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4 @ a7y ,zxanmm.b. \ WA ORI SO0 1 R ek e ¢ ) ‘@ year. —— Postolfice at Narwich, At ti Cona. a3 second-ciges master. Telephone Callu: Bulletin Business Otfice, 480, - Bulletin Eaitorial Rooms, 35- Bulletin Job Office, 35- Willimantic Office, Room 2. Marray Bulldtng. Telephorie, 210. Nerwich, Saturday, July 17, 1909. ) WHAT I8 THE BOOK GOINGTO BE The question is being asked, What s the 250th annmiversary Jubilee book going (o/»bé like? It is not going to be like any book ever printed about Nerwich, 4f we have the right concep-/ tion of it. 1t is going to be an accurate ac- count of the eritire celebration gather- ed by a competent scholar from' relia- ble sources and no pains are 'to be spared in making, it the finest ook /ever printed about the city and town ©f Norwich. _It will contain the cream of all the ms“and addresses delivered, the ‘mames of all committees, and also”the mames of hundreds of people who toek part in the ceremonies, with portraits, and street scenes and views of thé parade and the historical play—the wery best pictures which The Bulletin ®an procure. It 1s expected ‘that this book will Bave 400 paes, With 30 pages of ap- _Propriate portralts and pictures. It is to be sold for 32, bound in pioth, and for $3, bourmd in leather, ®here has been received orders for @bout 150. The Bulletin would like 96 make an edition of 1,000, but unless Bhere’is a quitkened demand fhe edi- $ion is likely to be cut down to 500 #opies. The Jubilee book of 1859 was not to be had less than $6 or $7 a copy shen wanted this year. This book will be at a prémium in the future The Bulletin is planning to have it ready for delivery about the 1st of December. Those who desire a copy ehould send their order to The Busi ness Manager of The Bulletin, Nor- wich, Conn.. FOR A GEOGRAPHICAL GOV- ERNOR. The New Haven Palladium, in con- sidering the gubernatorial possibilities in 1910, recognizes that the sectional issue is very likely to have its bear- ifig upon the matter. The Palladium says: “Senator Barnum of Salisbury, who 15 said to be the most likely candidate, not only qualifies for the office in bus- iness fitness and perscnality, but he elso qualifies geographically. He comes from a county which has had only two governors in half a century, and Litchfield county may well lay claim to the office. As to how im- portant a factor the geographical posi- tion of a candidate for a high office s, we have only to go back to the contest for the United States senate which ended in the selection of Senator Brandegee instead of former Govern- or McLean. What went a long way toward defeating Mr. McLean was the fact that he lived in Hartford county, which already had a United States senator in Morgan G. Bulkeley, and popular feeling was against two sena. tors being chosen from one district. We believe that this feeling will be assertive when it comes to the naming of the next governor, and for the sake of harmony and fair distribution of offices the next chief executive of the state will come from one of the so- called remote. counties.” Upon these grounds Windham coun- ty ought to be able to make a strong bid for the place, for it has not had & republican governor in half a cen- tury, and it has some of the staunch- est republicans of the staté residing there. It has the timber, why should it not receive the recognition and the honor? THE \WELCOMING SPIRIT. Why do not the people of the east cultivate the welcoming spirit? Out west the congressmen and senators know that their constituents are alive because they recogize merit and wel- come them home. The people of Iowa are -getting réady to give an enthusiastic recep- tion to Senator Cummings. In com- plimenting him, the Des Moines Capi- Ral says: “As regards this welcome there is | mot a dissenting voice. The senator has accomplished what he thought he coyld do, and what his friends tflought he could do, in one session of the senate. He has succeeded in catch- ing the eye of the nation. We have not agreed and do not agree with the senator upon the tariff. But he fought his battle before the people of lowa and the people of Towa, knowing him and knowing his opinions, elected him. Therefore he has not violated any pledge or understatding.” And the people of Indiana are get- ting ready to give Senator Beveridge a welcome to his home in Indianapolis. He is to be given a soclal greeting and afterward to make a formal address wupon the tariff question to the people of Indiana. Indiana fs a doubtful state, The legislature to be chosen next year will be charged with the duty of re-electing Senator Beveridge or choosing a democrat. The predic- ion comes that Senator Beveridge will have the fight of his life to carry the state for the republicans. All the other strong men in Indiana have been defeated. All of them went down in /the battle last year. Therefore Senator Beveridge will be practically inaugurating hig campaign for re-elec- tion. There is nothing the matter with this form of doing things. It is a live and appreciative method—it tends to keep congressmen awake, for they are confronted by a live constituency. Printers Ink celebrates its 21st an- niversary with a 156-page edition. It is jdst indescribable. It must be seen to be appreciated. Its bulk warrants the exclamation: “Great Caesar's ghost!” ) If it is hot here, what must it be down in Alabama where there is an extra session of the legislature? ‘When Senator Tiliman trembles for . the future of the country the coatinent | does not seem to quivep -PISTOL. A ‘celebrate with toy-pistols _ endence day witness Indescribable suffering or,ten days, have a fumeral &nd then Lyive left them 8 lifetime to ) ‘carelessness in. The state of New Jer- :y registers the loss of six bright ys by lockjaw and reports are com- ing in from- the other states. &o-» the toy-pistol came into use twenty years ago thousands of bright little. fellows have died as the result of polssn from what seemed to be sHght | accldents and this year the record | promises to reach a score or two. It is not strange that humane people are doing all in their power to avert these awful results. None of these ‘réports come from cities which have inaug- urated ‘a sane and safe Fourth. These come from places where license and riot exist in the mame of patriotism and where disorder and danger are the rule on Independence day. It is up t6 parents to save themselves as well as their littie boys the cost and the agony of suc haccidents as these. A PRETTY KETTLE OF FISH. The story in yesterday's Courant about the neat place that was being arranged by an attormey for himself at-$2,500 a year of tife state's money was much discussed at the capitol. It developed that the atterney who stands ready to take the sinecure is Thomas J. Spellacy of this city, a democrat, who was senator two years 4g0 d@nd was so successful in helping the ‘bucket-shops out of their threat- éned abolition. Mr. Spellacy’s friends said that the publication did not worry them; they believed they could pull the bill through the house and they had the governor all fixed so that, if the thing went through, Spellacy was sure of a job. The movement in the house against the creation of the office geemed to be gaining strength. Onme influential member of the judiciary committee, which kindly originated the bill, said that he had never seen it, much less voted on it, and the publication in the paper was the first intimation he had of its ex- istence. Certain influential persons who had endorsed the scheme were quoted as saying that they did so by request, and very earnest request, but that they did not care to see the pro- ject enacted into law.—The Courant, July 15. ‘agony This 15 & well-told tale; but it would be improved by shewing how this democrat got his pull with a re- publican legislature. Bold methods are required for self-created jobs, but it is not often that a democrat can venture with & show of success under such conditions as these. The giving of publicity to the whole scheme marks its deagh-kneil. * If the repub- licans have nothing better to do than to entertain schemes of this kind, it is time they adjourned. EDITORIAL NOTES. Tennessee repudiates near-beer and accepts beerette as a name for the imitation drink. g When St. Swithin comes and finds forty dry days he is not mean enough to repeat the afffiction. Happy thought for today: It you do your level best today, your con- crete yesterdays will be worth lookin back upon, The amny and navy are expensive necessities, but wherein these appro- priatfons resemble insurance is not so very clear. Atlanta is showing up just as many jags dry as it used to when it was a wet city. Now, what is the hatter with Atlanta? This is the real summer weather, and humidity is cutting more of a swath than it has a right to, consid- ering the drouth conditions. Evelyn Thaw cannot be feeling very or-a week | ha, re. a lite of § i‘w' 'm“-it respected wu:‘h-:p:? Thew "Couti ‘rus (3l eareh better. than the Creator has, but they couldn’ There was never @ truer saying than that “the tongue wounds worse than a lance.” It is scripturally spoken of as “the unruly member!” And some peo- ple keep their tongues sense- lessly or savagely all the time, perfect- 1y unconscious of the fact that he who talks much has least to say. Solomon in his wisdom said: “Whoso keepeth his mouth and his 8, soul from trouble.” there is any- thing in the world that can create an unpleasant atmosphere in a whole neighborhoed it is the tongue that runs. Hvery day the tongue makes a great deal of noise, but very little of value is said. If we only spoke when we had something kind or beneficial to say, how talk would dwindle. It is natural to talk, and this is its sole defense; and the first sign of wisdom is disclosed when a person begins to hold his tofigue. As | was digging in the garden of a recent cool morning I was surprised by the warmth of a pebble I unearthed while hoeing ont weeds; and it dawned upon me, that such small heat-holders serve as the foot stoves served our an- cestors in the isty past—they keep the roots of the plants near which they lay warm during the nights. It is the lack of these pebbles in the clayey soil of Louisiana which makes such a vast difference between the temperature at the noon of day and the noon of night. 1t is declared that there is not a loose stone in the whole state of Louisiana. This little warm pebble tells why tie rhubarb near an exposed abutment wall to the westward of the lot is sev- eral weeks earlier than the earliest in the neighborhgpd. In my early days in Ndrwich I went into 4 restaurant one day to dine, and as I was reaching the dessert a ge: tleman near me said to the waiter: “T will finish with pie such as Congress- man S——— always has.” Very mat- urally 1 felt curious to know the char- acter of the food our congressman fed on, and when it came to ordering des- sert the same order was used. I was temperate, and brought up with strict- Iy temperate ideas, and I was stagger- éd when I received a piece of restau- rant minee pie in a saucer covered with hot brandy. I didm't get up and rush for thé door, but I wanted the expes ence and tackled that island of mince- meat and pastry in a shallow sea of alcoholic digesting fluid. It tasted g00d and, was consumed with a relish. 1 soon felt very much exhilerated— more so, doubtless, than the congress- man or his second did after such a meal. I never repeated the order, for T didn't care to get my nose to blush- .ing over what went in at my mouth. This has been a good season for cut- worms. and ladybirds, hence for plant- lice. The cutworms I have grown this season have been large and fat; and the “pussley” and hog-weed and dog- grass has had a riotous time on the dahlia patch. It is pretty clear of weeds at this writing, but the dust is full seven inches deep and how the plants keep looking so well I do not know. Some of them are a few inches high and some a foot or more. They are good.promising ‘plants, and will, no doubt, give exhibition blooms by the last of August, but just now they look as if a heaveniy soaking would be their only deliverer; and doubtless that is so. They need rain and will respond well to it. The red, white and blue bouquet is not as readily attainable on the Fourth as one would think it should be. There is reaily no scarcity of red and white flowers, but there is a sacrcity of blue ones. To get three masses of flowers that match well in these colors is not so difficult as most people suppose— enthusiastic over the possibility of her husband's discharge from the retreat. She doesn’t want to be killed! On account of one case of smallpox in Philadelphia 2,000 persons are quar- antined in 4 single street. As a hold- up this beats the highwayman's. Ask the fly in the house where are screen-doors and screened win- dows, how he got in, and he cannot tell. He enly knows that he flew in. A Ma excuse for resiging office is thit he has nothing to do but to collect and cfunt momey. That's easier thdr counting the footsteps of Time. There are 500,000 two-dollar coun- terfeit bills in circulation in this coun- try that are known to have been made in Italy. These Ital-i-ans should be deported. Weston has reached San Francisco in.a condition to start and walk right back to New York. He and the American battleships seem to be in- vulnerable. When St. Peter asks Rockefeller how he got to be a billionaire, he will not be able to say by being gen- erous to all my employes and just to all mankind, Newburyport's family jar does not seem to attract much attention in Massachusetts. If Newburyport isn't hunting for trouble, it appears to be troubling Hunt. Governor Woodruff did not expect that it would take $10,000 out of the state treasury to investigate the ovs- ter fisheries of the state. In politics the unexpected often happens. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. Who Did the Work? Mr. Editor: Not least among the many pleasant surprises that the an- niversary has brought to the town is the discovery that the youngest son of George A. Rudd possesses talent like that of his father, whose career as an artist was so abruptly closed several years since by his loss in the Alps. The modesty which caused the de- signer of the illustrations in “The In- land City” to hide his Initials in foli- age and tree stump, has only served the more to arouse the query, “What student of the Art school can do such work?” These who have failed to gain the desited information will be pleased to learn that Tracy Porter Rudd was the artist of all the pen and ink sketches—the one etching was by Ozias Dodge, the instructor. ‘he fineness and finish of Mr. Rfdd’s work show both natural en- Centaures and Silene will do it in good shape—Centaurea alone will do it, but it lacks bright red. These pereanials, one from the Levant and the Caucasus, and tie other from the subarctic re- slons of the earth, once started in a garden are not casily rooted out. The self-sown plants leave no doubt that they have come to stay. They make themselves at home on any kind of soil and despite the rigorous use of the hoe greet one every spring” from the edges and corners of {he garden. The red and white silene are of the right color and the light blue centaurea matches them well. You have heard a few l-ams talk about the common people just as i they had them all classified into the common and the uncommon; but they have not, for a common person is one without imagination or beauty, and they are found in all the ramks and conditions o7 life. To be without orig- inality of thought and to be without ideals js indeed to reach a common level. Some people talk of common people for the sole purpose of impress- ing others that they are uncommon themselves. /In a sense they be, but not in the sense they would have us think. The man or woman of mind doesn’t have to knuckle to money for favors for they soon get to recognize the light which lighteth every man who cometh into the world. The swordfish season has arrived and ish steak is in order. 1t is not so0 long ago that the swordfish was not considered edible—it was a womder for size and profitable on account of its oil. 1do mot kriow of a prettier sight than a swordfish swimming near the surface in a smooth sea. He is not afraid—the noise of a steamer does not seem to disturb him. He swims in his native element like a monarch conscious of his might. Hugh Millér says this flsh began to swim in the seas a dwarf and became a giant. He discovered that the first swordfish were oply a span in length in ancient seas and that they grew to be monsters in modern seas whose bodies equalled in hugeness the trunks of ancient oaks Per contra, many things of earth which ‘were gigantic are now only represent- ed by @warfa. Nature's balances are ever maintained. We do not know much about the savage side of life, although we may forget to thank God that we have caped it. Life in all its best cond tions has a nether side. It is only a short time ago that a young woman in the west arrested for murder said this: “I never fait a mother’s kiss upon my brow. Never was a woman's hand extended in friendship to me until after 1 killed Otto Lundstrum. Never was a man'’s voice raised in friendly warning. Youns, friendless, inexperienced, alone in the world, T was fit prey for the hunting of men. As remorselessiy as they hunt down the helpless deer in the forest they hunted me down. Is it any wonder I fell? Every man's hand was against me. I beleved there was no truth, no honmesty, no love in the dowment and professional training and give glad promise of success for the young man in his chosen life work. Surely Edmund Clarence Stedman would have rejoiced, had he known that his poem, reset in its present form, would be so fittingly Hlustrated by ome who, like himself. bad family associations with old Norwich. A LOVER OF PROGRESS, Norwieh, Conn., July 16, 1909, world. Men who hunt down the wild beasts of the forest kill their bodies, The men who hunted me down killed my soul” What a picture of life this is! What an indictment of men devoid rinciple! What a revelation of brutality! It is not so strange that the underdog goes or that the de- fenseless turn and commit murder. Do not be & grouch It is casy to Sad as could other human beings. There was always & as to how a to him. He ha out surprises Denbar did a A purchases of s pretty large sum of each Therefore it was natural McEwen, the new manager of a h::‘rm in these same supplies, cast speculative eyes in Denbar's tion. McEwen wanted Denbars trade and saw no reason why his firm should not have it. So instructing young Leavitt, a good salesman, he sent him to_Denbar. Young Leavitt returned to the office at 4 o'clock that afternoon with an edge on his temper. It always upset Leavitt if he falled to get what he went after. “I got Phillips & Angell's ‘order,” he said, throwing down his papers. “What abeut Denbar?’ asked Mc- Ewen. Leavitt growled. “Couldn’t touch him,” he confessed, It was odd, because young Leavitt usually could work an order out of a lamp post if he set himself to the task. McEwen picked out the mext man with more care. - “Youll have to use tact” he fu- structed Bilby. “Spar around until you see what kind of a mood Denbar is in and then meet him on his own ground. Humor him. They say that he'll sometimes take flattery and again he'll throw an inkwell at you if you merely intimate that he is looking Ton Bilby came back with his mouth in a straight line. “No” he reported. “hie didw't throw any inkwells or any thing like that. He just didn’t see me. He didn’t know I was on earth. T faded away through the crack under the deor.” McEwen is a stubborn man. He glared straight into Smith’s eyes when when he gave his commends to that competent salesman a day or so later. “T'm’ going to get that order from Denbar.” he announced in a cold tone of finality. “T know it can be got. And yowre to get it, Smith! No ex- cuses go! That's right.” McEwen set his jaw when Smith walked back into the office. The salesman regarded the manager with a belligerent eye. “Anybody,” ha announced ,who wants to get Denbar's order can. get it for all of me! And you can have my resignation when- ever you want it”' “Now, now, Smith"” said McEwen, mildly. ' “Calm youself! Evidently you did mot go after him the right way. You did not humor him!” Smith growled inarticulately and then muttered something about the idiocy of humoring a wild beast. “You dow’t know anything about it!" he finisived. “Well, T know Dembar is only a man like the rest of us and he can’t hoo- doo nor hypnotize anybody and there’s no sense—-" in eve juors and Beers. Quality should be most F-pflrmt essential. le of good judgment are not in- uenced so much gy price as by quality with us you get a combi- h“ uality and low price. uors of the best quality at buying, what 1 so im: In n:lnylz’a portant a it. He-laid down his card and waited things to be thankful for every day regardless of our little trials. The fact that John Breed used to be a subscriber to the New York Herald shows that he was a man who calcu- lated to keep_in touch with all public affairs in his time. In looking over a bunch of old newspapers recently 1 noticed one of the date of April 15, 1814, with J. Breed written on the margin; and it was No. 1288 of the New York Herald, then in its fifth year. He may have heen ome of the original subscribers. It was a four- page paper of five columns without a displayed head of any kind in it, and it contained advices from Washington as recent as March 31, and was prob- ably the best part of a week in reach- ing Norwich. Jan, 3§th was the latest news from Paris and March 30 the latest from Bostom. The newspaper world was slow in those days. Now we have news from every city in the world every day and from remote parts every week or two. SUNDAY MORNING TALK NINETEEN HUNDRED AND NOW. A certain well known and sometimes milily ridiculed American city has proposed for itself through the me- dium of a group of prominent citzens, an ideal of municipal development which looks. t a much finer city architecturaily, educationally ~and moraily to bé made & reality by 1915. When the late Edward. Everett Hale heard of this “Boston 1915” movement he made the characteristic remark that while it was an excellent ideal, a still better, motto fer the arousing of public spifit would be nine- teen hundred and now.” Instead of having people concentrating attention on a goal six years distant, he would have them take hold with all their might of the nearby duties and oppor- tuniites. Doubtless these two ideals—that of an objective some distance away In time and space and that of the im- portance and stratogic character of the present moment are capable of being reconciled and of being made mutually serviceable, but for the mo- ment I want to emphasize Dr. Hale's admirable suggestion. Two classes .of persons need just this propelling suggestion. One 1s made up of those numerous people whose motto is “some other time.” In tropical countries it is almost impos- sible to get the natives to do anything. They dreamily reply when urged to do their duty, “Tomorrow, tomorrow.” But when tomorrow comes it is the same old pretext .again. And so tue days slip by and tasks are left half completed, while those who should be doing them sport under the shade of some umbrageous tree. But by and by some red-blooded Anglo Saxon comes along and then the dirt for the canal begins to fly and other great construction and improvement un.ler- takings make splendid headway. “Do it mow and clinch it” is a popular American motto, and yet who does not know men and women in every Amer- ican commumity whose chronic weak- ness is the habit of procrastination, who are all day doing a thing that ought to be dispatched in three hours. It is particularly true in the moral sphere. Most of us expect to brace up some day. Oh, yes, we are going to join the church bye and bye, we are going to put our shoulders to patriotic and good citizenship movements. We are going to write that letter of sym- pathy and render that little kindly service. But when, my delaying brother, pray, when? “Keep mot your kisses for my cold. pale brow.” Time speeds on. What thou doest, do quick- ly. Join the nineteen hundred and now society. The other class of people to who an Injunction of this sort may serve as a needed Incentive is made up of the serfous, strenuous members of so- clety whose ideals are so high and often <o radical that failing to enlist general popular sympathy, they be- come discouraged and say 'it's no usq to do anything, but wait for a change in public sentiment. It's no use fto fight the liquor trafiic untfl we can get a national prohibition law. It's no use to clean up the streets and agitate for pure food and milk and better tenement houses until socialiem ig in the saddle everywhere and an entire revoluilon 1o e Dublic_aititude has order. Johm Tuckie Prep. imperfect bearin tirely closed deafness s the result. and unleas the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its mor- mal condition hearing will be destroy- ed forever; nine cases out of tem are Ciused by /Catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mu- cous surfaces. We will give One Hundrad Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars free. F. J CHENEY & CO., Toieao, O. Sold b, ruggists, C. e Hall's Family Pills for constl- pation. Foley's Honey and Tar not only stops chronic coughs that weaken the constitution and develop intoconsump- ton, but heals and _strengthens the lings. It affords comfort and relief in the worst cases of chronic bronchitis, asthma, hay fever and lung trouble. Lee & Osgood Co. THE OFFICE OF WM. F. HILL Real Estate and Fire Insurance, is located in Somers’ Bleck, over C. M. Williams, Roow 9, third foor. febl3d Telephone 147. Joseph F. Smith, FLORIST 260 Main Streef, Norwich. ivid ‘lhe Plank,” = Frankin_streer, the best ALES is headquarters for ane, LAGERS In Nor O'CONNELL & SHEA, ay2id —DRINK THE BEST — Bradieston & Woerz Beer. THOMAS H. WILSON'S, junled 78 Franklin Street. —OPEN— Del-Hoff Cafe Bisiness Men's Lunch a specialty. Alo Regular Dinner, fifty cents. 90 HAYES BROS., Props. Schlitz Milwaukee Beer, $1 a dozen. Famous Narragansett t Stock, 60c_a dozen. Yale and New BEn Brewery rter, 50c a Co.’s Ale, Lager and dozen. Wines, Liquors and Cordials at spe- cfal_prices. JACOB STEIN, 93 West Main St. Telephone. 26-3. Shene ’?n?;um‘“"'“"tfi 1 ;e:n:cund flllcki{:h‘y Remedy may result in a up the worn out ens these organs NEWMARKET HOTEL, 715 Boswell Ave. n-hflflfl-‘mtfldw n:”n.inw.u & as Wines, | Dancing Ice Cream, Scdan and Light Lunches. 2.1, reennone ssi-« | 1030 RAWSON & WHIPPLE 1509 .-7 afternoon and) evening, iy Cars leave Square at 145, ’%Cl‘. 3.15, 545, and 645, 7.30, 746, 8, Purchipy yeur car tickets, admit- ting to Park, at Madden's Cigar Store, W £ s oy : e Dastehinnd Ho. whis . is varfed and lete. - O Bneat i pushy beowe he i look around. BREED’S THE ATRE Deered up, at his caller, NO DATE SET. { 1o Soy/, he rematked, do YOu WRIt|ogening of Hartiord Armary Depends Charles McNulty, Lesses. h“fif’“ 'r?:md himself. l’"x don't 0y il Norwich, Conn, Devoted to o col ) First-class Moving e e o Althousgh plans for the dedication of sv10a | Pictares and Qlusirated Songs. Denbar got o Jiis feet and romoved me;'dm arsenal and armory at his coat. “Come on, then he order- 03 Feature Pletures | ed. “The boys have caught about roweid a6 4 STy S o bnfl"{;l‘ and *;‘;{ -~ * (Thrilling Naval Plcture), > @oing m. They've - —AND— T - than already given out by the joint lked out and McEwen follow- | been r voowr g gh Grade an ustratel ngh. ed}{: :‘: mne: co:;'nl & largely upon the c‘:ommm ‘i‘lmu%hfi Mntinecs, Ladies and Ohildrem, Sey #In five minutes McEwen, slelel;'el ::f&; :‘u '-h;' d:fi“!‘fi:fi who 'r'z i Evenings, 10e. Ted D D I R e asilod st | boen planned to hold the ceremonies Workmenship | BREED HALL. Washington Square like an Indian, but Denbar vel ISR S TG UG cemmeniy iy louitest ' 1& ‘WhE wohle mirule ot e ud oA uaranteed | the barking and scurrying and shout- tober. g Entirery - ing and whacking had ended. Then, 3 ' K ’l‘fl 'm! Wiping _ thelr perspiring brows, Den: i ssadi RonERl EA bar and McEwey 1 ir way PP to t:e private F)fllcg, ;epnl‘lr‘tn' ?lal!:!- 2,'8"“ . O Mo JNeunstman. ages to apparel and breathing hard. ; Suddenly Denbar. looked *up, ‘Whisk - May Building. | Devoled to High Class Moving broem in hand. “Say,” he asked, “what in the dick- Pictures and Hiustrated Songs ens do you want, anyhow 7° i St McEwen felt a pall settie upon his e 200 ure Picture X spirits. “I've scnt enough men over # : A COUNTRY GIRL'S PEARL. here,” he remarked with some spirit, L Mr, Dudley in High Class Songs and vou to know the Fairmount com: " . v Y ouldn’t ordert® Hipameses 4. 3. Mt Mr. Delaney in Ilustrated Songs. FOE L g | Iy Matinee 5o to all. Evening 10a he snapped. “But it k' Iver Dally ! 5 my trade ain't worth coming after Hac y ‘Theater codled, by, electricity. yourself you don't get it, I don’t want . and vizd any cheap smsnr‘;wnbcl\ntwln[_x‘p my office trying to do business with me Head man or nothing! Now tal Board‘ng JAMES F. DREW v itt and Su v i 0 .. Young Leavitt and Smith ang Bil>v | wero lined up unostentatiously on the Stable 1ano mmu am] return of their chief. Bxpectancy was i . . R, i edy. ears Best V' ly. “Did—did you get it?" breathed is the bestlux_n 4 12-14 Bath Street. |, ni lork 12"' Ty ! ' voung Leavitt, who could not swaad the complexion and cures HORSE CLIPPING A SPECIALTY.| sepizid . Porkl suspense. skin diseases. Al druggists. IALTY. 3 McEwen looked as bored as possi- (f STR TS B2 “Telapbone 883. apr2sd ble. “Of course,” he said with with- Hills Hain s0d Whisker Dye, black or brows, 50c. EXPERT TUNING ering scorn. His subord!lnatm looked crestfallen ! i - w‘t ANWS saves lnd'lulflr-)nl l'h;‘ plm..-- X and respectful. \ " guaran . e T o e COAL. AND LUMBER. F a0 2 o 15 Chatremant Aves HEA e iwen Hiaheed up with grest Wi ench Dyers and Cleansers Norwich, Conn. . ity. "It was perfectly easy,” he sald. . “raduate Niles Bryant Scheol of Phwae T merely humored ~him!"—Chicago FINEST {WORK in the United News. postal and Tl eall. ] States. We use none but the ¥rench e Mo B 3 method. Al work Guaranteed. More taken place. Wrong again. Bacause we can't do everything at once we “GOAL-IN-TXE-BIN" han: 990 castemans hers o’ Nosrwich, < F. C. GEER 4 are not excused from trying hard 1o 15 THE BEST KINL OF COAL TUNER 0 all we can today. o el - Hurrah for inineteen humdred and | You can tell a “Coal-in-the-Bin l.shl“’s 122 Prospect St, now! The best year that even was, a z:- -;‘kry:- Fou, '9a ;»- him. fi}' ] Tel. 889-5. Norwich, OFf veritable year of our Lord. ‘ There |keeps him young — 1 184 Main 8¢, with Nor, Cir. Library clean larger things — ha's a with con- . o — — e lives on el the wworia for, | Bdence in the future of thik country.| JundeTHETu PLUMBING AND GASFITTING. ward. A SN Morel: Buy Conl i JeIN A . USIC AND DRAW . |Rose Bowling Alleys, | The Vaughn Foundry Co. wisic o onws | £, CHAPPELL 9. |B050 B0 8 y na cosa_apd “pcie syt IRON CASTINGS will begin the season at the New York Contral Whar! ond 140 Main inset- LIUCAS HALL, theater August. 16. Tolephones. v, 44 . | rornistea » atock of b _l' a.—_ a o e 49 Shetucket Strest. ' e tterns, n\.ll‘-;.-r.-'. Mazie King, toe dancer, is now per- Jan228 forming in TThe Midnight Bome’ at et | 3 3. C. GTONE Prep the Broadway theter, New York. w 0“ Phl i Sugeotm S S M arine nying, Diect orn mbiag vived “A Gilded Fool” last week. o, ‘h The running sxpenses of a houss are There is a rumor that “The Beauty a1 i sty o el sismbing. Bifher enses eaneyaste B e St o e Uiy ML‘-'; trom miles to our store| —veually a4 the most incewwembent Pevy in the principal part. - GOODS. Dome and lesrn | tima. An esthate fer replaoing sush S Free Burning Kinds and Lebigh P L I e plumbing with the modern, peace of Yosce Bk reimy s oo nd ALWAYS IN STOCK. e Y & e B g 70 12y 1~ gaciam il g 1l c: circuit e ea- ter at Montreal and the Royal Alex- | wm guarantee the price willbe reassnable. andra. theater at Tavento. A ’. UTIIOP eleoh -2 Nerwich Town. b tivet e sk, b ' may2 The next parts that Robert Mantel oy s J. F. TOMPKINS, will act in this country are Coriolanug | Offce—con Market and Shetuchet Sla = aunté 67 Wost Mein Stresh and the Falstaff of the first part of Telephons 168-13. ” “Henry ¥V.” Neither has been seen { ' in recent years on the American stage. | ootsed - BAKERY T F For the fifth anmual tour of “The we -flflg Cake and Bk Clansman” George H. Brennan has p Do ¢ et G s brought together with hurdly an ex- trial Heuna and Pm 4 ception the entire compamy that firet 20 Felrmount Btresh produced the play in New York. et 99 Feankiin Strsat Nina Morris, who was the Awtoin- martd R noirmoels, oo e e v | Well Seasoned Wood| DON'T WORRY: revived “The Prisoner o ze‘;nn ast s v 3 [ season, has been emgemed enry W Bayage for a prineipa) rols n “The C. H. HASKELL It Maxes Wrtakies. Florist Shop,” the comedy asmounced P for the Liberty theater, New York, in PRI, 7554 e 5 2 "z AN S7 Franklin 8t 58 Thames 80 At Dreamland, Mansger Gumpertz| maysd is giving to th:!e mfl”\flm:tmfi‘: of the park the shows ever given ou tha lsiamd. e J. A. MORGAN & SON, circus, comprising ‘best performers btalnable, is made up of fifteen aets ilabie s s Jp &= o0 | Coal and Lumber afternoon until 11 at night. The ring | We carry a well seieoted line of alt is over the lagoon and the performance | stees family ceal. Lumber for bufld- may be witnessed from seats under a | ing ses. cool and shaded arbor, which entirely | 5 Conftral Wharf. Tel 894 surrounds it. septisd _— Deafness Cammot Be Cured —— LUMBER —— by I 1 lications, as they cannot ,Xm‘.”li'h,‘,g heased portion of e car. | 1S best 1o B S s | E o oure Ana tht (s by comaticutional remedies. | cArTy ® big lime of Shingles. © | 30§ West 120th Strest, New York, Deafness is caused by an inflamed con- [ up and let us tell you sbout our ttock mars1d dition of the mucous lining of the ®. F. & A. J. DAWLEY Bustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or mayl4d , and when it en- i A W, BURNHAM, Eye Specialis!, Jyla 257 M, Street. 86 (0 92 WATER ST, GEORGE S. DRAPER, Pr Have cholcest of o de Fruit Or- 1t just recelved the ported Cordials, consi he, Chartee: Cr Abxinthe orbidder Maraschino Cl 1 B M star H ndy, King and bi ite and Dewar's hiskey & ameson's one aud Uiree siar Irish . Vhiskey, Gordon's, Co Plymouth, 4.4 Tanqueray, Burmetl's Tom and Fields ¥ fioe Gin. ¢, & C. Gin, Als ind Rurke's Stont, Heublein's Cocks ils, and the best assortment of merican’. Wines. Full line of Lager ttled at brewery, Tobacco, Cigars J Groceries. STORE OPEN EVENINGS. er Ale, F )