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easonable Articles * MANUFACTURED BY Lee & Osgood , ACmmpa"ny. 31-133 Main Street, NORWICH, CONN. LEE’'S LIVER GRANULES—A prep- aration beyond doubt for the relief of constipation, torpidity of the liver, in headaches and dizziness so frequently caused by sluggish liver and irregular bowels. Price 25 cents. 08GOOD'S JAMAICA GINGER—An excellent preparation for colic, cramps, dyspepsia, indigestion, etc., and in all cases where a warm stimulant is re- quired. Price 25 cents. LEE'S BEEF, IRON AND WINE—A valuable restorative for all convaies- cents and especially. in various forms of general debllity. Price 50 cents. LEE'S HEADACHE WAFERS—A epeedy relicf for headaches of all kinds, . . k Merrill went further into ‘details re- & . slok; bitious, mervous or hysterical. | il 'PIEENAY T MR 215 S15 WAL | garding Thaw's alleged aduss’of young | (he staff, of the nresent ommmandtr: great grandfather, because extra-, Also relieves neuralgia. Price 25 |state proved the charges she made in h":‘f"‘:" :;d h;;nm?::e'nuo :It.h ’gtu:- portant duties for the organization. i cents. &~ a printed pamphlet recently, that her ford %th, i . son had been hurried away to the asy- | “*H, friqge festified to the truth of EXCEPTIONAL FARMER di it is f di LEE'S TOOTH POWDER=An anti- | lum without being allowed to get his | ;urig of Her story. He sai that ihe 2 e y ordinary mer S roun n every séptic powder containifig valuable | €/° ;‘i."M‘;:r:".;“x:l’l ‘;‘.zl’fi::“' Imgnehy he turned over to the wwoman, | Harwinton Man Who was Buried Re- : v properties which whiten and preserve 5 ‘which she sal was used to preven! e cently Succeeded in Life Where % ¥ On the whole, however, Thaw and [girls Thaw whipped from, making < the teeth, perfume the breath, heals|,. ',y ;rney are well satisfied with the | trouble, did not comfe from ‘l'luw.h!m- Thousands Have Failed. p bflg- Yo un eed only th € and hardens the gums. Price 25 cents, Jyledaw L. L. CHAPMAN will make a Summer Sale at reduced prices en the balance of Harness, Car- riages and Summer goods. Owners of horses will save good money buying thier horse supplies for the next 30 days. A large stock to select from. L. L. CHAPMAN Bath Street, Jvdaw JOSEPH BRADFORD, Book Binder. Blank Books Nade and Ruled to Order, 108 BROADWAY, Telephone 252 Norwich, Conn. oct10d Watch Repairing done at Friswell's speaks for itself. Wil FRISWELL, 25-27 Franklla Sang2daw Grand View Sanitarium for the treatment of Mental and Nerv- ous Diseases, with separate and ds- tached department for Alcoholic and Drug Habits. Address Grand View Sanitarium, Telephone 675 EMWEF bty v g ealth Norwich, Conn. White Plains, N. Y., g’-.ty 29.—Wil- liam Travers Jerome, district attor- ney of New York, prosecutor at both Thaw murder trials, - his in- quisition of Harry K. w in the supreme court at o'clock this eve- ning. This ends perhaps the most sur- prising chapter of the court pro- cedure ‘n which the Pittsburger has figured, certainly the most sur- prising in this latest phase of the case, Thaw's fight to prove himself sane and obtain his reiease from the |script. Thaw mndm :‘ 5 Matteawan asylum for the criminal in- sane. In Hands of Friends Today. All told, yesterday and today, Harry Thaw faced Jerome's lightning thrusts for ten hours, yet he held his own at all times and tomorrow he will be in the hands of friends. His attorney, Chsrles J. Morschauser, expects to call him in the morning. This examination may be as long as Jerome's, and aft- er it the district attorney may have a few more questions to ask. Thaw Goes Over Records. Notwithstanding the mental strain he wag under yesterday and today, Thaw labored far into tonight with his attorney in Justice Mills' ante- room, going over the multitude of rec- ords used today by Mr. Jerome in his rapid fire of cross questions. The district attorney eonsented to this, but left one of his deputies to guard the evidence, which he said belonged to the records of his office. Thaw and his attorney returned to the court house at 7 p. m., and, with a deputy sheriff at the door, began their task, which extended well into the night. They asked this ,privilege chlefly on account of certain exhibits introduced by the district attorney. These consisted of various papers con- taining notes and drawings found in Thaw’s cell at the Tombs after he.was sent to Matteawan. What use Mr. Jerome will make of them will develop later. But their appearance seemed to bother Thaw somewhat, and after court adjourned, = Mrs. William C. Thaw, the prisoner's mother, gave out day's work. Thaw showed even more confidence than he exhibited during the first encounter; in fact, his self- satisfaction at one time almost cost him dear when he ventured into a heated passage at arms with the dis- trict attorney. But he checked himself when he realized that he had nothing to gain and everything to lose by a show of témper. Except for this squall the exchange of questions and answers with here and there an occasional sally 7 ot P of wit, progressed smoothly-from 1.15 nfit: urnm by Yufifl; Mr. E”‘I“fi g self to the pr! er's 5 0 .h%- day he based his questions ch up- on various documents, rs and memoranda which he | in prising numbers. Thae most useful was & | 26 sheets of foolscap pa were pasted a s vi dfi- paper clippings nu- -an to Delphin M. Delm, _chief gupl during the first . for use m aring his closing speech to the gome of its contents were strang: enough to caube suspicions of the au- thor's sanity, but.these bits Thaw in- variably explained by saying they were letters written to him and his family by persons whose kind inten- tions ‘probably were better than their menmf balance. 5 “Lots of it was rubbish,® he added, “but some of the letters Cmnlfl;‘d ideas I thought Mr. Delmas 13 use.” Thaw's part of the compllation showed him as a man of many tastes amd interests. In it he quoted pas- sages of Scripture regarding sins against the young and referred to the dragon tales in Percy’s Reliques for striking similes regarding nford ‘White. He culled from his volumi- nous correspondence the most striking expressions that might be put to the same use. 3 Imas’ opinion of his client's sug- gestions was indicated by the fact that he turned the carefully prepared sheets over to the committee of alienists be- fore which the prisoner appeared dur- ing his first trial. Mr. Jerome got them from this source. Two Other Witnesses. Heard. ‘While Thaw was, of course, the cen- ter filgure at the hearing today, there were two other witnesses, Susan Mer- rill, the former New York lodging- house keeper, and Clifford W. Hart- ridges Thaw's former attornew Mrs. thing he had pre self. He said that he had received $103,000 from Mrs, William Thaw, but had used a large part of it.for “vari- ous purposes” conneeted. with bis em- ployment by the family. v Evelyn Thaw was.an interested au- ditor in court again today, but her husband on the - ‘stand ‘ignored. her presence. She naturally looked at him but he resolutely refused to look at her. Indiactions are that the hearing will last at least a week longer. “PISTOL-TOTING” IN THE SOUTH. New England Makes the Weapons for Our Negroes to Use. ‘We seem to haye struck a responsive chord in the estéeemed Springfield Re- publican at last on -the queltlofi of pistol-toting in the south. Some day: ago we commented on the pistol mak- ing business of New England and of the effect that this successful enter- prise has had upon the homicidal sit- uation in the south. A The . admission is also made that “New England profits by the pistol making business and even by the local violation of the South Carolina stat- ute,” but the suggestion is made that South Carolina might develop some self-control in the use of deadly weap- ons. Then our contemporary indulges in this defense of one of New Eng- land's most profitable industries: “A pistol, like a shotgun or a rifle, has its legitimate uses, although its ownership or carrying on the person is properly a subject for regulation by the authorities. The twenty-inch law South Carolina now has is most ex- cellent and ought to be rigidly en- forced.” We agree wholly with the last prop- osition of our friend, but we do not agree with it in its statement that “a pistol, like a shotgun or a rifle, has its legitimate uses.” There is no legi- time use really to which it can be placed except as side arms for those who aré engaged in the military serv- -ford. REV. AMOS OSBORN Was Circuit Rider in Northern New England 75 Years Ago. Rev. Amos Osborn,-a. circuit rider who began service .as a Methodist preacher in the north woods of north- ern New England and New York about 75 years ago, celebrated his 95th birth- day Monday at his home in West Hart- Mr. Osborn is probably the oldest clergyman in Connecticut, and few men have lived a more strenuous life than he has in carrying the story of the gospel to a widely scatteréd people. He is connected with St. Paul's M. E. church on Park street, Hartford, and last preached there when jn his 91st year. Mr. Osborn was born at® Pittstown, N. ¥, in 1814 and studied for the min- istry in Boston, Mass,, and was ordain- ed about 1840. Methodism was then young and the ministers of those days had strenuoys lives to lead. " At one time Mr. Ogborn had 28 churches under his charge. He mar- ried in October, 1844, and his wife, who shared many of his hardships, is still spared to him, although an invalid and is 91 years of age. Mr. Osborn’s recompense for his labors were small in those early days, at one time his salary being only $375 a year. » At one time his parish .was' partiy in the New England states and. in Canada, the dividing line being a wide swath of trees cut down to mark the .and Floride, and i gz w53 '?égfii §z i i Aibany, New Lake Shore and Union Pacific rallroads to Salt Lake City, arriviag there on Au- last South Norwalk, resolution was ad instructing the delggates to P! t his name for the office which is only twice remoyed from that of commander-in-chief, As- ‘surances of support have been re- ceived from the other New England delenfilm as is considered the most eligible candidate from (his sec- tion, while he is so well known to the G. A. R. from all over the country it appears to his friends that he is rea- sonably sure of an election. Judge Beers enlisted in Co. I, Sixth Cong. Vols., on August 25, 1861, short- ly after he became 16 years of age, serving with the re, ent in Virginia, North and South Carolinas, Georgia being mustered out as en‘u.ln of his company, August 21, 1865, after hold! various non- commissioned offices ahd being pro- moted to captain. He has been an active and zealous member of Elias Howe, Jr, post, G. A. R, ever since it was organized, having béen its com- mander. He also been command- er of the department of Connecticut, judge-advovate-general on the staff of Commander-in-chief Thomas J. Stew- art, also holding the same position oh Ordinarily the farmers of this sec- tion of the state do not make a great deal of money, says The Torrington Register. Farming isn’t as lucrative a business ‘as some others; but George B. Alfred, whose funeral was held re- cently in Harwinton, was an excep- tion to the general rule of agricultural careers in this viciinty. It is belieyed that Mr. Alfred's es- tate will aggregate about-$20,000, and practically every ceént of this money was accumulated by farming. Mr. Alfred was a born farmer. He knew just how to get everything ‘posgible out of the land tilled and at the same time how to give back to the soil the richness which the crops tended to destroy. The Alfred farm in Harwinton, where the family was reared, and where Mr. Alfred made his small for- tune by hard work, is today in better condition than it was forty years ago. Mr. Alfred cared for the soil as he cared for his livestock, knowing that only by carefulness could the quality of the land be kept up to what it snould be. Mr. Alfred had foresight, and he knew perfectly the conditions under which he was working. He mixed brains with his seed and he always reaped good crops. .He was an excep- ticnal farmer and on: which the town of Harwinton will sorely miss, either unconsciouslyior not. Mr. Alfred owned a large amount of property in Florida and in the Adi- rondacks. He also owned considerable land in both Litehfield and Harwin- ton, HUSBAND GOT DIVORCE. Mrs. Abbe Linscott Discovered It When She Tried to Get Pension. Mrs. Abbe Linscott of 21 Russell street, an employe of the Warner Bros. company corset factory for the past 29 vears, received the surprise of her life a few days ago when the pen- g i line between the two organized gov-|sion department of the United States he c h y B Sl R e R e oo | ernments. His last charge was at|government rejected her claim on the of defense. It is made so that it can Wells, Vt. He has preached over 6,000 | grounds that her husband, John H. be easily concealed about the person, and it has been placed under the ban in this state, because it has been so | frequently used with murderous in- tent. The law in South Carolina pro- hibiting the sale, transportation or use in this state of any pistol less than 20 inches in length and three pounds in weight was enacted for the purpose of preventing the pistol trade in South Carolina. The law is not enforced. Few.regard it. -. . . Tt is said that during the last thir- ty-five years 25,000,000 pistols have been manufactured in this country, most of them in. New England, and that the rate of production now is about 1,000,000 annually. We have not the statistics at hand, but we venture to say that more crime, has been com- mitted, more lives have been lost, more property has been sacrificed by the sale of 1,000,000 pistols in this country a year than can be credited to the intemperate use of intoxicating liguors. —Charleston News and Courler. A Quiet Vacation. sermons and many of the original useripts are preserved. BROTHERS ON LONG TRIP. Reach Los Angeles on_Their 10,000 Mile Journey. an- Word has been regeived in.Green- wich that E. D. and A. N. Mead of that town have reached Los Angeles, Cal, after a 41 days' automobile jour- ney which began in Greenwich, says the Stamford Bulletin. They passed through 14 states.and ¢overed a dis- tance of 4, miles in their 45-horse power Packard roadster. The Mead brothers are making a 10,000 miie trip from Greenwich to Seattle and return. They made their trip by way of Chi- cago and Milwaukee. 'Passing through Wyoming they had an unpleasant time with a large pack of wolves which fol- lowed them for many - miles. They went through Nevada by way of Death Valley, passing through Geldfield and crossing the desert to Mojave. After several weeks in Seattle they will turn to Greenwith by the - northern Linscott, who died five years ago, obs tained a divoce from her 11 years before his death. Mrs. Linscott cannot .belleve that she was a divorced woman for 11 years without knowing it, but the government record shows it. Her husband lived in the west for many years and became postmaster of the town .of Linscott, founded by his two brothers. He corresponded with his wife, and Mrs. Linscott said she was never served with papers, and that she and her husband never had a cross word. She has sought the ald of Congressman E. J. Hill in her ef- forts to obtain a pension and will en- deavor to prove ‘that she was never divorced, at least notilegally.—Bridge- port Standard. NORMAL SCHOLARSHIPS. New Law Provides for One for Each Town. In the senate at Hartford this week Senator Luther explained the bill to provide trained teachers for small can be done without ourselves on _KNOWI possible by Dentists ¢f experience. that.e. Each of our staff of operators has made some branch of Den- tistry his particulat specialty for years, and whether you need filling, crowning, extractfon or bridge work, we have a SPECIALIST to do it for you, and do it positively without pain, to one-half. the prices prevailing at other offices for the same quality of work. elsewhere. sales outstrip of brands old enough to be its first sack to tell you why. 5 i‘vflx oo g e the records . The same High Quality STANDARD OF EXCELLENCE is maintained in every brew THE JAMES HANLEY BREWING CO,, . PROVIDENCE.R; L ALL DENTAL WORK 1T ain by Dentists who KNOW HOW. fie HOW. Good Dental work nowadays is only We pride We have been 20 years galning and at from one-third K. WILL PAY you to Investigate and consult us before going We make no charge whatever for examination and advice, Sets of teeth that fit, from $8.00 Gold Crowns, 22 karat....$5.00 Bridge Wérk Bpecial —our own system — absolutely A vacationist at a Cape Cod resort | route. towns. Tt establishes scholarships of impossible for teeth to makes it clear in a personal letter that PR RPNy $150 each in the normal schools for break off 00 f all the strenuous life is not confined to Left Cellar Door Open. scholars from towns having a grand i s “esse s 00 ACTUALLY, POSITIVELY, IN- |ih¢ workaday world. He arrived at| When Sturgis Sellick of Ridgeway | list of $1,500,000 and less. It also pro- Fillings .......000.... from B0e VARIABLY RESTORES GRAY HAIR TO TEE COLOR AND " VIGOR OF YOUTH, Y 'tlook young if hairi , faded, ol and Kieless, Flay's Flaic Feakts wil brn back the natural color, just as it was when you Maukes the bright, silky and full of life and r—fll dye—won't color or soil your BOTTLES, AT DRUGGISTS, 4 “‘Elh- Soap cures Eczema, red, i fn and satts 350, drageiece Seod . “The Care of the Skin,” “The Care of the Hair.” m Hay Spee. Co, Newark, N. J. Broadway Phar.; Lee & Oggood Co.; Chas. Osgood; Utley & Jones: Dunn’s; Bevin & Son. his summer house just in time to greet 2 colony of gypsy moths, starting forth a quarter of a mile away from his cot- tage, and for a space of two weeks stripping all the green from the trees until they looked like those of Chelsea after the great fire. Then came the g8ypsy moth men, clearing a path about twenty feet wide around the infested district, after which they obtained | cat, but which proved itself, by its| Luther said it would not be desirable rermlss;‘lnn from the proper authorities | odor, to be a more than str: e cat, | to compel a teacher to teach imn the - Mo 0 set fire, Everything was as dry as ‘While the moth killers them- ile precaution, it ‘i not likely that they were in any degree responsible for the for- est fire which broke out not long aft- er, this happened just the same, anhd gave the vacationist his mext alarm. It looked one Sunday afternoon as if his cottage and the whole settlement would be so soon wiped out that he held up an automobile to ask if it would take his family and effects tinder, went to bed Friday night heileft the outside door of his cellar-open—-and that was the reason why he was awak- ened along in the middlé of the might or early next morning by a great commotion in .the cellar.. Investiga- tion disclosed the fact that the fam- ily dog had discovered an intruder in the cellar which he teok-for a strange a cat of a peculiar odoriferous kind. The dog worried the cat badly, buj shook it up so much.that he got him- self into a very disagreeable condi- tion and distributed a decldedly dis- agreeable odor throughout the house. The family are thinking about spend- ing the rest of the summer in the barn, or out ‘of doors. Agreeing With Eliot. Former President Eliot of Harvard, when informed that he is mentioned as vides that the graduages shall teach school in any of the small towns re- ferred to in the bill, for three years after their graduation. The expense is estimated at $13,000 a year, though, according to Senator Luther's state- ment, the expense may not Amount to that sum. in reply to Senator Arnold, Senator town from which she went to the nor- mal school. She might not want to teach in that town. He did not think that a teacher would refuse to teach in ‘the town after she had had the ‘benefit of the ‘scholarship. The bill was passed by an unani- mous vote. NORWICH FIRMS AUTOMOBILE STATION, Business Directory OF EASTERN CONNECTICUT AND WESTERLY, R. I. All 'work guaranteed for 10 years King Dental Parlors, Dr. Jackson, Manager. Franklin Square. NORWICH FIRMS MEATS AND PROVISIONS Y % . { somewhepe Lor sacety, since be had no |4 candidate . for . Fovesm ¢ Wh h s hoo‘? oit, § Otis Street. - Automoblle | James Barning, Norwich Town, Conn. Sflmmef Mi““ler time to hunt an expressman. Stran- ET;;::'Ie“sd:othlnx in_fer A ::od ;?a’;:& 1C C :'na" B?cylc'h Rerairing. Geparal Ma-| Fresh and JBait Meate Bomiiry o mne . gers put the party up for the night. 5, . chine work. Jeohbink ‘'Phone Fre: lons received dall ;.‘v.ry. y ight. | people who hold Dr. Eliot’s talents WHAT KIND ¢f a TRAINING? A i @ The aown authotities hurried every|and personality in high esteern will SERDING RATRRIAK Prompt delivery. ¢ —at— available man to the fire, and between ith his conclusion.—¥gll* ha 7 e —— » the shovel brigade and ‘the backfires | Horala, - o o o RAver Our ALS TRy help Posk, MeWjillams & Co. 47-56 WSl | REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE. . MISS BUCKLEY'S, 308 MainSl. |which were started, the main tide of A S8 to a decision. Send Lime, Portidng Loment, Fartod Roofing. | Geo. E. Bachelder, Room 2, 65 Broad- ar26d ? Y destruction was checked just before it Something Worth' Whils. — | Way, Real Estate and Investment » m reached the cottager's door. Buf the r Broker, Notary Public. Auditing and 'oday—Now. It’ -, - » LER . 3 ", smoke was so intense that he could not | , It 1S reported that a few Japanese asking. R coh"’“::“" und Water Sta. Expert’ Acccuntant.- Telephone 615. fe 11 r have taken summer cottages on the have remained in the House that night $ the best Ales' La y i R GBORGE G. GRANT, | ioyovent fe mow wanders what | %ouh shere Seiinsily o enoy e R e e e | e e next can happen to make a vacation x [, v m ¥ ily use. Delivery. 'el. 136-5. . . t‘ er an ALMISL | serene and resttul.—Boston Transcript, | MOUtH county war game. They will see 4 — Ladles’ Tailor, »2A Y PL | some husky young soldier lads in a well CONTRACTOR AND JODBING Novwioh: W conducted set of manoeuyres.—Brock- ton Time: $2 Providence St., Taltvilie. Prompt attention to day or night calls, Telephone 69-31. asrMMWFawl WEI(' you want to put your bu. ness before the public, there.-is no m {Hun better than through the advertis- .rm&. of The Bulletin Depend on McCall. The tariff conference committee has been framed up against the interest of Massachusetts, but we are hoping that the eloquence and persistence of Con- gressman McCall of this state will be strong enough to hold something for the old Bay State.—Gloucester Times. F. B. Beckwith, 90 West Main Street. ! Contractor znd Bullder. Jobbing work A 3 of til kinds promptly aitended to. WILLIMANTIC FIRM3 “IHE FOUR-MINUTE RECORD.”. | . _ STIMPSON'S STABLBS, Come In 4nd hear it. It's something ;“f ¥oung's hote] Maln street. to date service . great. / and hesvy team! AnA More Sensible. If Weston's walk . should start a eraze for walking it would be more sensible and salutary than the recent craze for Marathon s.—New York Tribune LR . Y