures and Photographs framed In the best possible way at Feasonable prices. A new stock of Mouldings for the spring season. {BMEF STATE uzws} Wateroury. will be organigec Middletown.—A few seen on Main stipet Thursday noon. Watertown.—Myron MceNeil will cel- ebrate his 87th birthday at his home on the 224 of this month, Simsbury.— Lean and Mr: frcm a trip so Stratford.—7There in the town of Stratford ary and eight births The Hon. George P. Me- JcLean have returned th. 3 oner safled on the * & trip to Bermuda, Bridgepont.—Buidii W. H. R DuBoj Prince George Branford.—Dr. Barbour of Danielson was the guest Tuesday of his brother- in-law, A. L. Johnson, who, is cenva- lescing from a severe iline Woodbury.—Charlie NicHols is -,‘u trip through t northern and wes r the London. saies in March, NORWICH FRAME WORKS, Potter Building. mariia Onen evenings. Tel, 511 Bristol—OQf the two large ice com- panies doing business in this town, one has almost a full supply, but the other bas less than two-thirds of the amount _completion.. up-to-date workrooms. When you want clothes you want good clothes, made by a reliable v ' house with a reputable standing. We are proud of our twenty years’ reputation. There’s no limit to our endeavors to please and satisfy every customer. We are the largest producers of legitimate CUSTOM MADE CLOTHING in New England—operating the most complete and We promise courteous attention to all cus- -~ tomers, and values unapproached by any house in the country. _ Why should you wear a ready made suit when for the same money you can have it made to your measure ? Al our garments are made on the premises and tried on before We guarantee fit and satisfaction. and examine our stobk of woolens. No trouble to show goods. Call and see us before buying elsewhere and we will convince you. . Goods, Fit and Workmanship Guaranteed. A SUIT or OVERCOAT Made to Order Q& w THE HOLBROOK TAILORING C0., 140 Main St Open Ev.nlng- until 9 o’clock. -Ennsclence Call into our store 315, , Norwich, Ct. they will need for the coming season. Both companies have been cutting ice in Terryvillo this week. Meriden.—Going to ‘the dock in New York, Louls Truchotcaf Meridbn ex- pected to meet his fathe: when La Lor- D e undeds. When is thther Afd Rot appear he went aboard to make m- and found his father had died se and was buried at sea. | have, 1e funeral of Father 2 of East Grand Forks, North Dakota, wa held Thursday moerning at St. Mar, Main street. A solemn high requiem mass was celebraied by the Rev. F ther Fanning, assisted oy the Re ther Fitzge = deacon and the Rev. Father Higgdls as sub-deacon. isn't the rision. CiAs Kidder of | rision. Winsted.—The Revs. B. F. Winsted and A. W. Ackerman of Tor- rington defeated the Revs. G. W. Jud- son of Winsted and J. C. Goddard of Salisbury in the clerical golf tourna- ment. The individual scores were: Kidder 94, Judson 99, Geddard 100, A nan 102, in the morning. In the Ackerman defeated Judson too. result is afternoon the possibility of error. ever, is & competent judge. Mr. Roose- velt’s habit of coming back promptl at his eritics {8 responsible for the be- lief that he was impatient of criticism @nd intolerant of disagreement. Those who know him best always say that though he fights hard, he has no sense of wourded 1ride and resentment such as & man who suffered silently might his feelings and ‘Waterbury American. He relleves then forgets it. “Yet the sea whits foam. Shake all the light iti receives,: sorbing any, is always white. ies Eov&dflr"d into tiny diamopd Why Foam is White. “How white the foam 1s,” sald the pretty girl, in a voice muffled by the sable stole drawn goross her red mouth. is" green. 'Whay, then, foam Wreen " ‘The young gophomore laughed in de- he =ald. “Beer is brown, but its foam is white, you are ignorant!™ e up black fnk an red the same. A Mr. Taft, how- Al bod. great chuwur hat Has endeared M- ni! to all of us, ly| Senator Oharles Sumner of Massa- chausetts called at ‘White House early one miorning. e was told that e pxa-ldcnt was downstairs; that he uld rightsdown. He found the pnaldont polishing his boots. Some- what amazed, Senator Sumneh said: “Why, Mr. President, Jo you black your own boots?" ith a vigorous rub of the brush the president re- Dlli:& ‘““Whose boots do you think I'd S BELA L. PRATT Designed Statue, Replica of Which Has Been Prnomod State. America, designed by Lyon Pratt, which was put up DY th. state of Connecticut at Andersonville, has been much admired by all who have Frank W. Cheney of has had a replica original statute—and one Wednesday Extra Fancy SEEDED RAISINS 1b. pkg. Best Teas 25¢ Ib. A beautiful status of e Young Best Coifees 20¢ Ib. None better to be had at any price. United Tea Importers Co., Franklfn 8quare, up one flight, over Somers Bros. nd G K ed over Kidder. | so that they throw back the light f PR wdiw‘f‘-‘-)l—’fl ek S many facets, absorb nome of it gh.:: &mfl&a&om;vgfi:fig;tgz 0| jan26TThs white by consequence. Pow roug] ms WHIT TR PAFERS.OAY, marble for instance s white) Any ml-\t:; to, be put ""nf"of,’;?y“":“fl C . | foam is water powdered inti ese | grounds. was unanim vote PebINAly st | small diamonas, ‘and hence its-¥hite- | by the commission to recommend the arr lage common impression as to the temperature of a month sesms to be about right. Most people felt that February was warmer than usual, and now that the records begin to be pituted it appears that the temperature somewhere about Six . degrees above the unueually wet. But as & rule the indefinite general recollection peo- ple have of a month or a whole season | depends more on whether it was gen- erally clear and pleasant or chilly and disagrecable than on temperature ree- ords. Those who have tested their im- have found —Hartford For once ti | ed the I the lime town. Roosevelt’s Quickness. Taft's testimony that Mr. Roose- velt is the qi ‘man he ever kne to acknowl ake and ‘“reverse himeelf,” will astonish those who have the nim too self assured to admit and well port Standard. —New York Press. — A New Member Coming On Friday, March 5, & new paper is to be issued at Greemwich, Conn., nam- It will look into things, as its name Indicates, and turn nvestigator. ight upon the doings of tl ‘W. A. White, for long manag- ing editor of the Ansonia Sentinel, will be the sditor, and his experience ability guarantees at the start a lively conducted journal—Bridge- Lincoln’s Safety Valve of Humor. Lincoln's rare sense of humor has properly been called -his safety- valve. Without this it is incomprehen- stble how any, human soul could have borne the gréat load of responsibility which he conscientiously assumed. His gifted wit was but another side of the and acceptance by the state of the gift. Colonel Cheney also offered, through the commission, to mest the expenses of a suitable pedestal, It was voted that the secretary of the commission prepare a suitable Y tition, with resolution attached, to tl general assembly, praying for the he ["acceptance by the state of such gift of Colonel Cheney, as far as the re- plica is concerned, and requesting an appropriation of $2,000, in order to meet the expenses of a proper pedestal and the erection of the memorial on the Capitol grounds. 3 Heavy Work at Hand. President-elect Taft is to be made a Mason on eight, and now a serious question has arisen as to whether the Cincinnati lodge will use an elephant in the initiation or give the regular goat a course in physical culture.— Philadelphia Telegraph. Your . Blood is a _ Field of A valiant little Battle army is con- tinually marching through your veins, arteries and capillaries. Night and .day they patrol every alley and channel of the body in search of their natural enemy, the germs of disease. A, White Corpuscles. B, Red Corpuscles. C, Wall of Vi D, Epithelial Layers. E, Contracted Pigment Cells. and Automobile Painting and Trimming Carriage and Wagon Work of al! kinda Anything en wheels built to order, PRICES AND WORK RIGHT, The Scott & Clark: CORPLRATION, 507-515 North Main Street. apriéd Do you appreciate larg: dious quarters, where wi 00D TASTE DEMANDS 1= e — Porcelain, Not Ugly Metal, is Proper Filling for Teeth. DR. JACKSON PRACTICES THIS MODERN DENTISTRY Everybody Can Possess Teoth of Nat- ural Beauty—No Pain. In this day of Porcelain Dentistry one who suffers the disadvantages of an unsound and unsightly set of teeth is his or her own worst enemy. 'Tis not the intention of the writer to dwell extensively om the matter of being thus handicapped, for every possessor of a poor, repulaive set of teeth knows too well ‘the disadvantages which very often extend even to a tortuous degres. A person who rather than open his mouth to talk, thus exposing the decayed condition of his teoth, does not enter in & con- ng for your | They are the white corpuscles,—the ‘‘Little Soldiers of the Blood.”” Modern science has demonstrated that these white. corpuseles are the disease-fighters of the blbod. See the picture in the cirele, and the ex- planation of how they fight for you. They de- stroy the millions of germs which pass into our bodies with every breath we take. When the blood is poor and thin and deficient in its proper supply of white corpuseles, the invading germs swarming in, and finding the defending force too weak to:oppose them, take possession of the body and begin their work of destruetion. This is the beginning of an attack of an in- fectious disease sueh as the grip, pneumonia, and fevers, and even of the winter eough or eold. The germs of such diseases sweep across the surface of the delicate mucous membranes of the throat, the nostrils, the air passages of the lungs. Nothing can stop their attacks or de- feat their ravages, but pure, disease-fighting blood,—the blood that Hood’s Sarsaparilla makes. 1t is also owing to the thin, impure condition of the blood that serofulous troubles, eczema, boils and pimples, develop, and*rheumatism, ca- tarrh and other diseases gain a hold. When such troubles are once established, noth- ing but a medicine that will absolutely and irre- sistibly cast them out ean permanently cure. As a blood-purifying tonie and health- builder, \Hood's Sarsaparilla is pure and sure. ‘It is pleasant to take, bright, clear and bracing to the last drop, with no depressing after-effects. It has eured thousands of people and is prob- ably taken in more homes today as a reliable family medicine than any other preparation. It is essentially a blood-maker, a digestive, an appe- tizer, an invigorator that nourishés both brain and body and enriches the blood. If you are ill, weak, run-down, have ‘‘that tired feeling,”” if your appetite is poor and your digestion bad, Hood’s Sarsaparilla is just the medicine for you. If your disease is of long standing or of constitutional nature, like serofula or eczema, or catarrh, if it is caused by acidity of the blood like rheumatism or neuralgia, or pleurisy, Hood’s Sarsaparilla sses just the qualities ngcessary to eure yom, and you will find them 1n this medicine as in no other. Take Hood’s Sarsaparilla for your spring medicine, and fill your body with generous life- giving blood, rich in red corpuscles to nourish you, and normal in white eorpuscles, the disease- fighters of the blood. Then you may reasonably expect health, goed appetite, perfect digestion, clear and energetie brain power all the coming year. Be sure to get Hood’s Snmpnnlh in usual liquid form, or in chocolate-coated tablets ealled Sarsatabs. 100 Doses One Dollar PN prescriptions is free from objection- able features ? An exacting service, clean untens clean bottles, clean labels, and all ap- purtenances are of the highest class, which should-appeal to the sick alike the well. Assayed drugs compounded free of all sediment, and dispensed in the most appetizing manner under a check sys. tom. The last consideration, PRICE, being in mccordance with the demand and supply of best products. ink this matter over and let us compound your next prescription, L. The Lee & Osgood Co. Pharmacy feb27d GAIN SOMETHING by a course in Book- keeping. Shorthand and Touch Typapriting Norwich Commercial Schoal Broadway Theatre Bldg, | would 1tk | any versation, 1s often mistaken for ignor- ant, or, so to speak, a “dummy Still this same person may Qe the wit of the company a brilliant man or wom- an, and is r‘rln«clnq the opportunity to “make g simply because of seit consciousness or rather consciousness Toncerning the repulsive or detectable false set of teeth he so0 zealously at- tempts to hide. Such a person is his own worst enemy. Since the inception of the practice of Porcelain Dentistry in this city by Dr. Jackson at the King Dental Parlors many people have been released from the bondage of poor teeth to find life far more worth liv- ing, for such teeth are not only a men ace to health, but to soclal aspir as well. The “old yschool” dent was all right. It served its purpose of providing teeth to masticate with but it did not go far enough to restore the natural beauty of the mouth. This i¢ the mission of Porcelain Dentlstry ~to ~ive you a set of teeth either by filling process, inserted bridgework that will o elosely form to nature as to be absol non-dotectable. No gold or me any kind Is used in the practice of modern dentistry, for metal s in tis ut Porcelain s nature's counterpart and while shades of testh vary Porce lain is by & unique and practical cess baked so the precise shadin your teeth will be pertectly mat. In this way you are, through F lain Dentistry non-detectable glad to show. ¥ you are the possessor of bad teeth, don’t remain in the put- it-off class any longer, but act at once for you're robbing yourself of ‘muck of the good in life. You will find it one of the greatest rellefs you've ever experienced to be able to talk and smile_without that ever uneasy | sort of feéling that the one you are ing is looking critically Porcelain Dentistry use it Is the den the most for you. The metn ployed in the practice are p painless. No long drilling or ma awa the old time method kson to ha a ts h you about your teeth. He v 1l you without cost what he can Visit him at the King De Franklin Square, Somers day or evening. You ought to know about Porcelain Dental work and he is the one to tell you in this city. feb23TuThS FOR THE BEST ALES and LAGER Go To “The Plank, s Frankiinst. O'CONNELL & SHEA. Telephone 5C4-4. DR. € R. CHAMBERLAIN, Denta/ Surgeon. In ehnrn of Dr, 8. L. Geer's practice “during ks last iliness. Norwich, Conn. JOSEPH EBRADFORD, Book Binder. Blank Books Made and Ruled to Order, 108 BROADWAY, sept1sad Telephone 252. octiod “THERE 1% no advertising medium in tern Connecticut. eaual lo The Bul- tin for wusinesa results. You don't get a pound of dirt with every shovelful of COAL you buy from us. i’ No! — ALL COAL is mere or less dirty when it leaves the mine; but every pound s well screened “before we deliver It "Phone, The Edw. Chappall Co. NORWICH, CONN. COAL Free Burning Kinds and Lehigh ALWAYS IN sTOCK A. D. LATHROP, Office—cor. Market and Shetucket Sta [Telephone 168-13. Branch Office—Lewisy Shannon Bldg. act29d LUMBER —— The best to be had and at the right prices, too. Remember we always u\rr 'y big line of Shingied. Call us t us tell you about our stock. II F. &A. J. DAWLEY * mayld J. A IOIGAN & SON, Coal and Lumber We earry a well selected line of all sizes famty coal. Lumber for bulld- ing purposes. 5 Central Wharf. sept19d COAL ae WO0D C. H. HASKELL . Tel. 84 489 "Prones 402 37 Franklin St. 58 Thames St Jan12d PLUMBING AND GASFITTING. The Vaughn Foundry Co IRON CASTINGS hed Large stc Ferry 8 prompt No. 11 The Best Bollar's Worth ts what most people are looking after today and the fellow who cannot give it 1s working under a strong handica; That applies to my business—PLUM NG. I only ask for & chance to prove my .bnug to give it to you J. F. TOMPKINS, 67 West Main Street. T. F. BURNS, Heating and Plumbing, 92 Franklin Stree!, marsd DENTISTRY at Teeth Without a Plate is the greatest boon of modern times. 1 wish you could understand the differ- ence between having te A a plate and teeth without a piate. One ls firm, comfortable and lasts a lifetime; the other covers the roof of your mouth, destroys the best part of the taste. One never falls down; the other often does. Where it Is necessary to wear & plate, DR. SYDLEMAN will make you one that will nt. i HOURS: 8 e m to 8 p. m. Sunday, * “Icl on parie Francais.” All work guaranteed. DR. R. E. BEARDSLEY, Dentist, 237 MAIN STREET, FAY BUIfDING. Norwich, Conn. . 8564 Lady Assisgant. 10-3, We Are Receiving Our Spring Patterns of Wall Papers e and Interior Decoration and will pleased o show them. The rming and t fety. Also Window colors Upholstery, Shades and great Lace Curtains, Furniture, The Fan;i;l?Smdios. 31 Willow Street, Norwiech, Conn, feblodaw ¢