Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 30, 1909, Page 11

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NORWICH JRDAY, u:fmn 30. 1909, UNMISTAKABLE when you take a few doses of -Lee & Osgood’s White Pine and Tar Cough Syrup THE FIRST SIGN that it iz Lee & Osgood's is a feeling 1 AM COUGH- ING LESS. THE SECOND SIGN fs a certain action on the entire system, quite dis- tant from that of any other cough yrup, and one that only the Lee & Osgood's White Pine and Tar pos- sesses. \ THE THIRD N is the rapid d appearance of the cough and the com plete satisfaction of the customer. | Convince yourself. We guarantee tisfaction. PRICE 25 CENTS. The Lee & Osgood Co. Manuafcturing Chemists, 131-133 Main Street, NORWICH, CONN. It your druggist does not keep it mail o Sideboards | A dining room with: s much like a window without hang- ings — unfinished an: It lacks the touch that gives the the home uimospiseie of collect: Our Buffets is one of the largest ES ern Connectuot the , an tively lowest. #ll Dining Room Furniture out d v Sideboard our prices Shea & Burke receipt of 25 cents oct s a nsat 1 pri 37-41 Main Sireet. oct7d sfa in Bast- W deboard ory roog an posi: ices on s week. FARMER'S TALK TO FARMERS Classes and Ranks—The S Evidences that Farming i Frosty New England—T! (Written Specially for The Bulletin.) It's great fun to classify people. There are the tall men and the short men; the thin and the fat; the dark and the light, etc. Then we can di- vide them by races; the White and the black and the yellow, and so on. Like- wise they fall into classes temperd- mentally. There are sanguine men and melancholics; optimists and pessi- mists; men and two-legged dyna- mos of electric energy. Mentally, morally and spiritually, similar lines division run through the race, and t is an occasional diversion with me, thinking over the list of my acquaint- ances, to classify them in my own mind. This one goes into the class of prigs; that one into the class of her- editarily good; this other into the cl: of idealists; a fourth into the class ¢ mole-like materiali a fifth is one of the natur criminals converted by grace, and a sixth goes, plunk, into the great order of unreformed liars, One can go on thus making classes and filling their ranks till his supply of known material gives out. Among other classifications with which I thus amuse myself is the one which divides my fellow farmers into_“the Snorters” and “the Snivellers.” You've known a young horse, just out of pasture, with a good feed of oats freshly swaliowed, toss head with animal self-satis- swings out of the farm- road. He's feeling good good, and he just snorts the bracing air and the the miles his fleet feet llow and the glow that is to gate into warm him, and the good natured word and the kindly pat from the master that are to mark his triumphant re turn home. That's a type of the snorter class. Also, yow've known the old plug that can’t hold his head up unless he's checked so tight as to seem cruel; that fairly slumps into nerve- lessness when you hitch him up just for a mile's drive to the postoffice; that actually drools with sorrow as you force the bit into his unwilling mouth, and starts out of the gate with ears k and eyes drooping and lips flopp and tail hugged tight over the cr r and such a general air of melancholy marty to lom that you almost ashamed touch him up” and make him take the gait he's perfectly 1 of H he wasn't so blamed dis- yura, in men hat's a type of the sni are a lot of things where— d horse; alike. all s0 bumptiously arrogant in their seen farmers s I've seen—you've steem and their esteem of the profes- which they follow that one invol- un dodges at their approach vy are so swalled up with impor- tance that you feel crowded when they ver into the same ten acre lot Their self-conce sky- scraping that you wonder it t in- terfere with the orbit of the moon. They don't walk sedately along the common highways; they fairly bounce over the surface. They strut; they r; they are forever throwing their caps into the air. They seem to radiate itisfaction: they actuaily Snort with self-glorification. They are the sort who are forever orating about the lofty honor of agriculture, and ut the farmer's dignity, and about absolute superfority to the rest of world. - They fill the air with “tall alk” about what they have done with their flelds and their cattle and their horses, To lsten to them one would think that farming was the top notch of earthly eminence, and that none but tarmers had any real right to the first table. They are the snorters Then we've all seen the other sort— th and sorry farmers who are al. ways more or less unhappy. = They never get both fect at a time out of the Slough of Despond. They are gen- erally g0, in th clutches of Giant Despair. Their favorite hiding plac 16 a cave of gloam,whence they emergo at intervals to blink blearshly & the sunlight and p diet a storth or a deluge or an rthquake or some- hing else of hat mnature, Things iever go quite right with them. If it rains they moan over the damage to their mown hay or their uncured fod- de If the day is Impeccably fair | and bright, they wag foreboding heads |over it as a ‘“iveather breeder.” They | either d bad lu yesterda or Schiitz Milwaukee Beer, $1 a dogen. | Naving | Ve are gotas 10 Famous Narragansett Select Stock, |t tom They are ashamed of a5 Sosan, their bu seem to think the hay- Yale and” New Englana Brewery | seed in is a badge of dis- Co's Ale, Lager and Porter, 0o a|Iepute. They are always laboring un- b7 g der afflictior ays quaffing the bit- ‘Wines, Liquors and Cordials at spe- | t°r shoeg fore inch A and their daily diet seems to be gali JACOB STEIN, 93 West Main SI. Telephune 26-3. WM. F. BRILEY (Sucgessor to A. T. Gerdner) Hack, Livery and Boarding | Stable 12-14 Bath Street. MORSE CLIPPING A SPECIALTY. aprzsd Individuality Telaphene 883 TOLLAND CoU WILLINGTON Reports from Recent Conventions— First Death in Family of Eight. Tv. Darrow as the most state gave a Mr. hurch gave report of the Mrs. Gardner port of the Womay Missionary socletles. Margerie, the infant es Amidon and Mrs Sunday Rev. tist Bap- | comprehen- conventic a and daughter Alice of Hol Amiidon, who died last Thursday, was burled Saturday, Rev. E. W. Darrow officiating at the service. Burial was n the new cemeterr. Much sympathy s felt for the parents this first break in their ini family of | and four | graphic re-) p's Forelgn and Home | norters and the Snivellers— Not a Failurs in Rocky, he Golden Mean. and wormwood. Their conversation is always a whimper; their record a grumble; their only song a wallful dirge. Their favorife tune is “Pleyel's Hymn,” and their pet prophet is the lamentable Jeremiah. They see the{ sun only through smoked glasses of dejection; even their rainbows are hung with black. They greet the new day with forepoding, and await the night with the drooping of soul. They assume that farming is slavery and feel sure that agriculture is going to the dogs. They can't raise the crops they used to; they can't get such help as they used to; they can't buy any more such boots or such shingles as they used to; the apples aren’t as big and red as they once were, nor the maple sugar as sweet. These are th Snive Now, 1, for one don't think sither sort wholly admirable, nor worthy of imi- lunon Do you I don’t want to meet ry often people so snortingly bump- nn us that the very sight of 'em wak- ‘ens the old Adam of fighting antagon- jsm within me. Nor do I really har after the continual society of sad- pair. Both make me uncom- And, sakes alive, we haven't €0 much time to waste, in our short to make ourselves lives, as to want more uncomfortable or be made any than need be! Moreover, neither one is right. That's most important of all. The world is neither a_terrestrial paradise nor js it a charnel house. Farming is neither the highest occupation on earth, nor is it the least honorable. There's sweet and sour In everything; there’'s sunshine and wain every year; there's good weather and there’s bad weath- er; there's ups and downs; there ig time to mourn and a time to dance. Life isn't as joyful as it ought to be, mi nor is it as hopeless as it ht be. Farming isn't as fitable nor as pleasurable as we wish It was, neith ig it as barren and as deadening as jt could well be if things were a little different If it be true, as | read asserted on census authority, that the value of the farm products of Connecticut has increased from about fifteen inillions to about twenty-six millions in fifty years, then farming in Connecticut isn’'t wholly a failure. If it be tr a similarly asserted, that Boston's 7,000 manufacturing establishments have an agsregate value of $40,000,000 less than Massachusetts’ farms, then farming in the Codfish Commonwealth is not wholly a failure. If it be true, as similarly asserted, that the capital of the entire textile industry o England is $155,000,000 less than the capital invested in New Enzland farms, then New England farming is not wholly a_failure. And, if farming not a faflure in bleak, rugged, rocky untain-heaped, winter swept New England, surely it cannot be in more favored are The farmer of toda, is better off than the same with the same phys equipment, could ha ago. He gets more and ha possesses greater comforts at t; e has more leisure and less hard work: he Is a freer ma his_opportunties for self-improvemer and Lappiness are greater. | know—none better—that it Oh, is a hard world at times, a cruel. Tt | has its periods of storm and stress | when everything seems to shake loose | and nothing is left to tie up to. To of us there come times to weep as well as times to laugh. My own heart is bleeding, even as I try to write this, over a little fresh-made grave in the Groton hills. Such a ! tle, little grave!—and yet in it are b fed love which seemed greater than anything else on earth, and hopes that { once reached out to and took hold of infinity. - Nevertheless, out of th mounded earth of such graves spr the towering certainties of immor jty. Over even them rises, plend- ent, the solemn dawn yon There is a golden mean, widely sep- arated from either of the extremes to which I have been alluding, which all men, and especially all farmers, would do well to seek. It avoids undue boast- | fylness #nd bumptiousness, nor choose the black shadow of perpetual LETTERS FROM TWO STATES. Belknap Heights Estel gloom. Tt recognizes the hard and the| On Wednesday, Oct. 27, W. N. R - cruel In life as well as life's work nolds, pastor of the Baptist church T pp: g death-rate from kid- therefore it speaks mildly and w at Shannock, was ordained to the | ney disease is due in most cases to the arrogance. At the same t it sces | work of gospel ministry fact that the little kidney troubles gre the glory and the grandeur w | ordaining council consisted of the pas- g % are a part of our heritage tors and lay delegates from the fol. | Usually neglected until they become fore it speaks firmly and lowing Baptist churches: Second Rich- | serious. The slight symptoms give dence; unboastingly, but also unmur- [ mond, First South Kingston, Queens | place to chronic disorders and the muringly River, Fast Greenwic Quidnesset, | sufferer goes gradually into the grasp THE FARMER. | First Hopkinton, First Westerly, Per- | of diabetes, dropsy, Bright's disease BB e e S ryville, Saunderstown, Shiloh, 'New- | gravel or some other serious form of e ———— | port, Point Judith, Fourth Baptist, | Kidney complaint Providence, “L”Tl ‘:! ey 'J\'\‘v L =l you suffer from backache, head- = 9 cil organized with Rev. G Rigler | aches, dizzy spe it the kidney se S “] P ' obbs as clerk. After care- | unnatural in appearance, do not ock of Whis e fully examining the candidate in his | jay. Help the kidneys at once Onur /ytock of Whiskise Sompions 4) Chris experience. call to the min- | Doaw's Kidney Pills are especially | the best brands, domestic and import- stry and views of Bible doctrine, the | for kidney disorders—they cure where | ed. Try our Old Darling. You will | BOLTON NOTCH ouncil voted to nroceed with his or- | othérs fail. Over one hundred thou- | . ¥ - o i A nation. The ordaining service took |sand people have recommended them,| ind it rich and mellow with age — New State Road—Game Supper—Acci- | place in the evening with the follow- | Here's a case at home: right either as a beverage or medicine. dent to Automobile. ing programme inging by the con Mrs. J. C. Sheppard, 107 High St., 9 2 | s s gregation; prayer; sermon, Rev.C.E. | Norwich, Conn, says: *I consider s Contractors started working on the ‘Hm]r nf"{'lu\nlr‘m(- uxrlurmw_: v]vm»-r Doan’s Kidwey Pills an indispensible T, | new piece of state road between Bol| by Rev. T. C. Gleason, with the laying | remedy for kidney and bladder trouble. G (f;n and Manchester Monday. The top | o8 of hands by the Rey, Messrs. Rig- | Several years ago 1 first used Doan's 0. treen el‘ger, of what is known as Nigger Hill ig|ler, Gleason, Thoma obbs and Je- [ Kidney Pills ana learned of their to be lowered about five feet, and about | ter: charge to the church, Rev. Mr. | great va They proved very ef-|, 47 FRANKLIN STREET, | one-half mile of road will be filled in | Thomas of Fope Valley: ‘charge fo the | fective at that time, bringing positive | Telephone 812 Norwich, Conn. | with gravel and widened. candidate, Rev. G. W, Rigler of West- | relief from pain in the bagk and cor-| aug2id Carpenters have about completed a |erly: hand ot fellowship, Rev. Mr. Je- | recting other kidney difficulties that — | small cottage on Dr. M. Maine's farm. | ter of Newport; benediction by can- | had caused me « great deal of amnoy- | oy alter Doolittle of Belknap is work- | didat | ance. I procured Doan’s Kidney Piils | of Hartrord Tsland and was baptized and joined |and since learning of their merit, I | “About twenty members of the Bol-| Dr. Bixby's church in Providence 29 |have kept a supply in the house. 23 | ton club enjoyed a game supper Mon- | years ago. . b n 1 5 Mon or sale by all dealers. Price 50 | day at their cottage on the lake at Election of Officers. sster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, | CHANGE IN PRICE | e Reld was a Martford visitor Wednesday Dr. C. Wesley Hale of Springfield was in town Monday visiting relativ |& A 5 | | Selectman Little of Columbia was in ls Whlt Co“flts ln‘. John Westrel is 4l with diphtheria | town on business Wednesday and the house is quarantined, T members of the Edwards family are all | Automobile Ran Into Fence. l)ho‘ fa h improving, 3 | . While Dr. D. C. Y. More of South| 0grapity. Clayton Morse and two friends from | Manchester was returning home from | Stamford are at Louis Morse's for a | Belknap in his automebile Monday the Beiaging out the real personality, | few days’ hunting. The gentlemen | steering gear failed to work on a curve | 8ne goints in character, the little | are J. Miller and Cashier Clarence Bell | between Eolton Depot and Belknap, | s that make us what v | of the First National bank of that{sending the auto into the fence and | Toned down by the natural spirit of | city. throwing the doctor over the fence and | &8 srist into perfect accord. Not a| Miss Jda M. Adams has gone to New | down an embornkment about ten fe h of paper and pasteboard with | Haven for two weeks. | Dr. More was wellshaken up, but ¢ dy-made look. D. B. Gardner, who has returned | caped with a few bruises. The auto- 1f yéu want a photo of vour rea)|from a lengthy ~western trip, spent| mobile was badly damaged and was seil, and admire, call on LAIGHTON or what yeur friends see to love The Photographer, epposiie auglsd Norwich Savings Soclety. Horal Designs and Cut Flowers For All Occasions. GEDULDIG’S, 77 Codar Street. Telephone 503. Jy2ea . 1s oo agyer or b-qu- tisin equal ¥ ".1 - Friday with his parents here. TURNERVILLE. Henry Mono, who has been clerk and sistant postmaster at the Turner- ville office, has moved to New London, He will be miessd by many friends. Mrs. W. E. Jaquith has returned from a week's visit with her son in South Coventry. Mrs. Annie Stubbs spent the day [ith her cister, Mrs. Robert Gengrous ast week Invitations are out for a Hallowe'en party at F. E. Clark’s this evening, Oct. 30. Mrs. E Holman of South Willington organibed a W. C. T. U, in Hebron last week with a number, of members from dium ‘n be Bul- this village. The vacamcy in D. F. Jaquith's blacksmith shop has been filled by Willlam Daly &k Se = Coventry, Invitations Out for Hallowe'en Party. | towed to Manchester for STAFFORDVILLE Woman Preacher Accepts Call to Local Church—Ide-Chapman Marriage. | . Miss Ruby Townsend of Enfield, N. H., is spending several weeks with her grandmother, Mrs. John Loungs- bury €. R. Kemp and Walter Hall of Hol* yoke, ts of H. A. Bos- Mass., were gue: worth and Wes! | day. | Miss Marion Jones, home missiona | of the Congregational church, has Bradway last Sun- cepted the call as preacher in this lo- cal church, and has commenced house- kepin in’ Mrs, H. M. Vaill's tene- ment Mrs. M. II. Halloran returned to En- iage of her brother, Walter D. 1de, and Miss Julia Chapman of that city. COLUMBIA Arthur Whitcomb and Party Get Rec- ord Catch of Coons—Thunderstorm Heavy—Other Mention. IL. W. Porter is making repairs and improvements on the house recently purchased from Henry Wililams. New windows and floors are included in the repairs. Mrs. Fanny Brown is visiting rela- tives in East Hartford. Six in a Night. Arthur Whitcomb has been consid- erably annoyed by ‘the ravages of coons the past season. Recently he entertained a party of hunters and a coon hunt was organized and six of the big grev fellows were captured in a single night. All of them were taken within the radius of a mile from Mr. Whitcomb's residence. Heavy ‘Thunder Storm. This *place was visited by the heav- jest thunder shower of the season last Saturday night about 12 o'clock. The thunder was 80 heavy that houses were shaken so that windows rattled. The rain fall was not very heavy. Hunting in Goshen Woods. Willie Wolff and Horace Little en- ¢ joyed a hunting trip in_the wilds of Goshen (Lebanon), on Friday after- noon and Saturday of last week. They succeeded in captaring nine grey squirrels and 4 small quantity of other game. News Notes. fami of Charles Proffit and Richards and family have 1o Willimantic. Miss Julla Kneeland, who ployed as teacher at_South ton and her sister, Miss Kneeland, who teaches at ingly, spent Saturday and Sunday at the home of their parents, Mr. and Mrs, W. H, Kneeland, in Pine stre Frank Johnson and family of He- ron have moved into the tenement owned by Mrs. A. H. Fox recently va- cated by Edwa McMurray Willard B, Clarke is visiting rela- tives in New Haven and Hamden, BOLTON Missionary from China Preaches at the Congregational Church—George Fin- | negan Goes to Indianapolis. The Willi moved is em- Willing- Josephine Hast Kill- Roberts of Hartford, a from China Rev. James returned missionary ached at the Congregational church Sunday. Mr. Roberts’ subject in the evening was Missionaries in China. He talked interestingly on the subject, which was enjcved by the audience Mrs. Carry D. Carpenter is visiting| relatives in Springfield. George Finnegan left week for Indianapolis, wh be. chauffeur for Louis H Carpenter is to take Mr. place as manager of Mrs. Carpenter’s farm Miss Kate C. Pomeroy of Windsor is of her sister, Mrs. W. C.| Mr. and M los Ruggles and sons of ing- field were visitors at Mrs. Francis E. Ruggles’, the last of the week Mr, and Mrs. Clair S. Hutchinson of Hartford and’ William K. Sumner of Rockville spent Sunday with Mrs, Hutchinson's and Mr. Sumner's moth- first of the | re he is to Levey Roy Finnegan's | Mary D. | | Mary Anthos Mrs. Jane B. Sumne Mrs. Jennie L. Bolton returned to Hartford today, after several months wi. Hartford Carpen- spent at her mother's home In Mrs. Louis Carpenter of was o recent guest at D. ra STAFFURD Louisa Wobbecke spent Sunday n_Springfield C. Bugbee is attending the G. A convention in Hartford. Miss Gertrude Wightman has so f recovered from her illness a return to_her school work N W. E. Clark of Hart | Mrs, W. D. Skinner Nortt stock are guests of Mrs. Will WASHINGTON COUNTY, R. 1. RICHMOND Rev. W. N. Reynolds Ordained to Min- istry with Impressive Ceremonial— Annual Meeting of Woman’s Mis- sionary Society. yeuy °Srgs Elvaed Senva Qm\\yye‘m Ny oathe bowe Ve system ejjec\\m\\y 3 0S\88 onemoveomng abinal consivpaXion permanently. \\s Yeneficral ways buy the G\\\\\“e. MANUFACTURED BY THE CALIFORNIA Fic Syrup Co. SOLD BY LEADING DRUGGISTS S0'ABOTTLE ROCKVILLE Irish-Babcock Wedding—Deacons Or- dained. evening, October Mr. and Mrs. Albert r only daughter, M s On Saturday at the home of S. Babcock, th Lyra Adell Babcock, was unifed in marriage with George Caplton Irish by the Rev. Erlo E. Sutton. The wed- ding was attended only by near rela- tives and a cousin of the bride, Miss Sylvia W. Lamphear of Westerly, and Everett C. Palmer, who acted as wit- The bride wore a silk dress which was the wedding dress of her grandmother over sixty years ago. They will reside in Rockville where a house is being made ready for them. Last Saturday afternoon at the Sev- nesses. lay Baptist church Charles O. 1 and Harold R. Crandall were | ordained to the office of deacons. Fol- was the order of services No. 9, Before Jehovah's Throne; prayer, Rev. L. F. Randolph; Scripture, Rev. Erlo E. Sutton; an- them, When My Heart Is Overwhelm- ing, choir; solo, The Plains of Peace, Miss Lyra A. Babcock; sermon, Rev. William L. Burdick; anthem, Sing Aloud «Unto God, cheoir; remarks by deacons-elect, Charles O. Crandall and Harold R. Crandall; prayer of conse- cration, Rev. Horace Stillman; ad dress of welcome, Deacon W. W, Woodmansee; addres The Church d Its Deacons, George H. Utter; symn No. 335, I Love Thy Kingdom; henedi m. Rev. Jul\ll J' Tue. A'(CADIA Exciting Times Precede Election—Per- lowin Hymn sonal ltems. John Hall is assisting Charles H. Reynolds in his harvesting. Mrs. Mary Ann Barber sold ‘her household goods at public Wednesday itement is running high concern- ing town and state election, which will be held Tuesday Nov. Mrs, T. H. Barber and Mrs. Iva Rey- nolds have been visiting relatives and auction on friends in Providence for a week Miss Bertha Perkins has concluded labors for Mrs. Mary Reynolds and irned to her home in Westerly Woodmansee has finished E. M. Tillinghast and is working on a cranb bog dam near Greene, R. 1 Mr. and Mrs._ Ellery Barber have begun housekeeping at Woodville, R. 1 A dance s held at the home of Grace Barber last Saturday evening. on Tanner and Mrs. Frank James Mrs, Amy Barber in Exeter on Mr. Hogan of was at Mrs. Wilcox's over DO IT NOW Norwich People Should Not Wait Un- til It Is Too Late. The annual meet 1g of the Woman Missionary society connected with the Baptist church at Shannock was held | Wednesday afternoon in the church | vestry following officers_were | elected for the coming year: Presi- dent, Mrs, W. N, Reynolds; vice pres- ident, Mrs. E. B. Earnshaw; secretary, | Mrs. Nellle Moore; treasurér: Mrs. .| R. Dawley: cradle roll superintendent Mrs. Mabel Kimber: solicitor, Mrs. Lo- ra Weaver, Mrs. Liilian Thompson. HOPKINTON Polls to Open an Hour Earlier—Goun- | cil Prepares Voting List. : Mrs. H. Gillette Kenyon is preparing in this to renovate the Slocum hous viliage and make it her home Notices are posted in the two vot- ing districts in Hopkinton for the gen- eral election Tuesday, November 2, at 9 o'clock a. m., one hour earlier than in_the past John Barker and his housekeeper have moved into a tenement on the west road, knewn as, the Prudy Cham- plin_ house, By A Hallowe'en supper is to be given by the ladies of the Second Seventh- Baptist_church at the home of William L. Kenyon. he singing class tau v Henry :n_dpened its course of thirteen Tuesday and Mrs. Thomas F. Ch visited the beach *r Weeka Tuesday night in pdrsuit of frost bat without success evening. near field, N. H,, last Tuesday, after spend- ing several days with local relatives. Mies Lulu Ide was in Springfield Mass, last week Friday, to attend the The town council as a beurd of vassers prepared the voting list be used next Tuesday, on Friday, tober: 20 an- to Oc- nts for ti Remember t no other. sole ag e United tates e name — Doan's take The Bedrock of Success in a keen, clear brain, backed by indomitable will and resisticss energy Such power comes the_splendic health that Dr, King' w Life Pi npart. They vilalize every organ and build up brain and body. J. A. Harmen Lizemore, W. Va., writes: “They are the best pills T ever used. 25¢, at The Lee & Osgood Co.'s. Mr. F. G. Fritz, uneonta, N, Y., writes: My little girl was greatly oenefited bv taking Foley'’s Orino Laxative, and I think it is the best remedy for co stipation and liver trouble.” Foley's Orino Laxative is mild, pleasant and effective and cures habitual constipa- tion. The Lee & Csgood Co. n Manilla Cigars We offer from an importation just received, at attractive prices. A. S. SPALDING, Mgr. No. 57 Franklin St. Tel. 823 oct28d ALL HORSES BIE No other form of property insur- snce is sure of being a loss. GET YOUR HORSE INSURED be- fore it dies from a SUNSTROKE. €. G. RAWSON, Gen. Agt. Main St, Norwich, Conn. ‘Phones—Ofics §59; house 854-2. Jjun23d WASHBURN CROSBY S GoLp MEDA FLOUR DEC JAN FEB MAR APR AND MAY JUNE JuLy AUG SEPT Oc N VEMBER Hair, Scalp and Face IMPROVE YOUR OP; Miss Adles will not alw to provide Eastern ladles with Excl Styles. Consul er wh Have your hair stylishly t the new millinery. Miss Adles will be of November 1st. WAUREGAN HOUSE, York. Telephone 704 MISS M. C. ADLES, Specilis! PORTUNITY. 5 be avail- Congecticut n e Parisian Hair il ou arrange an, to 1 week Norwich Bostor d e price to be charged to perso and corpor alternating cur- rent 'electr power has been changed by dersigned to taie | effect on September 1st, 1909, that is to | say, all bills rendered s of September 1st, 1509, for alternating current elec triciiy for power as shewn by meter | read taken August 20-24. 1909, to have been used since-the last previous reading shall be according to the fol- lowing schedule 1 io 500 Kilowatt Hours! 5c per kilo- c for each additl Board of Gas and Electr! sioners. 500 Ktlowatt Hours EXAMPLE. Number of K. W. H. used. ...1008 500 K. W. H., at & cents. $25.00 500 K. W. H., at 2 cents...... 10.00 $35.00 Norwich, July 26. 1909 JUHN McWILLIAMS, GILBERT S, RAYMOND, EDWIN A. TRACY. c for first onal kilowatt ical Commis- Jysod Delivered to Any Part best on the market PEERLESS. A telephon reccive prompt attention D. J. McCORMICK, 30 mey26d the Ale that is acknowledged to.be the of Norwich HANLEY'S o order will Framlelin St. TBERE 15 no advertising medium In Eastern Connecticut Leun [0y businese resul I to The Bul Jaw we tee THOMAS JEFFERSON D. D. S, pr Originator of Dr. King's Restor- o ation Method for the natu o restoration of teeth — orig e of the King Safe System of =i Painless Dentistry and Inventor e of the “Natural Gum"” Set of te Teeth, Etc. All right served 3 Dr. Jackson, Manager. apri3TuThs Dr. King's Restoration Method What Ii Does for Toolhless People mea are al full se ed in require resort nbrauce You w on nt hem A PAINLESS PR OCESS An fmpression has forth that t me surgical operation connected with tl w ot ) missing teeth. Some people have written in to know it we bore down into the bone and put the teeth in on pegs ! Others have an idea we set the rew teeth into the sockets where the natural teeth were originally It §s quite natural that some uat g T would ask such qiies- tions, and in order that they may be full swered we Will state that there is no boring, no cutting, no implantation about thls method, noth- ing about the work that is painful while it is being dene or afterward, Patients leave the office with these teeth In place and at once begin chewing meat, eating candy, toas:, or anyihing else with the same com- fort they would enj every tooth in r head had grown there. If we couldn't promise this and mak on the promise. the Re- storation Method would not be a succes would no better than ordinary bridgework or partial plates WE ARE GENERAL PRACTITIONERS All Forms of Dentistry Treated by Experts. While the Restoration Method is our grea 1t we are general dental practitioners as well. I'rom the simple \ e most in- tricate plece of porcelain work, ou s a rvice of the 1 ablic Naturally we would do such work well, mu r than it could be done in @ one-man office, for the operators employed here are ali men of the very highest skill ey need to be to do the Restoration work. Bunglers would not be tolerated In our office a day. neither would dental students. We demard the finished craitsman, both at the opep- ating chair and in the laboratory KING DENTAL PARLORS, Fraoklin Square, Norwich, Conn, e t ¢ wonderful method give back to a patient of teeth he or she start- he beginning. All we or more teeth In each from, and we shall not s dinary bridge- scess of the werk. free from In- ¥ this result gums and the natural ; ondition, tight= th which may be loose pyorrhea if the patient dreadtul, dis- pply are its own & nature’s plan, so 1 qually * divided, bite on these teeth exactly the same « would his natural match nature's teeth so dece experts. They ok at and a source delight to the ome wi The Thames National Bank REMOVED TO Central Building TELEPHONES - 990 and 9! 41 Broadway, you want te put your husi » the public. there is no me. tier than ghreug): the adyertl ing columus of The Suiletl

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