Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 4, 1909, Page 4

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a 2 ‘ orwich Zulletiz i wnd Goudied, 113 YEARS 0 price, 12¢ & waek; 50¢ a a year, tered at the Postolfice at Norwich, . a8 second-class matter. ‘Telephone Calls: Bulletin Business Office. 480. Bulletin Editorial Rooms, 35-3. Bulletin Job Office, 35-6. ‘Wilkimantie Bullding. ., Bn ’ Office, Room 2. Murray Telephone, 210. — — - Norwich, Wednesday, Aug. 4, 1909. The Circulation of b The Bulletin. Tie Bulletin has the largest cir- 3 culation of any paper in Eastern & Connieeticut, and from thres to four § Umes larger than that of any in Norwiich. It is delivered to ove 3,000 of the 4.063 houses W Nor- 4 wich,, and read b: ninety-threes per cent. of the people. In Windham " 31t is dolivered to over 900 houses. £ Putnam and Danfelson to over 1,100, and in al' of these places is considered the local daily. Eastern Connecticut has forty- nine Sowns, one hundred and sixty- five post office districts and forty- § ne raral free delivery routes. The . Bulletin s sold In every: town mnd on all of the R. F. D. routes:in Eastern Connecticut ¥ CIRCULATION i 1801, average . 1905, average. 1806, aves 1807, average. 3 z AS A SUBSCRIBER VIEWS IT. The names of subscribers are com- ing in for the Jubilee book of the 250th anniversary as fast as The Bulletin anticipated that they would. This book 38 essential to the proper completion of the event, and its publication was assumed by The Bulletin as a matter of civic pride rather than as a specu- lative enterprise. There is no money §n it for the printer. One citizen has lordered 24 copies and one 1), and these are the only large individual orders. An order from a New York subscrib- er, who has no other interest than the interest awakened by a few years of yesidence here, reads: “Please have my name put down for one of the celebration books. | ‘want it for two reasons: First, | want to be able to read the whole thing and study the pictures at my leisure; sec- ond, s an investment—your two- dollar book will be in demand at $5 . or better before you and | get through selling things. There are people liv- ing in Norwich now who wen't order and whose children will be begging for copies at any price in 1925." This is the truth. If The Bulletin does not print an edition larger than ©00 copies, the book may be in such demdnd that it will go to a premium at once. No agents will be sent out to solicit orders, because that would add to the cost of the edition. Names of subscrib- ers should be sent in to tie business manager of The Bulletin. NOT TO BE SO EAS The getting of a vote upon the li- Quor question is not to be o easy in the future as it has been in the past. It was an easy matter to procure twenty-five voters' names upon a pe- . tition to the selectmen to have a vote taken for the purpose of determining avhether the citizens were for licenst or prohibition. Under the law passed Dy the present general assembly, pro- wviding that a petition to the selectmen to have a vote taken on the liquer license question at a town election must be signed by ten per cent. of the registered voters, instead of by twenty-five riames as herctofore, such & petition must be signed by ten per cent. of the legal voters, which would mean here in Norwich a lst of 500 Tames. ¢This glves hope in many places that the temperance element “has been absolutely checkmated; but it will not operate in that way. It ‘will be more work to get the petition, but so many people are willing to sign L@ petition for anything that the num- er of names can readily be procured. It should be borne in mind by the agitators that if a petition is tp be sgotten up it must be signed and on file™n, the selectmen’s office not later \than September 13th. THIS MEANS YOU. Section 1—No person shall spit on the paved walk of any public street, “park, or square, or upon the floor of any hall or office in any hotel, res- taurant, department house, tenement or lodging house which is used in ®ommon by the guests or tenants ‘thereof, or upon the floor, platform, {Bteps or stairs of any public church, “theater, railway station, store or fac- fory or street car or other public con- WVeyance. Section 3—The term spitting as used in this act shall be defined as the act of expelling any secretion from the ehest, throat, mouth or nose. Section 3—Any person violating the ovisions of this act shall be fined less than one dollar nor more "than five dpllars, or Imprisoned not {more than thirty days, or both. This law makes plain enough what intent is, and it behooves the peo- to pay attention to the restraint the spitting habit. If rigidly car- d into effect there would be five dred prosecutions in Norwich e day for some time, This widely mlent habit is not easily curbed, the prosecutions made under the will be of the few, not the many. some one is going to prosecuted under it, unless every citizen bears law in mind and puts his expector- ating machinery Tight out of use. ‘Heredity, precedent, forgetfulness or | involuntary ejectment will not be ac- cepted as a defence any more than ignarance of the law. If Sustice was done, more than half the farmers who voted for this law would have to pay its penaities: within a week. Legislators still spit. MILITARY MANOEUVRES. The military interest of New Eng- land is centered upon the game of war to be played on Cape Cod in the week between August 14 and 21. In round numbers, 16,000 will beginvolved in the manoeuyres. About 7,000 members of the Massachusetts militia,’ assisted by possibly some regular cavalry from the ranks of the “Fighting Tenth," the negro regiment recently stationed at Fort Ethan Allen, Vt, to serve as or- derlies, will act as a Qefending force. They will be opposed by about 9,000 men of the New York, New Jersey, Connecticut and Bistrict of Columbia national guard. Under the supposition that the at- tacking force is backed by & strong naval disph says a Boston paper, the invaders are conceded the strat- egical ability to land their forces. They will attempt to fight their way through the state, but the defenders assembled in Boston on the afternoon of Satur- slay, August 14, will be notified promptly of the place or places of dis- embarkment. Warned of the landing the defenders, are to be rushed to the scene, undogotedly a place bordering on Buzzaxis bay. The further ma- noeuvi.s are either problematical or unznnounced. The defenders will be so arranged as to deploy the 7,000 troops over .a frontage' of more than thirty miles., This initial line of defence to be moved backward or advanced according to the strength of the offence will extend from Plymouth, bordering Cape Cod bay on the east, to the town of Mans- field, close to the Massachusetts- Rhode Island boundary on the west. Twe range of the invaders will neces- sarily be such as to facilitate a prompt discovery of any possible ‘loopholes’ and ability to concentrate strength at such points. The navy is entirely eliminated from this vear's game. The problem is one of repulsing an attack from the rear of cogst fortifications;” not_one of re- pelling a naval enemy. There will be no forced marches on this vear's pro- gramme, the movements being regu- lated entirely by conditions. Nearly $500,000 will be required to cover the cost of the game. The troops engaged will receive pay ranging from 2 a day for enlisted men to $5 for officers of the line and $15 for those of the rank of brigadier general. Sala- ries alone will cost Massachusetts $20,000 for her troops. That state will also bear the ex- pense of transporting the defending army to and from the mustering point. This js reckoned at $20,000. The commissary department for the defending army, having entire charge of distributing articles, 27,000 pounds of fresh beef to 1,500 packages of matches and 400 pounds of candles, will expend about as much more. The army of the invaders will come to the battleground entirely proyis- ioned and accoutred EARLY SWEET CORN. Tt is not generally realized that sweet corn on the Fourth of July is not among the impossibilities any longer. This has not been a good year for green ¢orn but a Hockanum farmer writes the Hartford Courant: “T had sweet corn ripe and ready for market the 12th day of July, but have picked only a limited amount, as I am saving it for seed. At the present time I have at least 200 dozen ears past the eating stage. If it had not been for the drouth and haying it on high sandy soll, it would have been a week earlier. Now, this means that if the season had been a good average season, this sweet corn would have been ready for the market on July 5th. At this rate it looks as if June greew corn is among the future possibilities. The time was when the smart farm- er had his first green peas on the Fourth of July, and now it is often full five weeks earlier than that on specially early seasons. And whilé the green corn and green pea sea- sons are being hrought springward, the strawberry season is being lengthened and the probability s that we shall vet have August strawberries as well as June, Hunting wildcats In Texas will be tame sport for Taft after his experi- ences fecently in Washington. With the aeroplane man the good roads question has no meaning. = Any route is all the sam¢ to him. With the cotton crop short two and a half million bales, there is no pros- pect of cheaper cotton this year. The joker so suddenly discovered in the tariff bill is not half so scary a thing as the nigger in the woodpile. The Spanish people who were cheer- ing over an heir to the throne so re cently are now ready to oust its fathe; Count Zeppelin made with his air- ship twenty-one miles an hour against wind. a head well. This is doing pretty The price of mearbeer h: in Georga. price of the looking up so. Some men are so ambitious to get their names up, that they seem satis- fled if they just got them in the rogues’ galler: s gone up This may be because the crop of cotton is new The Boston Record is of the opinion that Peary is safer in the Arctic re- gions than a Berkshire farmer is on Broadway, New York. Happy thought for today: The wife who gives her husband a piece of her mind does not seem to part with & noticeable portion of it Secondhand automobiles are in pretty good demand, and, vet, the Sun- day papers have columns of them of- fered at reasonable figures. At this season of the year men are not often tempted to become demo- crats. Something fresher goes better when the temperature is high. The gold an impression upon New York that a western miner found trouble in dis- posing of a real gold brick there last ‘ cannot make the people cleanly $law any easier than you can by ent make them religious. Buf 1z the law of Connecticul, and week. When young Mr. Rockefeller tells his Bible class to keep their lamps ranging from f There's no use at all in beating around the bush and trying to deceive ourselves into belleving 'that there's nothing the matter. My pet doggie, 'l‘l&‘nnn I both have the blues. ter Fan, who used to get ints tantrums and boss me around, is so happy that the tears of rage come Into my eyes just to look at her. y, Fan merely smiled this morning when I practiced my plece on one end of the piano and let sweet Tip practice his etude on the other. That just ows how nice she acts. Tip and I are miserable, for we have no one to fight with! en fathg found that Fan meant to stay at home this summey, what did he do but send poor, bedraggled little mother out of the hot kitchen away to & lake up in Wisconsin? That mede me happy, for it meant that Fan would have to help the maid do the work and there wouldn’t be much time for her to think out fiendishness. Darling Tip and T rejoiced. But Fan's foxy! What did she do the very first night but invite poor Mr, John to dinner! It made me sick, not being able to eat in peace because of having Fan roll her big eyes at Tip and ‘me if we forgot, for just the tinlest minute, our company table manners! It was to be a grand dinner, but ‘sweet Tip and I, according to the plans, weren't golng to eat a thing till the watermelon came. I washed Tip's nose and brushed his hair, and Fan made me put on my pink silk Sunday socks, to make poor Mr. John think us rich, T sup- pose. And what did the silly thing | do but buy & box of cigars with fancy | bands on them? 1 pulled them off and | was sticking -them on Tip's ears when | Fan came in and with one pounce— | O well, what's the use of thinking | about 1£?" It ‘was the last time ¥an | pommeled me, anyway. | We started that famous dinner with creamed almond soup, and there sat | Fan at the head of the table, all biushes and smiles. and a-flourishing | poor mother's solid silver ladle that mother can't afford to use herself. Take it from sweet Tip and me that we were mad! Then all of a sudden, just as Fan was filling the last plate, the door bell rang. Fan was so startled that she dropped the ladle and it splashed her new cream batiste dress and splashe the cloth, and fell on sweet Tip's bac With one bound my pet leaped from the room, howling. Fan never noticed that she had hurt my precious Tip. She'd got a big blister on her arm and now she start- ed to weep over ft. Then poor Mr. John rushed over to her and grabbed her arm, and—he thought I was at- nding to Tip, but I looked back-— ssed the blister! | | | | § trimmed and burning, he is suspected of giving a slight boost to the oil business. It is well enough to talk of univer- sal peace, but so long as war breaks out like an epidemic there does not appear to be a likelihood of its at- tainment. A Jersey husband of four years' si- lence is sued by his wife for a di- vorce. She might buy a talking ma- chine, but she cai't get such a hus- band every time. | barking. | da While we were doing nothing at all—just watching to see what would happen next—father came behind me and, vanking me up into the air by the arm, carried me yell m;‘ne living room. He ;even shook bit and asked what I meant by eav dropping, whatever that is. Before I had 1ime even to get in a good rousing cry, I was introdyced to Aunt Sally and Unele Abraham, who had come to visit us from the country. 1 thought they were lovely. They had such nice brown hands and they sat =0 quiet on the edges of their chairs, just smiling at me and Tip. w&fle father kept c1 talking awfully fast. After ever so .ong he told me to tell the maid to put on two more plates. “Here, don't go that way,” he called as I started through the dining room. But T didn’t stop. Neither did Tip. Well, the dining room was just like the cover of a maigaszine. There was poor Mr. John on his knees beside Fan, looking up at hor. She had one arm around his coilar and there wer such funny little ligh's shining in har eyes that I though: there was something wrong. 1 gave s nig vel That set Tip In a second fataer and un and aunt rushed in o se2 what it was all about. I could w22p this minute to_think what happe'i>1 ta Was Fan excited? \Was poor Mr. John? No. Mr. Johe got up and with une arm around Fan’s walst hie walked over to father and shook his hand. Did you ever? Then they all laughed and sald something that I coulan't understan about “congratu'ations being in order. Every one kissed Fan—every orie but Tip and me. Then they shook hands all around with poor Mr. John. And Fan was smiling and blushing like a queen'! I've been snuhbed ever since. Poor Mr. John is awfuily tiresome. 1 think he must be boardig liere. He comes for dinuer every night and gets two meals every Sunday. He calls me “sis,” and once he chucked me under the chin and tried to kiss me. I hit him and snatched his tie and sweet Tip made a muddy fostorint on his shiri bosom. Any one who gisses Fan's arm needn't come around trying to Kkiss me! My, but I'm mad. Fan’s as happy as & lark—sings all ¢, plays such soft, sweet things on the 'piano ad smile<’ to herself. Ste even culls me “dearie” when there's no one aruad. And she stoops and pets Tip ecery time he comes near her. Tip and I are simply mis- crablz, for we hate no one to fight with. ' Th no one to make me g0 to bel or boss me around. It i so peaceful now that I ery myself to sleep night on Tip's sweet neck—Cnicsgo News. paperaan. - It is to his credit that he meagures up to the responsibilities. There are a few people, not them- selves the syperior in breeding or de- portment to the newspaper reporter, who affect to treat him as an Ishmael- ite. We remember a.case some years ago when the president of‘a club, in) asking The Republican to send a. rep- resentative to an outing of his organ- ization, specified that he should be a gentleman. “Whoever we send there to represent us will bé a gentleman,” was the reply, “and let me tell you, siy, that if anybody gets drunk and makes a fool of himself at your clam- bake, it will be a member of your Considering the careless way 'in which we refer to summer as the silly season, the Atlanta Constitution says that it does mot wonder the weather raises thynder. WHAT THE PAPERS SAY. A, Reversal. a black headline; “Everlasting- the New York World prints the diary With Iy True, the following extract from of Gideon Welles: No person representing a district in which there is a navy yard ought ever to be placed on the naval committee, nor should a member of coigress mea- dle with appointments unless request- ed by the executive. It is a terrible and increasing evil. And a y ago—before this diary was published—the- World ridiculed a member of congress for saying the same thing. He is beyond ridicule now. His name was George L. Lilley. —Waterbury Ameri In Two Places at Once. In the same morning’s editions the Hartford Courant says that Sir Hiram Maxim has just returned home from Europe and details some of his inter- esting _experiences demonstrating his gun silencer to the military authéri- ties abroad, while the New York Worid offers a special despatch from Bangor, Me., whicn relates how Mr. Maxim has been visiung theregbouts with Gover- nor Fernald, the while perfecting a new tabloid food, “Maximfeed” by name, a dozen pellets of which will sustain a man for a week. Evidently Hartford's noted inventor has also per- fected the art of being in two places at the same time.—New Haven Jour-- nal-Courier. Governor Weeks' Vetoes. Governor Weeks has so far made three vetoes, all of which have met the general approval of the state. Tha, is considerably below the figure of Governor Woodruff, but probably there are more to follow. Moreover, the ve- toes of Governsr Weeks are likely to be sustained, which is a marked con- trast to what happened to the vetoes of Governor Woodruff. 'That is no dis- credit, however, to latter.—New Haven Register, the THE REPORTER. A short time ago, The Republican had occasion to call a reporter to task for what seemed u spitefulness in a pilece of social news. The reporter had been sent out to get the particulars of a wedding, Aft- er making four calls, two by appoint- ment, and receiving three severe snubs, the reporter did not have the required information. The facts were finally gathered elsowhere and everything would have heen satisfactory, but in the article as it appeared was a phrase that had no business there. In three innocent looking words, the reporter opened the door of the family closet, took out a skeleion, held it up to public view for an instant, and then with a vicious rattle of bones popped it back into the closet again, probably forever. It was mean, but it was very human, and after listening to the way the reporter had been treated that day, we could not blame him. This brings us to the moral of the story, which is, to be courteous to the reporter. Nine times out of ten he is as good as you are, and we are not always sure about’ the tenth time, either. The reporter on a newspaper like The Republican is an indvstrious, well-behaved and quiet-spoken young man, who does his duty to the public and to his employers. There may have been days in the remote past when newspaper reporters were more or less of Bohemians, but that was in other days. The requirements of the news- paper machine of today call for the best that is in yvoung men and wom- en, and the newspaper gets them. There is no difference between the young man who is starting life in a newspaper office and the one who is studying law, medicine or theology, except that greater responsibilities are put at an earlier age upon the news- club, and not a reporter of The Re- publican.” There was just enoufh truth in this shot to make the official laugh and admit that his remark was entirely un- warranted. The .reporter sometimes comes to see you about things you would prefer to keep out of print: ~ Always remem- ber that he dislikes to do so, but that he knows his duty. You cannot heip either him or yourself by scolding or calling him names. Even swearing won't help. Discourtesy may result as it did in the case mentioned at the be- ginving of this article. althoagn the trained reporter endeavors to sink his identity and fuclings.and will do so except under extreme provocation. In short, the reporter is like any other human be:ng. He sxpands under kind- liness and his soul shrivels up under harsh treatment, much as yours does. It never pays to flout the reporter, He mares and unmakes more reputa- tions than you ever dream of. He can point what is good and suppress what is not so' good, and in the long run, his influence in this country is greater than that of the courts and pulpit com- bined. Besides, you never know what a re- porter may become in later years. Re- porters graduate into the highest walks of life. Ex-reporters are big men in business and in statesmanship; they shine in literature and international Dolitics. They stagd before kings and give counsel to the great men of the earth. One of them paid $2,525 to Nordica to sing for King Edward's de- light the other day, and another sits in_the White house. Imagine how any man who snubbed young William H. Taft, when he was a reporter on a Cincinnati newspaper not so many years ago, must feel when he remembers it.—Waterbury Repub- lican. FINE WRITING BY TELEGRAPH. 1t is one thing to tell the news and another to write poetry. If you can combine these arts, you're a bird, in- deed. The Associated Press, the great news-gathering and distributing agency of the world, sent one of these news- poet birds to do up the Wright aero- plane performance near Washington recentlys and “he done it” all right, too, Here is how the muse and he shook it out “Out from the edges of a brilliant salmon 'cloud-curtain the silver half- moon sailed, and looked down upon the scene as the machine dipped in a cloud of dust. The chief ri ew York and you don't sup- pose it was going to get left as a sky- poet with a flying-machine around, do you? Not m Here’s how that es- s The teemed contemporary viewed the high- | Iy colored situation in the heavens: As the machine went sailing on the m sank lower. The cl clouds purpie.” The flection from the sun that is a small matter. . The “A. P.s" salmon looked to The Sun pink, red and purple, which is going one color better than the sal- mon that people fish for. As for the sun einking lower when the machine went sailing on, we venture the opin- ion that it would have turned that trick whether ‘the machine had sailed or not; for the fact is that it has ac. quired the habit and cannot stop, if it ts to. We lcave it for impartial readers to decide between these rival poets, but trust that in the competition they will not forget that there are others. Here is the ~estesmel New York Times, which also took a lick at the' job, and e what its artist tossed off-—just as v as rolling off a log: ‘The scene was a beautiful one. The clouds were rolling away, and finally as a veil of pink-tinted clouds passed slowly eastward the moon three-quar- | The soft light ters full was disclosed. fell on the broad white planes of the flving machine and brought it out in full relief.” All right; hut just suppose the scft light had refused to fall on the white planes, How much mere interesting and important that phenomenon of insert than ads that sell nothing Getting the best is not a question of price, but of shrewdness. * Your results, We might talk age, for this agency is 36 years old. of success depends entirely on your selection of salesmen-in-print.’ We solicit business solely on the basis of We might talk size, for we have outgrown with results? ‘We have proved it pose they apply to at all. There is a way, and certainly. all rivals. ’ i talk buying power, infl , article advertised. h‘:f::le::e‘h otf me:iu.m-—-c dome:udli m‘;et:::l If you are interested, ask us to explain the of course. way. . LorD & THOMAS' | NEWSPAPER, MAGAZINE e O S AND OUTDOOR Caxaca .. ITRUDE BUILDING SECFTH AVE. and 20 ST. @, & WABASH AVE. ADVERTISING Address either office. They are equally equipped o nm'wmuuy-nmmmm All the Rest? Our only claim is that we outsell all others. to hundreds. We can prove - RUSTIC THEATRE Matinee and Evening Performances. FREE CONCERT Sunday Afterncon at 3.20 ‘Wm. Josh Daly’s Minsfrels CASINO Dancing ewery afternoon and evening. Ice Cream, Seda and Light Lunches. ting to Park, at Madden's Cigar Store. Purchase your car tickets, admit- men Suppose these claims .are facts. And sup- you. Suppose these men, at the same expense, could bring twice the results you are getting, _How much would it mean? to find out—easily, quickly It can be done without any commitment on your part, and without disturbing your present agency connections. The answer will be clear and final. It may be worth thousands of dollars to you. And it may be worth millions. That depends on the @ nature would have been. now ?—Hartford Courant. I GETTING THE WRONG NUMBER. A Little Sermon to Telephone Users. | t ‘When you have coldly, at hest, or hotly, at worst, and sarcastically gen- | erally, informed the voice at the other end of the line of its mistake, you are in no mood for philsophical " reflec- tions on the universally admitted fact that to err is human. The interrup- tion has been untimely; it has been troublesome: it has been fruitless. And it leaves you in a state of irritation that makes you feel as if you could | accord harsh treatment or af least ut- ter scathing. remarks to the "person | whose fault it is. < | But whose fault is it? The gentle | voice. which responds when you take down the receiver again to protest knows nothing of it; the chief oper: tor is sorry—if the chief operator hap- | Dpehs to be feeling in-a courteous mood. | Some otner operator may have made a wrong connection, or the caller may . t i f ‘Wouldn't it,“wrong number by mistake yourself.— | face are largely made up of the skele- were not for bacteria, corpses would | soon pile higher than the Andes, and own dead. keeps life going by removing the bod- with microbes and. ends with them. Therefore, bacteria are indispensable, and enough to admire their activity ty. | Hibernian who, when ‘told that if he died for old Ireland he would gain the | applause of posterity, demurred with the words, “Faith, what has posterity done for me that I should die for it™ t ndianapolis. News. . Microbes Make the World Go. Geologists tell us that, 'as it Is, en- ire strata of rocks on the earth’s sur- r ons of once living forms. Hence if it t he earth would be choked with its In other words, bacteriaa es of each generation to make room or the next. This life here begins we be disinterested in hus working for the good of posteri- This reminds one, however, of the ought to But do bacteria produce only what tem benefits for us, or cannot théy ones? our foodstuffs to an extent difficult for us now to foretell. ment needs some explanation. first place, the chemical element, ni- our food, whether that be vegetable or animal. mosphere i composed of nitrogen, and hence it may be imagined that we need not fear this source of supply giving out.—Dr. William Hanna Thompson, in Everybody's Magazine. Roosevelt. hippos were mad.—Atlanta Journal. Stats peci and in British Columbia. his gentleman would term post-mor- urnish_us with some ante-mortem I am glad to say that some va- ieties of ‘bacteria promise to increase But this state- In the rogen, is @ necessary Ingredient in Now, three-fifths of the at- Was Also Crazy. Twelve angry hippos attaclke Mr. Typrographical error. The ‘What the automobile is to the United the motor boat is to Canada, es- y_along the St. Lawrence river have followed out the wrong line in the directory, and there may be other possibilities that would be understood by one blessed with a thorough, tech- nical knowledge of the business. But whatever be the cause, or whoever s at fault, the veil of mystery has fallen with the moment; and the knowledge is ever shut from you. Of, course, it is all very annoying, but, after all, is it annoying in propor. tion to the annoyance you permit your- self to feel? Mistakes will happen— and even to vou, in spite of all your g00d management. As long as you answer the telephone you must ne- cessal answer the wrong number call occasionally, and sometimes, on right unlucky days. even oftener. This is_one of the penalties you addition to the established rates—for enjoying the convenience the telephone affords. As far as a number of wrath- ful investigators have been able to as- certain there is no way to avoid it, and no way to find out whose fault it is. Therefore, on such occasions, we would counsel calmness, tolerance and se- renity: and doubtless it will help you to attain such a state of mind, if you will pause merely long enough to re- flect that even you, in one og two re- grettable Instances, have called the AFTER SUFFERING TENYEARS Cured by Lydia E. Pink- ham’s VegetableCompound | MARLTON, N.J.—I feel that Lydia E. [ | Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has W 'ven me new life. | suffered for ten B ;elrs with serious | ‘emale troubles, in- flammation, uleer- | st ation, indimflol{‘v i neryo an could not” steep. Doctors gave me up, as they said my troubles were! I was in ,and did not care whetherIlived | or died, when I read about Lydia E. | Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound ; so I began to take it, and am well a, and relieved of all my suffering.’’ — Mrs. GEORGE JORDY, Box 40, Marlton, N.J. | Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- | und, made from native roots and erbs, contains no narcotics or harm. | ful drugs, and to-day holds the record | | for the largest number of actual cures of female discases we know of, and | housandsof voluntarytestimonialsare | | on file in the Pinkham laboratory at | Lynn, Mass., from women who have | ‘been cured from almost every form of | female complaints, inflammation, ul- ceration, displacements, fibroid tumors, | irregularities, periodicpains, backache, | | e o e e | Every suffe woman owes er- uurtz ve Ll;sh E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound a trial. If you would like special advice T e (0 Sra. Pinianm, e al lei Al | Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free, | and always helpful. | TODAY IS FREE STAMP DAY $1.00 worth of Green Stamps Free Double Stamps with pu Extraordinary Sale of Tailored Suits $1 positive $20. and $25. values. ery weol Suit we have in the store. A few Suits comprise are Isft over from the Spring seaso ple Duits. At all events every Sui both for style and material, and the baryzins ever offered in Noi Cor o in and see these Suits. lon | at this ridiculously low price. ¢ fflanhatfan 121-125 MAIN STREET The Leading Store in Eastern Conneeticut Devoted Exclusively to Men: dren’s Wearing Apparel. h or elsewhere. Come in today, for they will not last with purchases of 100 or over. of $5.00 or over. rehas Women’s and Misses’ 0. n and the rest are early Fall sam- t is appropriate for Fall wear, y are unquestionably the gr Women'’s and Chil- What and Where ¢ SPECIAL SALE Men's Calf and Viei Kid Oxfords, reg- ular $3.00, at 98c. Ladies' High and Low Shoes, regular $2.50 and $3.00, at 98c. P, CUMMINGS, caps. They are gl glass. Give them Telephon 53 Central Avenue. At C. 8. FAIRCLOUGH'S. Investigate our premium system. yaia jy22d HUNGRY HORSES are poor and unsatisfactory workers. It _pays to feed well and use GOOD FEED. You can get this wc rmght prices from A. R. MANNING, Yantic, Conn. Particular People Patronize Rogers’ Domestic Laundry. There's a good reason for it. Tel. 903-2. Rear 37 Franklin St. 0 Buy in Norvich, Canning Season is here and we have the best JAR in the city. No more porcelain lined BREED'S THE ATRE Charles McNulty, Lessee. Devoted tp First-class Moving Pictures and Hlustraled Songs. Feature Pleture, WAS JUSTICE SERVED? ~—AND— Six Other Fine Ones. Master Harry _Noonan, Phenomenal Boy Soprang, i8 Righ Class and Illus- trated Songs. Matiees, Ladies and Childrem, Bey w, 10¢. HALL. JAMES F. DREW Fiano Tuning and Reparing Best Vork Onl ‘Phune 4xi-8. 18 Perkine Ave scpL23a inzton Square EXPERT TUNING saves and improves the pi*ma AP work guaranteed. A. W. JARVIS, wraduate Niles Bryamt School of Plams Tuming, Battle Creek, Mich. Drop & postal and I'll call. declsd ‘Phone 518-5. } F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect St., Tel. 889-5. Norwich, Cu PLUMBING AND GASFITTING. The Vaughn Foundry Co. IRON CASTINGS “urnished promptly. Large stock ot patterns. No. 11 to 25 Ferry Street san22d Worn Out Plimbing The running expenses of a house ars largely increased by worn-out or poor plumbing. Either canses annoyance —ugually at the most inconvenient time. An estimate for replacing such plumbing with the modern, peace of mind kind will cost ncthing, and Tl guarantee the price will be reasonable. J. E. TOMPKINS, 67 West Main Street. may27d * T. F. BURNS, Heating and Plumbing, 92 Franklin Street. marsd Lithia Water Tablets The effervescing kind. Each tablet will make a glass of sparkling Lithic Wa 50 for 25 cents DUNN’S PHARMACY, 50 Main Street. Jy13a For the balance of the sea« son I offer all my Summer weight Suitings at a very low figure to clcse. C. H. Nickerson, jun29a DR. C. R’ CHAMBERLAIN, Denta/ Surgeon. In charge of Dr. S. L. Geer's practwe during his last tliness. 161 Main Street, Norwich, Conn, nov2éd We have Fancy Native Chickens, Fowls and Lamb. Order Here and Get the Best PEOPLE’S MARKET, 128 Main SL Joseph F. Smith, FLORIST 200 Main Street, Norwich. ivid Special for Next Month at Mill Remnant Store, 201 W. Maln St. Ten thousand yards of Fine Dre: Goods, Silks and Pancy Cotlon Good 2 to 15 yard lengths, for sale at on yrice. The ocar oor. Don't forget MILL REMNANT STORE, Jel2a 201 West Maln St. THERE 18 no aavertising medium in tern Connestieut cqual to The Bul- tin for business results. 6 Franklin St. Ir17a JUSTIN HOLDEN, Prep. JOSEPH BRADFORD, Book Binder. Blank Books Kiade and Ruled to Order, 108 BROADWAY. Telephone 262. Watch Repairing done at Friswell's speaks for itsell. WAL FRISWELL, 25-27 Frankiir Jandzdew

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