Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 13, 1909, Page 4

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&W” u--m-fllh- —_——— Enteréd B2, &8 t tilp Postoffice at Norwich, cond-class matter. hl-'t-n c-n-- ulloklu Business Off illetin Editorial R Bnu-un Job tfice, u ud 2. Murray -un-.. T-lqman. 210. N Norwich, Tuesday, July 13, 1909. THE JUBILEE BOOK. The subscriptions for the Jubilee Book of the 250th anniversary celeba- tion of the founding of the town are #oming in and within 30 days should yeach a mumber to warrant the print- #ig 6f a book which will be a prize @rom every point of view. The edition Wwill be limited and the reports will Pe revised and carefully edited. This ook will contain the names of the president and all the committées, the names of commanding officers in mil- itary and civic societles, the’ sermons and addressés and all matters "of in- terest pertaining to the event, It win be fllustrated with ancient and mod- ern views of Norwich, portraits of the president and chairmen of committees, views of the decorated streets and pub- lie buildings, of “The Founders” and the “D. A. R. fountain,” and a re- production of the invitation sent out to our absent sons and daughters. There will be nothing lacking in the way of information, fllustrations und g00d work. 4 One public-spirited eitizen has sent in an order for twelve copies, and an- other for ten coplés. Others are or- dering single coples for themsglve Please send in your mame promptly. No better advertisement of Norwich could be had than the placing of a copy of this Jubilee book in every M- braty in the state of Connecticut, and one in every great library of the coun- try, ncluding the National library Washington. Ot course, a copy should be sent to each of the city's distinguished guests, 1free. There is no profit in such a Werk for a publisher. It just puts on & com- plete finish to the celebration and pre- sefves facts which are handy for ref- erence in every man's library. FEWER SALOONS. There is no cause for regret that the legislature has passed the bill limiting the ealoons to one for every 500 of the population. That means 14 less saloons for Norwich in the end, and also that men who are now caught violating the law will be put per- manently out of business. The measure intends no injury to those engaged in the traffic, but pro- vides for a gradual reformation upon more rational and more decent lines. It puts the man who doesn't respect the law out of business the moment he is proved to be guilty. No new licenses are to be granted for applicants until the number has been brought down to .the new limit. 4 How long it will take to work down the present number with the present priviléges of appeal from the decision of the county commissioners, and the court's delays which enablée miscre- ants to do a business without a li- ¢ense for monthis at a time, remains to Bé seen. The provision of the law ‘which permfts this sort of a perform- ance certalnly ought to be amended %0 that a speedy trial should be given men who are under the ban of con- demnation, instead of in effect giving them an uhwarranted liberty which is not promotive of the public well- belng, or of a wholesome respect for the law. This law puts all the saloon keepers upon thelr mettle. They must have a care and obey the laws, or out of business they must go. It will be in- teresting to note whether this new condition prompts them to a closer observance of the law and a more careful conduct of their business. BOATMEN NOT SWIMMERS. It i8 strange that of 48 men whe recently rowed in a Boston regatta only 18- could swim; and upon the upsetting“ of & boat ene of the non- ewimmers was drowned. In view of this event, the Boston Record was led to remark: “What an absurdity in a city situ- ated like ours, in boat clubs whose membérs have every facllity for ac- quiring this ability? Would it be too severe to debar from a rowing regatta any man who had not ‘had time' to learn to swim? If he had been indo- lent or indifferent enough to - refuse this opportunity, it would surely be better to insure him against accident than to allow him to compete.” When the art of swimming is so easily acquired, it is surprising that in an event of this kind 60 per cent. were unable to save themselves from drowning in case of accident. The Portland Express says: “It certainly is the height of absurdity for young men to embark in such ticklish craft a8 racing shells, salling dories, ca- noes, skiffs, etc., unless they are fully able to care for themselves in the emeérgency sure to arise if their cratt capsizes.” THE DANGEROUS PROMINENT CITIZEN. It the Hon. John Logan, mayor of Worcester, _is correct, the undesira- ble citizen is not always a resident of the slums or a man of criminal rec- ord. In an address recently made by him and printed in The Congregation- alist and Christian Herald, he said: “The prominent citizen 1§ often the man who signs the petition to grant a Jjeense to this or that man to keep a saloon so that he can have. a temant for his store, no matter how disrepu- table a joint the tenant may keep. “Too often in our cities it is the pronfinent citizen who owns the slum tenements where life is hard. He for- gets what Jacob Rils once sald, that ‘you can kill a man as surely with a bad tenement as with an ax; it only takes a little longer, that is all! * everal years ago, before 1 was elected mayor, a petition was present- ed to the city government, and the party who solicited my signature ex- pressed surprise when I declined to #lgn it, and called my attention to the list of names of ‘those’ who had al- ready signed, and he had a goodly list of prominent citizens behind him. I _ Masught 1 mould Lke 10 know just how was preunud to Wm for his u‘- bmit it is not fair, or do what you don't feally think ought to be done, and thus throw the re- sponsibility on other men, with the hopé that they will have the nerve to do what you don't dare to do your- selt.” The seifish man 18 not rare, but ‘the manly citigen, the man who doesn't hedge, but is prepared to do his duty and his whole duty, 1is not readily forthcoming. The pockeét-nerve seems to paralyze all other merves, and that is the source of vaeillating ¢itizen- ship. BAND CONCERTS Among the pérmanent expenses of some of the twentiéth century cities is the brass band concérts which are given to entertaln the stay-atsHomes in the'hot menths, and this ié usually considered as money well spent, be- cause It directly benefits the masses and indirectly gives repute to a city for_enterprise and liveliness. The Bridgeport Telégram thinks nothing renders more ample returns for money expendsd than the band concerts. The Telegram says furthe: “Through the forethought of Super- intendent Birmingham in providing ‘a sufficient force of police to keap or- der from the very beginning of the season, the concerts are this year a source of great pleasure to music love ers in both parks. It is especially in- teresting to watch the long lines of people which converge from all diree- tlons towards Washington park and to note their evident appreciation of the fine singing and playlhe. When the roughs are eliminated and it is possi- ble to study the real audiences at the band concertst it is easy to see that many of the races which aré mow coming to us are perhaps more sus- ceptible of musical education. than of any other form of culture. The sheer delight in a'good tune which many of them exhibit is a pleasant thing to witness. Tt is impossible to move among - these impulsive and happy crowds so easily swayed by rhythm and melody without feeling that music would prove the most éffective méans of unifying and harmonizing them if Bridgeport ever found. its Damroseh. The revelations 6f the recent New York saengerfest in regard to the cos- mopolitan makeup of the neminally German singing societies showed the power of music in helping races of opposite nature t6 réach a mutual un- derstanding. All the great musie lov- ing races of the world are included in our population. It will be our own fault if we fail (o take full advaritage of such'a lucky chanc EDITORIAL NOTES. The summer idler must be a joy un« to himself, for certainly hé is not & joy to anyone eise. In hot weather it is wise to be care- ful what you say to the man who is bigger than you are. The man who is fond of cherry ple is having his day. As a fovrdation for happiness ‘cherry ple is fugitive. The citizen who has time to de- vote to enjoyment can find lots of it in and about Norwich just at present. A Pittsburg minister is charged with being a housebreaker. When Pittsburg shows her hand it looks black. With 20,000 souvenir postal cards coming in daily, the dead-letter office must feel that it :s greatly in need of albums. The wofld has waited so long for the Wright boys, it is not strange that they are convinced that it can wait a little longer. Happy thought for today: Do not wish for things you cannot get; but work for things which are within yaur purchasing. power. We should not know what a lot of good citizens Norwich has, had we not a few of the other kind for the pur- pose of comparigon. Mr. John D. Rockeféller has laid down ten millions more for educational uses. ' As a money getter he is the wonder of his times. The New Yorker who ate ten pounds of steak in thirty minutes is the kind of a man who would bankrupt an eat- ing house in 4 week. What is the use of trying to induce the Connecticut legislature 1o do any- thing? It will end naturally if it is allowed to just worry on. We are only a weék off from our great celebration, and we look just as common as ever; but it has left an uncommonly good feelin; Employment of the physician by the year may be the coming fad, but the envied man is he who can get along without a physician. The trolley cars of New York last year killed and injured over 35,000 people. A city bigger than Nerwich done up annually, is too much, If Senator Aldrich is as wily as he appears to be from this distance, he will be surprised by what the con- ferees leave in the tariff bill, not by what they take out of it. ) The young feliow with small pay has his vacation money in his hand and a new suit of clothes on his mind; and if he gets one he cannot get the other. It was ever thus! If July had not given Norwich three, incomparable days, we should “have heard, “I told you 6" arotind every corner. “Couldn’t have been' better!” sounds more satisfactory. Senator Lodge on the Tarifl. “This talk of revision upward is wrong. The whole movement of the tariff revision has been downward. “When the hill was reported from the senate committee it contained 379 decreases and less than 40 increases, and of the Increases at least one-half were on luxuries, such as wine, totlet soap and perfumery. Fifteen others were in the agricultural schedule. There were very few industrial in- creases, and only where it was abso- luf of coyrse you understand I mean, fe- creases from the present rates. = The ate has raised some of the house uced some of your . If 80, you clnt be blamed for not taking an Amrbml. heart-thrilling interest him! You don’t care in the least Whether or not on, 8 16, 1859, he decided to n two trees for firewood. You 'm dn't blink an éyelash if he had obeyed his first impulse and gone to town with the fat cow he Had sold the butcher. That's bécause you don’t re- alize what the five minutes of making up RIS BAd ieghs io you here in 1904, “X in chopping the second tree he let lh! ax slip and it severed an ery in his foot. The nearest doctor the hired man could reach was the hew enl, ‘whom nobody would employ he didn't have whiskérs all nvcr nu face and was a newcomer. Be- sides curing your srandfather = the young dagier fell in dove with and married hi8 daughter, Mary Ann. Aft- er he arose in his profession they mov- ed to the city and their son was you 4 ‘naturally you studied medicine, having lived in the atmosphere of drugs &IE your lite. “Now, if the young doctor hadn't been precipitated into the bosom of the family, so to speak, all in a hurry, dort 6f foreing the acquaintance with Mary Ann, she probably would have decided to take Hank Rustém, who fiv- ¢ on the next farm and had been ng her for years. She'd have takén him because he was the only man in sight and she was used to see- ing his around. And yow'd have been plowing corn now, sure as fate, in- stead of prescribing sugar pills for helpless people who think you know so1 ing! Yes, you would! Or eise vou'd be clérking in the Emporium -nd rofldllc‘ at Higgins Corners and éaring & cellulold collar! Now, that's what T kicking about—the settling of your life by somebody to whom it doesn't matter a picayune. the house rates. But it is mpossible to take either the house or the sénate a8 & standard. The only standard is necessarily the present law, and from that sn}:m number of decreasés have and the result of the con- Toraioh Titwess the: bonse. Snd " ihe sénate will be t6 maintain these and, gu'ihe whole, 1 think, to increase them n r. “This continual assertion of revis- ion upward is entirely without founda- tion. " Wherever changes have been made the great body of theém has been toward lower rates. “What are some of the more no- ticeable decreases, you ask? Well, the metal schedule has been decreased throughout. There has also been a decrease throughout in chemicals. Thi wool schedule thus far is unchanged, but if it shows any change when it comes out of the conterence it will be a change downward. “The cotton schédule, concerning ich §0 much has been said, if it is 4s the senate has have been decreases in lum- ber, n "Drint paper. and i wood pulp, and in many of the sundries, which embraces a very large class of articles. Liguors and wines have been in- creaséd 15 per cent. all along the line for revenue purposes. The tobacco schedule is unchanged, and that, of course, in the main, is a revénue schedule. “The figh schedule, which is of great interest to Massachusetts, practi- cally unchanged. The rates in it are very low in the present law. “With regard to some of the items which have attracted most attention: “The present rate in lumber is 33 a thousand. The house cut it to 1 thousand and the senate made it 1.50, which insures a large reduction n that item. “The rate on iron ore is now 40 cents a ton. The house made it free, and the senate put it at 25 cents a ton. This difference, then, is to be settled in conference, and to be settled be- twéen no duty and 25 cents. “The senate put wood pulp at the same rate as the house, one-twelfth of a cent. “Print paper the house reduced from b6 £0.82. 4 ‘ton, and the senate made dés the house made free, and the senate restored the existing duty of 15 per cent. What the result of the con- ference on this will be I can't say. hope that the position will prevail. “It 16 foolish to hail each separate article ag it comés from the senate as though it were the whole tariff. The whole result as it comes from the con- férénce Between the two bodies will be the law, and that will be generally a revision downward. Senator Lodge spent his Fourth of July strolling about in the cool sea Dbreeze on his handsome grounds at Eastern Point with his son, W. George Lodge, whose family occupies an ad- joining residence for the summer. He is in good health, but said he was very tired as & result of the arduous tarift session, He expressed. the opinion that the session would soon be over. Senator Lodge will spend little of the summier at‘Nahant this vear. As soon as congress adjourns he will take a sea trip—From an interview at N hant, in the Boston Herald. WHAT THE PAPERS SAY. John Mitchell May Be a Rescuer. It is something when a man like John Mitehell, the labor leader, speak- ing at a great gathering of people like that at the recent anniversary celébra. tion at Norwich in this state, and epi temizing the position of the labor un- fon in the social evolution of the na- tlon, puts the meaning of it above wages, Above shorter hours and on the plane 'of high principle and good citi- 2enship. itchell is reported by The Norwich Bulletm. a- fohow “Vice Président Mitchell referred to the martyrs who had brought to the ¢ause the blessings of God, and brought it out that organimed labor stood for more than hi hours, vi igher citizenship, better manhood, nobler womanhood and the defense of the helpless child. Now, as a match for this, how large 2 proportion of the prominent leaders Company. Those desiring Cloth Binding .... $2.00 Name ........ ..... “ee K State .. .. Indicate binding desired by wa, i £ %, L mo ty it's dollars to d fallen in love with g Eiég Eiasei don h office. what that would have meant to Sallie! 'y “As it is, just because a trifing. lit- tle office boy threw a banana peel on the walk, and she slipped on it and was gaved from falling by Orville Smallbill, who is good and*prosaic and plodding and tenacious—and, having seen Sallie, made up his mind he want- ed her and hung on vmh a bnluos grip till in sheer respair 10 got 113 of himeshe will marry him and live in a flat and spend two weeks every summer n the country and cal it traveling! And: all because Mrs. Delancey got mad at a dressmaker! “Then just beacuse John Hagan, wh is an engineer, played cards all nigl with some cronies when he should have been asleep he yawned once too often next day and the train ran off the track and was smashed up and old Tom Pettingill, who was going to New York with a mining scheme that at last would have made him a millionaire after a lifetime of failures, got knock- ed in the head and never came to himself right and spent the rest of his life smiling and, whittling a stick So naturally his grandson now is dri ing an ice wagon Instead of changing his_clothes five times a day and o dering things at the club when he lsn't ordering them on board his private car or yacht! -Isn't that enough to make old Tom's grandson sizzle with baffled rage? It doesn't seem fair, does it?" “Now you've mentioned his audience, “it doesn't. News. in the business of the world, the “Cap- talns of Industry,” the exemplars of high finance and the promoters of great enterprises, will put “higher citi- zenship, bettér manhood, nobler wom- anhood and the defense of the helpless child” above the accomplishment of financial strategems and spoils, the cornering of the necessities of the peo- ple and the accumulation of dollars? It may yet fall upon ‘the men like Mitchell to rescue the natfon out of the slough of despond into which it may bé led by the mammon of un- righteousness.—Bridgeport Standard. An Educator. It is safe guessing that the average person in Norwich knows a lot more about the city in which he lives than Re dig beroré the oplebration. The various pageants, the universal placarding of historic places about the town, will glve .n impetus to historical research among old and young, This 18 one of the admirable results of such undertakings which is some- times lost sight of. Many things in geography and history will take on new significance for the school chil- dren and what perhaps seemed at one time flat, stale and unprofitable may now become actually interesting and worth whilé. Such an event s a good thing to develop civic pride and make a man have respect and admiration for the place where he lives.—Meriden Racord. Mr. Taft and the Declaration. In his address at Norwich the presi- dent made his oft-repeated attempt to make the Declaration of Independence ccord with the imperialist adventures of the republican party. His argu- ments were the same as those employ- ed by him on other occasiows and also the same as those employed by the op- ponents of free government the world over at all times. According to the Declaration of In- dependence, all men are created equal and governments derive their just powers from the consent of the Eov- erned. “All men are created equal.” As Lincoln sald, the document makes no exception. It does not sa: ropeans” or “all whil plicitly says “all men. Mr. Taft tells us that men are not fit to govern themselves “until have sense enough and self restrain enough to know what is their interest In other words, some one besides them- selves must be the judge of their fit- ness, unless perhaps he means that no people are fit to govern themselves un- less they can whip any other people who think they are not. Thus the doc- trine of force, the doctrine that might makes right, is set forth unintentional- ly, no doubt, without disguise. “Selt govérnment has been fought out in the history of the world" is the president’s declaration, not of ‘inde- pendence, but of dependence—depend- ence on force.—Boston Globe, PERSONS TALKED ABOUT ~ ‘The chief sanitary officer of the Canal Zone, Dr. Gorgas, has issued an order against unmuzzled dogs being allowed at large. Sixteen-year-old Frederick Meler of Chicago. who graduated from high school the other day, attended one school for nine years without having been once absent or tardy. Miss Jessie Field of Page county has_an arithmetic with no cube root or binormial theorem in it, and only FOR BABY'S : SAKE — USE — omfort Powder Thc-hhnkiwfl.lb-fm'nfi andbestbaby powder. 250TH ANNIVERSARY JUBILEE BOOK. A History of the 250th Anniversary Celebration of Norwich, fully illus- trated, and bound in leather or cloth, will be published by The copy will please send their orders at once, as only a limited edition will be printed. ‘THE BULLETIN CO., Norwich Conn.: Please enter my order for one<copy of The History of the 260th Anniversary Celebration of Norwich. u—-mmmmwnn. Box with Baby's Head and Trained Nurse. Bulletin Leather Binding .........$3.00 Street No. .. .....ooeeeee drawing line through one Not e Tres wmpecialy e farms. in on Sir Hubert von Herkomer says he once saw the reproduction of a 5- ture called "m. Coming Storm, vértised in a shop window, and under uu title there were the words In large “Suitable for a wedding pres- enz." Mrs, Frank H. Snow, widow of the lAte chancellor of Kansas state uni- has toen try:augl s c?mn ar annually dur er Mfe from 5o e foundat! lorl; This is sald e first pension of the kind in Kansas. B. 8. Osborn of the Are- tic club of New York received a let- ter last week from Lieut. E. H. Shack- leton, the British explorer, who near- ly reached the South Pole, éxpressing thanks to the club members for. elect- ing him ap honorary member. Four granddaughters of Charles Dickens have been granted a civil list pension “In recogmition of the literary eminencé of the grandfather and in consideration of thelr straitened cir- cumstances.” The ‘recognition” may be timely, but it is not unduly gem- erous. The Portland (Oré) Baptist clergy- men in convention last week passed resolutions condemning Harvey Scott, editor of the Oregonian. for & recent editorial in which he declared vas a criminal waste of time and to endeavor to Christianize the Chigese. In recognition of the heroism of Major O'Brien, an Irishman, who was the commanding officer of the Forty- ninth regiment of infantry of the Aus- trian anmy, and who contributed large- Iy to the victory over the French'forces in the battle of Schwarzlackenau, on May 23, 1800, a monument was re- cently unveiled near the hbattlefield with much pomp and ceremony. , “Yale in the Air” “Yale On the Water” is the subject of an essay in one of our state con- temporaries lately, and we presume that before many years, when the in- tercollegiate aerial races llke place, we shall have editorials on “Yale in the Air."—Bridgeport Standard. An effort made in Rusela to form a gigantic stesl corporation, on the lines of the one now existing in this eoun- try, has failed. —— How's Thist We offer One Hundred Dollars Ri ward for any case of Catarrh that ¢ not be cur-:d bi Hall's Catarrh Cure. ¥, 3. ., Toledo. Oo. e AndersIened, have Kabwi F. J. ieney for the last 15 years, lnd helleve him perfectly honorable in Business transactions and fhancially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. WALDING, KINNAN & MARVIN, Whwolesale Druggit ‘Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internal- ly, acting @jrectly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testi- monials:sent free. Price T5c per bottie. Take Hall's Femily Pills tor consti- pati Foley's Honey and Tar not only stops chronic coughe that weaken the constitution and develop into consump- tion, but heals and strengthens fille comfort and relief in rst cases of chronic bronchitls, asthma, hay fever and lung trouble. Lee & Osgood Co. A Night Rider’s Raid. The worst night riders are calomel, croton oil or aloes pills, with D: They nev- o distige or inconvenience, but al- ways cielinse the system, curing Colds, King's Life Pills. Headache, Constipation, Malaria, 3¢ at | nation of high quality and low price, and get Liquors of the best quality at The Lee & Osgood Co. BECKY: ~ Gold” Medal Flour for me. A Cool Restful Mattress adds greatly to ones comfort these Summer nights. S. A. HAIR—We furnish best grade in 30, 40 or 50 Ib. weight. “OSTERMOOR” Felt— Special guarante:d Silk Floss. Combinations of Rattan and Cotton at the lowest prices. ADJUSTABLE COUCH BEDS at $7.50, $8.50, $10, $15, CANVAS HAMMOCKS N.3. ilhert & Sons 137-141 MAIN STREEEL, factor They raid | Liquors and your bed to rob you of rest. Not so|the most important essential. fluenced so much by price as by quality Lrsees. | 47 Franklin Street, h‘ Evening m FREE CONCERT N Sunday Afterneon at 330, |, w—=Big City n Vaudeville Stars— ¥ Giara Vaten” Fammb " the voiced primadonna nard, H. Hxvhy & r Skating Com CASINO Dancing every afterfioon and evening, Ice Cream, Soda and Light Lunches. Cars leave Franklin Square at 1.45, p 2.15, 2.45, 3.15, 3.45, and 6.45, 7.30, 7.43, . 8, 5.30. Purchase - your ear tickets, admit- Which Opened Yesterday i~ - -~ - Morning BREED’S THE ATRE Charles McNulty, Lessea. has kept our selling foree on the jump all day. Growds, all through the || Devoled te Firsi-class Moving store, there are thronge of people, as this Is written, sager to get their §| Piclures and Iiustrated Songs. share of the unparalleled offerings we told of in Menday’s papers. It ey, S I was the best single effort of this store’s history o give out a favorable HUNTING BIG GAME IN AFRICA, | \ —AND— , impression of the Tenth Mill End Sale through the vast multitude that v - w oy g Stories about Rolle Six OthereFine Ones. Maam Morelle, - soprano; Bradiey, contralto. Matimecs, Ladies and Childres, Sey ' Eveainga. 108 BREED HALL. RODERICK THEATRE Under ,New Management. Devoled to High Class Moving Piclures and \llustrated Songs “A Girl Spy,” Marion thronged our aisles yesterday. | R Our Customers Demand i, . The People Wait for It. Time ripens all things. It has been sometime since we gave the first MILL END SALE and it will be a long time befors we give the last one. Greater chowds attend it each year, buyers come from far and n Feature Picture, time drama. Mr, Dudleysin High Class Songs and Mr. Delaney in Hlustrated Songs, Dally Matinee 6c to all. Evening 106, ;l'h:m@r cooled by electricity, JAMES E. DREW Fiano Tuning and Reparring Best Work Only, ‘Phune 422-3. 18 Perkine Aves sept23d EXPERT TUNING awar cure in the knowledge that unmatchable values await them, bargains Every Department - Is Represented in this, the greatest bargain giving carnival of the whole year. Thou- sands of dollars’ worth of bright, new wantable merchandise saves and improves the pltaa, AD worl A W, nn'll v i offered at the lowest prices ever named for reliable goods, TODAY will be another eventful day for the bargains sold. Make | { il Tuning, Battle Creek; Mich. Drop a postal and I'll call. another visit—you'll find new attractions, additional bargain lots that we decisa "Phone 518-K had no space for yesterday. alt F. C. GEER TUNER " 122 Prospect St., Tel. 383-6. Norwich, C% YOUR HOME On inspection may need & few Shades or Curtains; or, perhaps, your Carpets begin to look a littie shabby. Maybe a couple of'new Parlor Chalrs or a new Rug or Dining Room or Ritchen Furniture' would be desira- ble. Well, you know there must be & few things badly needed for the com- ing Celebration, and no matter what you need, we have it. We cordially invite wou to come and have a look. It simply means “A Ilft- tle better quality for a little less money." Shea _&—I—Burke 37=41 Main St. LEWANDO’S French Dyers and Cleansers FINEST WORK in the United States. We use none but the ¥rench method. All work Guaranteed. More than 900 customers here in Norwich. Marsball’s Agency, 164 Main St, with Nor, Cir. Library. Jun24ThSTu Rose Bowling Alleys, LUCAS HALL, 40 Shetucket Street. J. J. C. STONE. Prop. In buying, what is so important a in averyd-y life as Wines, Beers. Quality should be The Vaughn Foundry Co. IRON CASTINGS v furnished promptly. Large of patterns, No, 11 to 26 .l'-rry Btreet. jan22d Worn Out Plumbing: The running expenses of a house largely increased by worn-out or poon People of good judgment are not in- o = In dealing with us you get a combi- oot13d 22nd Year szans TUES., SEPT. 7, 1909 low prices as such goods can be 1d for. Our stock is varied and complete. ‘ome in and look around. Geo. Greenberger, Norwich, Conn, y10d Telephcne 812. THE. SCHOOL that WELPS plumbing. Either canses annoyance Yo Start in Life. usually at the most inconvenient) We Obtain Positions plumbing with the modern, peace of mind kind will cost nothing, and I'ti guarantee the price will be reasonable. J. E. TOMPKINS, 67 West Main Street. T. F. BURNS, Heating and Plumbing, . Franklin Street. Ladies Tlfl.l' FOR OUR GRADUATES may Very Particular Tea Drinkers say that our best Teas are bet- H4 fer than that they have paid 60c per Ib. for. Our price 25¢ b, ALL VARIETIES. No Premiums to be paid for. WM. F. BAILEY (Successor to A. T. Gardner) Hack, Livery Boarding ' Stable RS, i 12-14 Bath Street. i . HORSE CLIPPING A SPECIALTY. “mt'd ha |mllllflels cn- AW lulllll. Eye Specialist, ‘Telephone 883. aprita Frankiin Square, y1d Main Strest. up one flight, over Somers Bros. : The, Old Norwich Tea Store JIHSTAFER THE OFFICE OF WM. F. HILL, — 8. T. 870 — Real Estate Fine Teas, Coffees, Spices and Fire Insurance, v ll\‘ Homn - mi lxtrnn Buying Direct From the Mannfacturers tells the story in a nutshell; tells why ladies come from miles to our store for DRESS GO increasing list of customers. BRADY & SAXTON, | Telephons 306-2, Norwich Town. 1s located In Somers' Block, over C, My Williams, Room 9, third ficor. febl3d Telephone UL, +« What Does 250 Mean? Why, it is Lewis' ‘phone number, where you can get ICE CREAM by the pint, quart or gallon every in short year. Large orders filled at notice. MRS. G. A. LEWIS, 21 Myers Nh via rices. — I“ MAIN lTlllT - Jun24ThSTu LOUIS H. BRUNELLE " BAKERY We are confident trial owder. a0v28 " Cake and Give us & 2 Pairmount Strest.

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