Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 9, 1909, Page 4

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arwizh Bulletiz and oufied. 113 YEARS OLD. stucco, give this material a distinct advantage over all others, and make possiple any style of architecture. The use of concrete for structural purposes is sure to increase in the next few years. Subscription price, 12¢ a week; 50¢ a months $6.00 & year. Entered at the Postolfice at Norwich, Conn., as second-class matter, Telephone Calls: Bulletin Business Otfice. 48 Bulletin Editorial Rooms, 3 Bulletin Job Office, 35- Willimantfc Office, Roo: Building. Telephone, 2 2. Murray = = Norwich, Saturday, Oct. 9, 1909, TAFT WILL NOT OUT-ROOSEVELT ROOSEVELT. The radicalism of the west over some of the alleged Roosevelt policjes ¢losely approaches fanaticism on ac- eount of the irrational interpretation put upen them. The papers were nol soothed by the spesches of President Taft, but charge him with being false to the policies of his predecessor to & point they declare of treason. In view of the situation, Taft felt obliged at Seattle to clearly define his posi- tion, and he told the people that as a member of Roosevelt's cabinet he thought that his knowledge of his policies loft no chance for him to mis- interpret them and that he should. not carry them to the point which the radical republican factions who would out-Roosevelt Roosevelt desired. The Roosevelt policies were written into the republican plat- form of 1908, to which Mr. Taft stands pledged, and which he promptly pro- ceeded to carry out by calling an ex- tra session to revise the tarift. The other Roosevelt planks are vet to be consldered by congress, and so much remains to be done that Mr. Taft in a recent speech expressed & doubt that congress would be able at the coming session to pass all the measuros to which the party had pledged the ad- ministration.” This means that all mew policles must be held in abeyance until this programme is carried out. This is a loyal and orderly mode of procedure and it will find favor with all reason- able citize THE DIVISION OF STATES. The time will doubtless arrive when the great ates of the union which have more counties than ail the New England states, and some single counties containing. more than half as much territory, will find it to their advantage and the advantage of the country to create new states by divis- fon of thelr territory. Such a move- ment s on foot in California, now, Dbut the time is mot ripe for it and its suceess Is mot probable. The people of gouthern California desire to have a state of thelr own as a means of lightening the burden of taxation, which they doubtless consider a way 1o increase the population and to ad- vance the Interests of that part of the state. Cajifornia has territory enough to make a score of states big- ger than Connecticut, but she has not the population to warrant at present the division of this long strip of the Pacific coast into two states of strength and respectability. Atten- tion is called to the fact that Okla- Toma through the next census is like- Iy to show a greater nuinber of resi- dents than Callfornia, although it is regarded as an Hnfant state. The Californians who favor the division are flerce for it, but the consent of the entire people and of the congress of the United States is neceasary be- fore it can be legally accomplished, and it is not likely that either can be obtained. THE DAWN OF THE CONCRETE AGE. Right in the dawn of the concrete age we find the bungalow to be the most pepular summer house, with a likelihood that it may vet he accepted as a dependable all-the-year-round town ho The adaptabllity of concrete to all forms of architecture, its fireproof qualities and the comfort and ocon- omy of houses made of it leaves no doubt that it will eventually outclass all other building material. 1t fits the bungalow period which is now upon us and promises to give per- manence to structures which hitherto have been regarded as attractive for their summerishness, It has been demonstrated that most of these attractive houses can be built at an outlay no greater than for the old- style, severe, unornamented buildings. Persons ‘ot moderate means can build them for all-the-vear occupancy if necessary or desirable; while those of means can and do put all the money into them that they wish. Another thing of great importance is this: It is always possible and easy to sell a bungalow svhere the Plain house will find no sale. Too many home builders construct houses that are in every way unattractive and lack style, and when they wish to sell there are mo buy- ers. And why? Because the house is exactly like thousands and thousands of others; it lacks individuality. There is nothing about the concrete which/will unfit it for the ornamentation which 0 Lecomes a bungalow and it 18 ®onceded that if & building is de- signed as an investment, one bullt of carrcrete ‘will be found to outclass ail others, since It will retain the original value for centuries, while every other known form of construction will ‘rap- idly depreciate. Emphasis may be placed upen the fireproof qualities of concrete con- struction by the fact that in the great recent conflagrations in Baltimore and San Francisco, the concrete edifices were practically unharmed. In many cities and towns the cost of fnsur- ance of concrete building is extreme- 1y low, which, also, is an important factor. Comfort is found in the con- crete bullding, because the walls are warmer in winter and cooler in sum- mer, a very great consideration, while at the same time they are more san- ftary than structures bullt of any oth- er material. Bullders, everywhere, are watisfied on this point, and, also, upon the adaptability of concrete to any form of architecture. The case with which concrete can be moulded to any ' form, and the various modes of con- struetion, Including the solld walls, the hollow wall, the concrete biock and THE SUCCESSOR OF GOVERNOR JOHNSON. Word comes from Minnesota that Governor Eberhart, the successor of tne late Governor Johnson, is a man who believes with all his heart in new political methods and turns his back upon the old. He does mot recognize machine manipulation or care for a machine nomination. He is a republi- can who declines to enter into the old | political ~organization as its central star and promoter. He puts the well being of the state above the well being of any party, and he will be a candi- date of the people, declines to make personal pledges, but stands for every reform Johnson stood for. When his home town—Mankato— was voting at a charter election for the adoption or rejection of the Des Moines or commission plan of munici- pal government, “I am for it abso- lutely,” he gaid, “and singerely hope it will be adopted. The politicians saw in this his doom and this Is what a Minnesota writer says of it: That was before his declaration against partisanship in the governor's office. It was his first statement, since entering office, of his ideds of political independence. When politicians read of it they smiled or laughed aloud and one said: ‘That cooks his goose!’ ‘The rervhblican party will never name him to succeed himself’ said another. ‘A tactical blunder at the very start-off,’ many called it. “This talk was in the capitol—in the governor's reception room. There is no doubt that' his friends hurried to the executive with the interesting in- formation. But the tall, thin man threw a few state papers and an extra collar into a bag, hurried to the union station and took a train for Mankato—to cast his vcte for the charter’that would Cethrone the republican administration there and substitute what the governor called ‘a business form of government with a centralized responsibility for the proper performance of public trust” And he did vote for it, hoping, as he said, that Mankato would be the first oity in the state to adopt the plan, and believing that if it did other small cities would follow and that then the movement would reach St. Paul, Min- neapolis and Duluth. The new charter wis defeated in Mankato by twenty- four votes. The governor was very sorry about it and said 0. Overconfi- dence, he sald, was the cause of the defeat. He was sure the charter would be brought before the people there aguiz before long.” Eberhart is strong in his personality and is likely to carry the men of all parties with him in his independence. He knows how to be right, but he does not know how to conform to machine Tuethods and wear a partisan collar. Tiere is a political crisis pending in Minnesot EDITORIAL NOTES. The high price of cotton promises to drive mills on short time. Happy thought for teday: No woman Is older than she says she is Hearst is out for Gaynor. Can hon- stand for dishomor in politics? Men who aspire to be governor often show their own need of a governor. or The men most furious for putting whiskey down are the enes who suc- ceed. The wonders of Yosemite attract the attention of President Taft for a few days. A 24-hour train between New York and St. Louis is the latest fast service venture, The man who plunges into watered stock does not get drowned, but he gets lost. 1t life was not a grind do you think that so many men would get thelr wits sharpened? The west regards Taft as a man of convictions, with the courage to live up to them. A complexion specialist is not so careless of chalk as the boardman in a bucket shop. He who has made life a round of dissipation finds it difficult to get upon the square again. The government revenue Wednesday showed a gain of half a million over Oct. 6 of last year. President Tuttle will not be retired from the Boston and Maine. He is too useful to be dropped. Some folks cannot live without flat— tery, if it is 97 per cent. water and only 3 per cent. mud. The late Dudldy Buck, the great American composer, put in 1§ and 18 hour days and lived to be Things In this world are not exaotly what they appear to be—the girl with dreamy eyes may be wide awake, The man who thinks that the future will take care of itself is less con- cerned with the present than he wil} be later on. . has ngw been found by Judge Black that the commitment law under which Harry Thaw was committed is unconstitutional. The Newburyport News, remarking upon the brevity of the platform of the Massachusetts democrats, obgerves that the party vote will be equally short. If John D. Rockefeller would tell the public how hundreds of millions can be accumulated honorably and hon ly it would give him better standing than his little dissertationi upon “hon- esty as the best polic Prize questions aré becoming quite & newspaper fad. Having decided what shall be done with the north pele, one of our exchanges desires its readers to tell for coin “What they ‘'weuld;de with a million if they had it!" /% Over 1,500 different kinds of insects féed upon the oak. ‘P gi A trolley ride across couniry in the late afternoons of these bright and cool October days is pleasurable when the shadows are lonfi and_growing longer until they lose themselves mn the twi- light, and when the vari ted foliage of woods soon to be denu is deep- ening in color just prior to being lost in might. The cobalt sky with cool white and gray scuds of every shape sailing before a westerly, breeze away from the sun to be dissipated, per- haps, beneath the shining stars. Some birds and flowers and insects seeking 2 place of rest in the night; and other birds and flowers and insects waking p to the employments of life and to deeds of darkness. All things seem to be changing except the white stand- ards In God’s acres, where past genera- tions sleep and others will find a rest- ing place, and there, too, the shad- ows are touching one another over the stones because twilight is near and peace is deepening—for the peace of night is deeper than that of day. It | is a blessed time for one to see, to| feel and to think of the depth of the silences which were before the sun was. The other day | saw yeuth coming in with great bunches of the blue | gentian—the fringed gentian—which | because of their lateness and cerulean | blue seem to be to some Heaven's own flower, while its near relative, the | closed’ gentian, is little sought or | thought of. G. H. Gibson_notes in “Strolls by Starlight and Sunshine,” among the wayward children of na- ture a white fringed gentian, and with the soul of a poet and artist he prized fhat single plant, which he noted “eyery year sends up its candelabra of snowy blossoms and will continue so to do if my friends the vandals will only be content to ‘love the flower and Jeave it on its stalk,’ for at best and to be consistent. 1 capnot feel that nature will long countenance its ex- istence, and fain would I see it die & natural death.” How different this from the trained florist who would have striven to have started from it a new race of white gentians which would have been prized for their nov- elty and beauty. This is the differ- ence between sentimentality and prac- ticalitv—between poetic feeling and commercial practice—and no ene can ainsay the fact that both have served he world well. Mrs. Blaine wrote in one of her | letters: “lLoneliness is nothing if you are right-minded. Possession of | yourself—to say to yourself, do this and she doeth it, and go away from that and she goeth—is to have your life adjusted to the will of God and moving to the eternal harmonies.’ Here s lald down the value of orderly procedure—the possibilities of self- control, Order and silence are two powerful factors in life—the faculty of moving right and of doing right. This all proceeds from the culture of the will, and as strange as it may seem the cultdre of the will means the utter banighment of wilfulness. Men and women of ability and talent are hand- icapped by their disorderly methods and their verbal responsiveness. The RBuddhistic eightfold path which leads to perfection comprises right belie thought, speach, doctrine, means of livelihogd, endeavor, memory and med- itation. This is all comprised in Crock- ett’s motto, “Be sure you're right, then %o ahead.” The care and the caution which keep one on the path are al- ways well rewarded. It was Hugh Miller who discovered that “a very exquisite pleasure may be a very cheap one, and that the very busiest employment may afford leisure to enjoy it,” but he was not the first discoverer of this great fact which means to the toiler supremacy over conditions. It takes a progressive man to realize this, and achievement Is sure to follow the realization of it. There ave people “who toil every day that they may eat and eat every day that they may toil” and they lose the cream of life because they have not learned “to look forward mot back—to laok up, not dewn.” Life is what we make it, whether we are men of leisure or men of toil; and men of leisure of- tenest make & mess of it. A merry heart sings on a gloomy day and drives devil's megrims away. No man needs e cast down, for the sun is set in the heaven for him. Look up! The woodpecker | have always re- garded as a shy bird and a winter rather than a summer visitor to the garden, but the past week I have been obliged to take a somewhat different | view of at least one rcoresentative of | the tribe. His steady tapping attract- | ed my attention by its regularity—as | regular as the ticking of a clock, but more rapid—and I began to look about for him, and I located him at work on the projection of a dead limb in the | crab apple tree not twenty feet away and not over ten feet from the ground. He did not mind me but kept right at | work until he attained his object and flew away. He is quite an engineer. He had located a borer in the tree and was tunneling to get the sweet morsel, andg doubtless got him. He does not mind the door of the baorer, but he lo- cates him by sound in his remote feed- ing place and then proceeds to take him out. The boring grub eannot get away and if he is alarmed by the as- sault upon his Jiving place he lacks the | wit to move or to try to save him-| self. “You tell your father of that and I'll | lék you!” was the way I heard a mother recently enforcing secrecy in the household. It usually holds the secret tight and fast, but what a train- | ing for the child. Things that ma and pa cannot be told of without peril are not correct things, and the child knows this It teaches the child to keep| things he doesn't want pa or ma to know from them, and to threaten to whip hig brother if he tells of him, We are not so careful as we should be to bring up the child in the way he| should go. These punitively over- shadowed secrets learn him to go in the way he better not. “Whatcher go- ing to do about it?” Cannot do any- thing only ecall attention to the fact that guch children are to be more pitied than blamed for the kind of men and women they make. The syrphus flies follow the plant lice just as the horse mackerel follows schools of small fish for provender and they drop their esggs among them and a voracious maggot appears who feeds upon the plant lice till he completes that form of his being; and this is the husiness of this clean, gold banded fiy whigh is as much of an aid to horti- culture as the ladybird beetles. But life is not one sweet song to him, for his foes lic in wait among the floral petals and ambush him. They are wary, but now and_then one of them falls 'a victim to the calliper spider who grabs him by the head and acd- ministers a serum which produces a sleeping sickness—a numbness which foretokens death. I surprised Mr. Cal- liper right in the act the other day @#nd he dropped his prev and fled, T dig not tarry, for I could be of no use to the victim, wha served as a repast later on. There are tragedies takirg place upon many of the blooms of a flower garden. Boys, never joke about serious things, 1t is a bad habit for boys ard tha very worst for old men. To me the man at the sunset of life who has no sincerity is a pitiable object. The cunning ways of the little child are very bad manners in the youth—the confirmed silly habits of youth are Dblotches upon ald age, The habit of mak- ing Jight of things does not beget confi- dence or respect. No person can keep hid fact that they lack sincerity. Tt i& the frank. true-hearted. right- p inded pergon that commands confi- en? ne old man with cenfirmed The fair Joung girl laid her lily hand tenderly upon the shoulders of the Broad street millionaire. “Father,” she said, “there is some- thing on my mind that has been gnaw- ing at my heart for many weeks, something that I must tell you to- night.” Dinner was over in the palatial home of the magnate. A log of hick- ory burned in the grate and cast its flickering light itno the dark corners of the $135,000 library, illuminating the gold lettering on the backs of the rare old books in full moroceo binding, and throwing weird shadows on the wail from the statuettes, vases and other articles of virtu collected from all parts of the world at a *!‘ll! expense. “What is it, my child?* The financier spoke with a troubled voice For a long time he had noticed with disfavor the frequent calls of the socialistic young _curate, Mr. Hicks, |and his frown had deepened week by week as the influence of the young man’s radical ideas became apparent in_the speecl and conduet of Patricia. No longer a butterfly of fashion, she had gone in for settlement work. She talked of orphans and recreation cen- ters, and at dinner this evening she had spoken of the Rights of Man in such a thrilled volce that her father had_dropped his knife and broken a costly Hayiland cup. “Father,” she salf, seating herself on the arm of his leather chair, “you have always been Kind to me, and it seems ungrateful and undutifulof me to criticize you In any particular. But 1 a thinking woman now; I can- naflflv having opinions and it grieves me more than words unugr-l to see you 1::“: eart you. doing t! tells me are wrom The magnate ught of the last stock company that he had launched, and his face was grim as Patricia went on. “I am not sensitive, father, but when I walk Jowntown with you and see the looks directed at you by the people who pass, and hear the whisp- ers in the crowd arounl me, I suffer the keenest humiliation. My face burns with shame, and I long to turn into the back streets and slink home unseen by the people of this city. It is not wholly pride, father, it is &l:y for ycu and sorrow that my own - ent ‘should be so false to himself and to his position as a leader in the com- munity.” The wmugnate rose to his feet and sternly faced his daughter. “You have no right to bother your bead with these things,” he said. “What a man does in tha business world is nothing to the women of his family. Whatevér people may say about me, I am always within the law.” She clasped his arm lovingly. “Of course you are within the law,” she cried, “but oh! father, people would have so much more respect for you if you would buy yourself a fash- ionable hat, such as other men in your station wear, and give that old gray felt thing to the ragman!"—Newark News. bad habits looks like the apple that is worm-eaten to the core. He may be smooth enough on the ottside, but the ciemy has bored to his heart. Life puts a lot of indellible marks on us and it is up to us all to see that they are to our credit, not to our discredit. Get the knack, if you can, of putting off the worries of today until tomorrow, The worrles of toddy have no claim upon your attentfon or time—they are nefther entertaining mor profitabie. I never saw a worry yet that had any more claim upon me or my mercy than a bad egg. | have had lots of them and they weren't worth the bad bile which gave them birth. Life cannot be screne where worry is. They are at odds like oil and water—they can't mix. If you want life to be serene don't hang out your card for worry, who can send you 53 degrees below zero in short ‘order. Some people catch on to the water wagon insfead of the band wagon, but it does not take them long to find out there is not as much music in it. Learn to make good choices in life and the battle is more than half won. SUNDAY MORNING TALK. Is Glory Worth Striving For? S0 much glory is being passed arnund these days that we can't help asking what it is good for, how it may be won, how it compares with other objectives as a spur to make us get up and do something. As a_motive It 1s superior to the sordid desire to get gold. On the day that the morning papers were filled with the story of what Henson, e ry's body servant, said concerning I sernsations at the pole, I remarked to a colored bootblack: “A man of your race is getting a lot of glory these days.” “Glory!” he sniffed contemptu- ously, “what's glory compared with the almighty dollar?” There you Kad the commercial spirit in all its nakedness and vgliness, whieh refusel 1o believo that men could be actuated by any-| thing less than the greed for gold. One certainly rises in the moral scale when he substitutes the desire for the praise of men for the passion to heap up money. For he knows that to deserve applause he will have to do something daring and unusual, some- thing in the way of discovery or ex- ploration or invention, something that increases the sum total of knowledge concerning the planet and this uni- verse. Working under the impulse of such a motive, the man will be putting into operation a different set of pow- ers than if he were cornering the wheat market or squeezing all his com- petitors in the chewing gum business. Yes, the desire for the praise of others is a legitimate one, provided, when it is gratified, one does not become vaii and supercilious, jealous and grasping If one ean't bear to hear anything good of a fellow seientist or a fellow inventor, than his own success has been at the expense of his nobled na- ture. “There's glory enough to go around,”—that’s :he stuff. A famous man whe can say that from the bot- tom of his heart is not being hurt by the garlands of reses with which he may be decorated. Such an ex- jression breathes a spirit of magnan- ‘mity, a_recognitlon of the fact that the world is larss and that a good many persons are experimenting today with flying machines, and secking to perfect the automobiles and undertak- ing to penetrate past the present bounds of human knowledge into re- glons hitherto unknown. The yearning for fame should never be anything more than a subordinate motive. Back of it should always Be two other great ambitions and usually, in the case of the noblest explorers and discoverers, these two motives are present. One is the passion for self- realization, Commander Peary tells us that for many years he has heen so porsessed by the desire for Arctic ex- plorations that he could do nothing else. It was the only path through which he could work out that which was in him. Kipling foresees a day | “When no one shall work for money, And no one shall work for fame, But each for the joy of working.” Sl another is the passion for ser- vice. Ah, here we touch the spring of | real glory. Right up and down your | streot, perhaps in your home, you can witneas reeds of every day faithfulness and love und self-sacrifice. When you tell me about them, 1 shall at once burst out with the adjective “Glori- ous'" After all that is the glory worth striving for. Most of the other Kinds are short lived. THE PARSON. Wallingford.—Donald Russell, son of Dr. and Mrs. W. S, Russell, who grad- uated last June, from the Sheffield scientific school, has been appointed assistant tutor in biology at that branch of Yale universi ditions. lay out for repairs later on. give your work to a responsible of all worry and responsibility. Plumbing Work incorrectly installed is a very poor in- vestment for this reason—you never know at what minute the work is going to give out—tb say nothing of the sanitary con- ALL TROUBLE with plumbing arises from its construction. The more you cut down your first cost the more you're going te Therefore—the only safe way is to arstow & 0. are Liconsed Plumbers and Steam Fitters and are prepared to do your work in the best possible manner. large or small, will receive our prompt attention Ask about our Second-hand Stoves Don't Mistake the Cause of Your Troubles. A Norwich Citizen Shows How to Cure Them. Many people never shspect their kidneys. It suffering from a lame, weak or aching back they think that it is only a muscular weakness; when urinary trouble sets in they think it will soon correct itself. And so it is with all the other symptoms of kidney disorders. That is just where the danger lies. You must cure these troubles or they may: lead to diabetes or Bright's disease. The best remedy to use is Doan's Kidney Pills. It cures all ills which are caused by weak or diseased kidneys. Norwich people tes- tify to permanent cures. D, J. Brown, 6 Summer Street, Nor- wich, Conn., says: “The results that Paris Fashions For Fall Season 1909-10 Received You are Imvited to call and see the Fall Parisian and New York Fashions, and also prepire yourself with a suit Saturday, Oct. 9th, at 8.15 p. m. followed the use of Doan’s Kidney Pills | for the Fall. Reasonable prices for| Fenry Miller's Associate Players i in my case were most satisfactory. I procured this remedy from N. D. Sevin & Son’s drug store, and in view of my experience oan heartily recommend it as an excellent preparation for toning up the kidneys and relieving all com- plaints due to a disordered condition of these organs.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50c. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name — Doan's — and take no other. Pearl—Isn't Molly's new hat a per- fect dream? Tom—More like a night- mare.—London Bits. ROPODY and MANICURE Treatment of Corns a specialty. Also Hairdressing and Shampooing Pufts, Switches and Pompadours made from your own combings. MRS. B. BURTON, Chapman Block, Broadwi oc house then you will be relieved All orders, whether DIRTY KIDNEYS THE CAUSE OF BACKACHE Just a Few Doses of Pape’s Diuretic will Clean and Regulate Your Qut-of-order Kidneys, Ending the Most Severe Lame Back and Bladder Misery. A real surprise awaits every sufferer | ment of Pape's Diuretic, trouble who Diuretle. from kidney or bladder takes several doses of Pape’ Misery in the back, sides or headache, nervousness, rheumatism pains, heart palpitations, dizziness, sleeplessness, inflamed or swollen eye- lids, lack of energy and all symptoms of_out-of-order kidneys simply vanish. Uncontrollable urination (especially at night), smarting, offensive and dis. colored water and other bladder mis ery ends. The moment you suspect kidney or urinary disorder, or feel any rheu- matism, begin taking this harmless medicine, with the knowledge that threre is no other remedy, at any price, made anywhere else in the world, which will effect so thorough and prompt a dure as a fifty-cent treat- ins, sick | tion goes which any druggist can supply. It is needless to feel m erable and worried, because this unusual prepara- at once to the out-of-order kidneys and urinary system, distribut- ing its cleansing, healing and strength ening influence directly upon the or- gans and glands affected, and com- pletes the cure befors you realize it Your physician, pharmacist, banker or any mercantilé agency will tell you that Pape, Thompson & Pape, of Cin- cinnati, is a large and responsible medicine concern, thoroughly worthy of your confidence. Only curative results can come fr taking Pape’s Diuretic, and a few d treatment will make any one feel fine, Accept only Pape’s Diuretic—fifty- cent treatment—any drug store—any- where in the world. In The Sure (e “ Makes Cooking Easy"” of a Modern W early callers. S. LEON, Ladies’ Tailor 278 Main St, Room 1 May Building. aughd A New Collection of Excellent Colors in Coat Sweaters Perfect fitting and correct styles. These garments contain more actual value a¢ the prices than we have ever been able to secure. McPHERSON The Hatter. sept23d Schlitz Milwaukee Beer, §1 a dozen. Famous Narragansett Select Stock, 60c a dozen. | Yale and New England e Ale, Lager and Porter, | domen. ‘Wines, Liquors and Cordials at spe- cfal prices. | JACOB STEIN, 93 West Main St. Telephune 26-3. Brewery 500 & Cit;AL AND LUMBER. GCOAL MAKES YOU THINK OF CHAPPELL CO. | ALL THIS COOK vs. PEARY TALK | Al the cooks in this city want Chappell's Range Coal, anyway. It's a fine looking Coal, square in fracture, not too free, but just free enough to be economical. E. CHAPPELL CO. Central Wharf and 150 Main Street. Telephones. Lumber octdd THE NORTH POLE has recently been discovered. The fact that JOHN A. MORGAN & SON was selling the best line of family coal and lumber for building purposes wag dis- covered in 1814 Still doing business at the Old Stand. Central Wharf. Telephone 884. COAL Free Borning Kinds and Lehigh ALWAYS IN STOCK. A. D. LATHROP, Office—eor. Market ard Shetucket Sta Telephone 168-12. ect2d CALAMITE GOAL Wall Seasoned Wood C. H. HASKELL 489 —— 'Phones ——— 402 37 Franklin St 68 Thames St maysd —— LUMBER —— %he best to be had and at the right prices, too. Remember we always carry a big line of Shingles. Call us up and let us tell you about ovr stock M. F. &A. J. DAWLEY maylsd A Hn Assoriment ol .... MILLINERY at ilttle prices. MRS. G. STANTON. octld CHANGE IN ADDRESS. DR. N. GILBERT GRAY, formerly at Hodge's Stabls, is now lo- eated in rear of No. § Frankiin square. Tl 574 mariid The Servant in the House by Charles Rann Kennedy. The cast includes Creston chz. Charles Dalton, Lizzle Hudson CoiMer, George 8. Irving, George Harrion Carter, Miss Frances Jordan, Hemry Travers. Prices. ...25¢c, 35¢, 50¢c, 75¢, $1.00, 150 Seats on sale &t the Box Ofice. ‘Wauregan House and Bisket, Pitsher & Co. on Thursday, Oct. 7, at 9 o'c oek. Cars to all points after performanee. oct7d BREED'S THEATRE Charles McNulty, Lessee. Devoted to Firstclass Moving Pictures and [lusirated Songs. Feature Pleture, THE STAMPEDE, -AND-— MANY OTHERS. Mizs Bdith Darnell, Soprano, in pree gramme of Selected Bongs. Matinecs, Ladies and Childres, Evenings, oa e BREED HALL. " Washington Square New Olympic Theatre Water Street. FRED HELD’S Motion Pictures and Iilustrated Songs WILLIAM T. DELANEY, Norwich Favorite Baritone. — Two Hour Show 10c — Change of programme Monday, Wede nesday and Frid Matines 216—10e. Children Sou Evening 8.15—any seat 10c. sept23d b F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect St Tel, -6 Norwich, C% A. W. JARVIS is the Leading Tuner in Eastern Connecticut. 'Phone 518-5. 15 Clairmount Ave, sept22d EUGENE WALLNER Director of the Academy Musical Clyd. Instruction for Violin, Cello, Mandolin 274 Washington St. oct2STTh JAMES E. DREW Fiano Tuning and Repairiag Best V'ork Only. ‘Pnone 432-3. 18 Perkine Ave sept2la [ el ] G. E. HODGE, Hack, Livery, Boarding and Feed STABLES Up-to-date Equipment and Guaranteed Satisfactory Service 14 to 20 BATH STREET, (Tormerly Chapman'a} Televhone 10 aorid CHANGING COLOR with regard to a Suit of Clothes, o any other Garment, is a matter of e with us. - Your Suit may look old and shabby, but If sent to us for renova- tion we can seon change its appear- ance by giving it & new lease of life, We'll take an old grey suit, for in- stance, and make it into a new black one that will give you at least another vear's service. The cost is little, and we are prompt In delivering work when we promise it. Give us a trial with a suit this week. Lang’s Dye Works, Telephene. 157 Franklin St ept 304 NEWMARKET MOTEL, 715 Bosvell Ave. First-class_wines, liquors and clga-a Meals and Weich rerebit w.t order. John Tuckia Prea

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