Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 4, 1909, Page 4

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0 s DN o 8 AR5 and in the Kitchen . be urged to accept this plan as the only as possible of their brethren, for the worst are not utterly worthless, and the good are mot so good that they carnot be better. and Gonfie?. 113 YEARS OLD. ' CONCERNING WOMEN. - Subscription price, 12c a week; 50¢ & month; a year Bntered a: the Postoffics at Norwich, Conn., as second-clags mat! & Telephona Onllss ulletin Business Office. 480. . s: etin Editorial Rooms, $5-3. \ A Baltimore minister is reported to have said that life has become so meaningless and useless to seme that it would be a good thing to provide for them a penny-in-the-slot machiue, which would kill them easily and re- lmtnhlf; This Is not a plous thought, and method of regaining what he has lost. A speaker at a meeting of the W. |If it is money he wants, he should be C. T. U. in Washington recently said | given an oppostunity to work on Sat- that he had mever seen such dese- | urday: cration of the Sabbath as he had seen | Don't take the boy from school eim- in_Washington, with card playing, | ply because he wants to leave. calling and so on in the' homes of the | Don’t scold the boy who fails; en- betfer class of people in that city. | courage him to do better work. Possi- He declared such passing of the Sab- | bly he. dislikes grammar—most’ boys bath a blemish on the national char- [ do. He may, however, be an expert in etin Job Office, 35-6. The Bulletin questions whether it is acter. arithmetic, for usually the. boys. are Willimantie Otfice, Room 2. Murzay | reafly o creditable thought for even| ' SR $oa0 misthsmaticipns, Mipsing Telephogt aie, one of the condemned. There is ot | Mrs. Julla Ward Howe. although in | ' Remember that where brilliancy is : - ; an element of charity fa this senti--|her Sist year, is in touch with every | shown in one direction, wholesome dis- Norwich, Thursday, Nov. 4, 1909. | .\ "\ .t there appears to be a_warp| Movement of importance in the world | like for another study may place the x and recently wrote a letter of protest | boy in a bad light. But that is no ¢ iThe Circulation of o Repaienng The assumptiofi that | {10, TRCCUAY, B2 paper in regard. to | proof that.the boy is not bright nor| ~ Makes the finiest grained ‘and lightest breads and cake. LUMBER AND COAL. COAL | there is a class so ambitious to Kill | 1, “yreqtment the European powers | worth pushing ahead. His one best themselves that they would volun- |jave accorded the Cretans. It seems | study may be the foundation for his | tarily invite death by dropping & pen- | to her very unfalr that Crete should | future work. ny in the slot has no grounds to rest |go to Turkey rather than Greece. e :t:&al:t‘a v;hoon:-;::::;:sm}n the | : e ghes e — ;"":'u.;:;j l",:o,f;;’:fp':z'p::?:b,:"fi: Miss E. C. Eccles is a typewriter | come the men and women who fill the inches wide. Width of lower edge in medium size, about 33 yard: Price of pattern, 10 cents. HOME GARMENT HAD_UNE The Bulletin’s Pattern Service. culation of any paper in Eastern % Connecticut, and from three to four i times larger than that of any in & Norwich. 1t 1s deliversd to over 3,000 of the 4,063 houses tn Nor- % wich, and read b ninety-thres per i fcent of the people In Windham § in 1a dolivered to over 900 houses. {| in Putnam and Danlelson to over I H ; The Bulletin has the largest clr-? i H wholly unwarranted. . Men who de- sire to dominate their brethren often show by such loose remarks that they are not fit to control men since they cannot’ control themselv AN OPTIMISTIC VIEW. President Mellen of the Consoli- dated road never lets his burdens blight his good cheer. He has faith in the immediate future of business 1,100, ara in al' of these places it 3| and does not share the gloom of some is considered the locsl daily. Eastern Connecticut has forty- five post office districts and forty- one rural free delivery routes. nine towns, one hundred and sixty- i of the stockholders. He is in a posi- tion to forecast prospects and he hes- itates not to affirm that he believes the 8 per cent. dividend is probable in the future in spite of recent large loans. His words of assurance are a8 The Bulletin is ®old In everyi follows: @ believe, that the dividend is now more who won the championship contest in | Connecticut. and was considered one of the most likely to win in the re- cent contest with Miss Rose Fritz, who won the title. The sixty entrants in the contest from Canada and the United States at Madison Square gar- den trdined just as athletes do in the matter of diet and exercise. Mrs. Kate Walker, who has lived at the lighthouse at Robbins reef for | wenty-three vears and has had sole | care of it for fourteen years, fac that { were recentl re ‘ed to, has had an opportunity recently to add to her fame Dby rescuing a couple of men | from drowning. She has as much courage in the water as she has to stand the lonely watches of the light | tower. NEEDLEWORK SUGGESTIONS. highest positions. The uneducated person is so sadly handicapped in the business world that. if he does succeed it is only through years of untiring effo WHISK 1S “FIRST AID” IN HOUSEKEEPING, Though its versatility is not gener- ally recognized, the whisk is able to fill as many roles as the member of the old-fashioned stock company. For instance, if slipped into a clean | bag of cheesecloth it is invaluable in cleaning the corner of uncarpeted steps. A clean one will lighten the labori- ous task of sprinkling clothes or iron- ing It dipped in water and shaken over the clothes. An old one will prove more efficient than any other sort of brush in clean- ing all the nooks and crannies of the Order through The Bulletin Company, g Patiern Depty Norwicn, Conn. - |Sacrifice Hits Alone Never Novelties in Millinery. Among the oddities in novelty feath- ers for millinery purposes is an uncurl- ed white ostrich demi plume, the quill covered with a strip of feather from the peacock’s breast. Another shows the fronds of the os- trich feather on the one side of the quill, while on the other are the stiff feathers of a quill scattered with jet. Both are smart looking and not apt to become common. ot wid Surely Sounds Sweet. Under. the name caramel there are a number of pinkish shadesrunning from light to dark. Indeed, the darkest tone might be aptly named fudge. A Scalded Boy's Shrieks Won a Ball Game. Chappell Co. Has Made a Bi Hit With Coal. It's the best all round Coal that A Change of Heart. and many ethers. r's Hard, but not too hard, bright, -hlnx and & ring that ajways goes with good | MISS FLORENCE WOLCOTT, . IN OPERATIC PROGRAMME. E. CHAPPELL CO. M:‘c:';:;' ~— Ladies and Children S Central Wharf and 150 Main Strest o — Bt S The Festival of Lumber — cuyssienm: FEATURE PIOTURE, - sink. It is absolutely necessary in the weekly brushing of mattresses, No_substitute can be found for it in the dusting of upholstery. A special one will be found very convenient in order to reach corners inaccessible ‘to the more unwicldy broom. | WOMAN ONION GROWER. horrified his grandmother, Mrs. Maria | Taylor, of Nebo, Ky., who writes that when all thought he would die, Buck- routes in Eastern Connectlcut. secure than at any time since I came to the property. If the company is CIR TION | handled in the future as it has been weesessesses 44123 in the past, stockholders need not be $!in doubt whatsoever regarding the tuture of the New Haven dividend : 908, $| unless there should come a panic re- o e 6559; garding dividends. I think we will | earn our dividends and replace the o '"n“""'“"‘""]rl79 urplus which has been drawn upon 7 543!.,durlng the past two years, if condi- #| tions continue to improve, and I be- 1908, average... . ! lieve they will” 3! President Mellen points out that 3| faith in the future is the keystone of | October 30 7’733 security. ~Unwarranted fear always | produces disastrous results. As a great corporation’ without serious com: == | petition the Consolidated certainly has town and on all of the R. F. D‘i‘ “There need be no apprehension, T H H| BENEFIT OF THE THE NORTH POLE HAWE CLDB 3 | len’s Arnica Salve wholly cured him. |bas recently been discovered. The fact Infallible for burns, scalds, cuts, corns, | that JOHN A. MORGAN & SON was vouns. yar- lling the best line of family coal and d wounsd, bruises cures ' fover-soren | seling the vost hne ot omly cont and | Friday and Safurday, November 5th and 6th. ped hands. Soon routs piles. 25c at |covered in 1814 Lee & Osgood Co. Still doing business at the Old Stand. The Haile Club will hold a Japaness Festival and Chrysanthemum nvm3 o Central Wharf, Telephone 884. o AT GHLANBOUER, the residence o the way, is a woman. Mrs, E. C. Dodd, buty. B C. who Lb the sutiior of a6V~ v ve: Mrs. Wil 3 - who lives in Laredo, Tex., has culti- o gl Ot e Bl pioi coAI s, am Camp Lenman, on Fri yated 105 jpcres this season and made} his smart tailored skirt in dark blue | T was aficted with kidney trouble and day and Saturday, November Bth and o over $50:000. ‘NT”\":;;:‘Q:"):JH{ ',‘":'n‘é ot. with plalts in groups and 4 |last winter I was suddenly stricken 6th, afternoons and evenings, from 3 e over $50,000. Tc pocket, is onme of the newest, and | with a severe pa : - . Tl cut in 8ix gores, | With & severe pain in my kidneys and | Free Burning Kinds and Lehigh | to 6 in the afterncon—from 7 to 10 in a gain of over $400 an acre is some- y chie. was confined to bed e, i ] i ity - For A g ght days unable s thing few men have the ability to do, tly Tatsed waistiine -and | yus SOnTISA Th BNt S amsistance. | My ALWAYS the evenings. and yor Kuls Weras fces ot Apens nd " sarvieeable development | urine contained a thick white sedi- Japans regard “hex- feat, a8 entiflingiher Ml had in serge, broadcioth and { ment, and I passed same frequently A. l] LAT“ROP 3 ' 1901, gverage .. IX-GORED SKIRT. ¥ A Religious Author’s Statement. A most successful onion grower, by | puris Pattern No. 3117 — All Seams| Rev. Joseph H. Fesperman, Salls- T geous decoration: Gardens, with gor- thousands of beau- TME AUTOMOBILE CENSUS. |a most promising outlook ! any great praise. . . day and night, I commenced taking Massachusetts has found it neces- | P o | of her fhrm. In peveon: Raising. onions | inches, "Walit e gst2%t 32 | Foley's Kidney Remedy and the pain titul Chrysanthemums on view and for 900 take o census of‘all autonio- | BIVIOED MONATIN | of her fyrmn In person, Ralsing onions inches, ulst, measre, | s 23, Mk | aradualiy abated, and” Amally ‘ceased | Offisg—cor. Markat ard Shotucket Sta | sale; Japaneso Costume Dances, Songs, | 20 inches wide, 6% yards 24 inches n: Wide, 4% yards 36 inches wide. 3% | fully recommend Foley's Kidney Rem- varas 42-inches wide or 3 yards ‘54 |edy.” For sale by Lee & Osgood Co work and at expense in that s tion, where irrigation is necessary is the intention of Mrs. Dodd to pl on a still bigger scale. 3 brings more of he B tion. biles and horse-drawn-vehicles passing | ‘Tammany's victory in New York on over the good roads of that state, to | Tuesday was not a complete and sat- | determine what proportion of fhe | ISfying success. ‘When it was revealed | wear and tear each is accountable | that the fusionists had captured the | for, and the second week's count made | board of estimate and apportionment, | for the week following Octol Tammany must have had a chill~| paris Transfor Pattern No. 8116. | Telephons 168-13. Games. - Japanese Juggler, Flower Girls, Jup- | Al kinds of Oriental | Table Delicacies for sale. CALAMITE COAL |uimiin - - - 5. including cup of tea, Well Seasoned Wood oct29ad reported, | must have realized that its grip up- G’mMpEi The first enumeration began August : On the revenue was lost. The win- 23, and the count was made from 240 | Ding of the district attorney by the | tions. r that week there were | fusionists by 13,000 plurality must be | a thorn in the side of Tammany hall ard for a po r painted in inted on heavy card | place in the be roidery m | dress. It is in th The guimpe occupies an im e of this s r of the ordi- 27,591 horse-drawn vehicles ] : automobiles. In the Octo count | Just what Mayor Gaynor may accom- | P S R B be st el B, apap i~ ( | i e R i S | plish for hie: partg is mot dscernile | eed stitches. | besides of and at George A, Davis' and Cransten cles and 18,500 automobiles a1 | —whether. Jis gratest;achigvement | Bullet The tiny yokes, which sometimes H HAS E L & Co's. novid kinds. The percentages changed from | to_be in promoting or balking public| pany pattern Dept., Norwich seem to be merely an extension the o M H B B8 of teams to 42 of automobiles in | Af o bo Tam s ollar, are freaubntly made of net ; RS T'MUSIC. | August, to 65 of teams and 35 of au- e | tided in T Lt ex 7 :” Klin St e &8 -.-Mx oy L] | tomobiles in the month just closed. e s yarge OdL. ¢ o g TR CAROLINE H. THOMPSON While the single-horse, light and by e i s T . f Musl heavy vehicles, were in a ldrge ma- AV r ir L vy Jority, there were almost three fimes mperfections, it r 1 o dull 46 Washington Street. mapy touring cars as runabouts | that he will be able t . nt not —— LUMBER - { B89e Ratomobile sNowit for the honor ef himsel < ihe best to be had and at the right L. H. BALCOM, Teacher. of Plane. prices, too. Remember we always i farry & big MNne of Shingles. Call us | ... ap and let us tell you about our stock | (he hume of the éfi,,,"," e 8 H.F. & A, J. DAWLEY 4 at Schawenka Con: ma isd [Evening School |t ,, =2 . —_———— A. W. JARVIS is the Leading Tuner In Eastern Connecticut. 'Phone 518-5. 15 Clairmount Ave. This is a rational way of getting at the real amount of damage done to the | roads by automobiles, and of ¢ ty estimating what thelr share of the | damage i5. Qther states will proh: bly foliow sujt fn thus getting at Just assessment for the automobile traffic, EDITORIAL NOTES. ervizer * with a femst-day is still a h is the kiund’ th not goods in thi distrust to the men Speake 10n wants it understood | At he represents the anthority of the of course | majority. ELECTRIFIED HAMS. A public which has become accus- | th, tomed to embalmed beef i ready for hams cured by electricit by any other rapid w: 1t is claimed that the electric fluid is @s it is when employed in tanning leather, as that might make the too tough, but it works, a Clev: is seems to be O.K IN CITY HALL NOW OPEN attac” ments consisting cf Top Shel and Broiler pattern, or of Top Shelf only, are an idcal conven cace ior summ r use. SCAWARIZ BROS., 9-11 . aler SL, Norwied, CL Tt has i that the a worse than 1 decided in Michigan tern. 10 cents and sirew suffcient stuffed sugar ove n Dept.. Norwich, Conn. | minced lemon peel. Ste Optimism ept a man intc man says, and works economica office, but him to =it and v Uy until tender - Ho originated this method of smile at the fellow who got there. | Ruches Popular t ak. Boil the rice with A PION, ’ / TUITION and SUPPLIES | _sepizza hamming pork and he told the mem- | —_ | Ruehes are so this year that | the s and nutmeg until soft, | .. 'y Béew e the. AmerieantMeat Packers| 1If the planet Mars kne Kat Am- | countless varie n, | and, when thoroughly done, dis® it, | FREE JAMFS F. DREW SMGeation. =t theld Fedsnt eomven. | erican scientists iving It might | but one of i1 far | piling hish in the center. 'Arrange . s | rise up-and cha: sing | was made stri r, to | the appies on it, warm the jam, pour tion at Chicago, that a ham which | rise up b yit o' ohed inbtosd e, [ it over the Whots ANEAsTve Dok be cured by the electric process three | et and a half years ago is as good now Happy thought fc Have vou as the day it received its electric | Noticed how much easicr it is to gos- bath. The hams are placed In a Iz about neighbors than it is to pray vat filled with a pickle composed of | for them? sugar, salt and saltpetre, and an elec- | tric current is passed through the vat.| It.is not Johnson who is putting The process is cheaper as well as| off the encounter Gentleman Quicker than the old way. says that it cannot come off until There will not be any objection to | APril, 1910. the process if it does not make the = hams less digestible than the slower | The editor who thinks that there is | method, nothing sure in fhis life must have overlooked the poetry that turns up in the spring. (R ST 2 P made. although a bit f the latter, some R T miak, was used in the design. ' Creamed Spaghetti. Whit :1‘;:‘1 '\‘;‘ ‘;: g 1:‘\.,’;’1\\'?\(1("5‘ Have two quarts of water boiling | ow_ Jine ‘0f the brown fur, | & kettle and one-third of a pound of | W+ Jine -of jorown fur | spaghetti. Hold a few pieces- of the WEBIRIE In aoft, broad Disits that be jspaghetti at a time in the water, and BB 48 Jniidle About twe. inches | 88 the ends soften turn them round fadsd bosh We A ehed %on (o & | and round and down into the kettle. from the top it was stitched on 10 a | ygyep "a)1 are in the water put on a sy ’_"1‘;‘;‘ K "‘;"?]tp":’\“,‘“‘“i’,‘!‘m‘; | cover and cook the spaghetti 20 min- S e ke Mgt 3 | utes, then drain. e, this of chiffon, though, was laid | "'y o cream sauce with a rounding the main piece. The Stitching |, yieqp00n each of flour and butter s covered with a wider band of the | anq one ounce of cream. Season with nished in front with two mink} o, naif level teaspoon of salt and a under which the fastening Was | fo grains of pepper. Stir in the spa— Little Rhody is to be congratulated D hespe B O : ittlé’ Rhod: o be atula ish and sprinkle with finely grat with respect lt:dtlehn!-pelmiure Oc‘l"”' upon returning the republicans to Use for Refrigerator. cheese. p e s s 1s a surprise o | poyer She would not had they not| When ice is no longer needed clean — most of us; but In molsture it was one| hayve deserved to be. the refrigerator, stop the drainage Avoid Wiry Material. of the driest of the dry months. The gt o pipe and dry the interior with a light- | Do not buy pully or wiry materials weather bureau's official metereological | The hunter who was mistaken for | ed lamp. It is moisture that rusts the | i you are not versed in cutting; it is gummary as printed by the Boston |a rabbit and shot must have deserved | Inside, %o vlace uo siefming aricic) | almost impossible for the movice to B0t Wil b4 of Bises 4 e M °h | In the refrigerator. e 7 | make a satisfactory garment of stiff Py v baal it to eask O e oy @I he ever make SUCh | to make an improvised cupboard out | mohalr or poor, thin silk, and it is un- n : inutive appearance of it, it should bé used for holding | wise to try broad stripes. ‘The mean was 53 degrees, and that — 5 fruit’ in cans, jars and bottles. It o skt is the October mean for the last thir- | . Senator Cummins of Towa telis his|the interior is in bad condition, now New Hair Dressing, ty-nine years. Four times in that|Sunday school class that the intrica- |is the time of year to give it the'usual | yrono o6 the very newest styles of period 1t has been five degrees lower | cies of civilized life make it difficult | three thin coats of white enamel paint. | s ooGi Tha' hiair entirely conceal the and once, in 1879, five degrees higher, | to tell right from wrong. The first two of these should be al- | gars These are invariably the modes but perhaps as few extremes are — — lowed to dry thoroughly for fow d4a¥8 | wyich include the center parting. shown as for any month in the year.| Secretary Nagel is a man who can-|Prior (o the last application Clean were 77 degrees, and the lowest 33 de- | ministrative irregularities and prompt- | gure there is no foreign substance in grees, while the absolute maximum |ly punishes those concerned. the pipes. To stop the pipes use a tor the basic period has been 90 de- —_— large cork wrapped in cotton and it into the end. If the pipe - Piano Teaing and Repairin) BELLS SEASONING — | *sosimm s | . = .. 40Years of Success;40Years preferred b | wa'(jlles i ' e | 51D as eli essi } fO'fPO g.Game,Mefl'tS Fish‘ r buys a Oslix. 1.5 Jewel, nickle Insist on BELLS the original. BELL’S CROQUETTES. 1 cup chopped cold roast Jamb or boiled mutton. Cook 1 cup potatoes, pared and cut in 3 inch cubes, in boiling salted water till soft. Brown 1 tallespoon finely chopped onion with 2 fabléspoons butter, stirring constantly. Add 4 tablespoons flour. Cook two minutes. Then pour on, stirring constantly, § cup strained tomato. Season with } teaspoon Bell’s s:m«nhufi 1 teaspoon vinegar, 4 teaspoon finely chopped parsley. Add lamb and potatoes. Salt to taste. Spread mixture on plate to cool. Shape, dip in crumbs, in egg, and crumbs again. Fry in deep fat, and drain on brown oA R ek cient to fluvor the dressl: RITR L0 TR S BN For Delicious Sausages, Flavor with Bell’s Sausage Seasoning. 285c.and 50¢. Cans; 6,12 and 25 1b. Boxes; 50, 75 and 100 Ib. Drums. 38! OCTOBER RECORD. The reports from Boston show that movement, in a 20 year gold filled hunting case. | Quality guaranteed. i JOHN & GEO. H. BLISS SPECIAL: THIS WEEK Crystalized Rock and Rye, bottle 68c 1647 3 Star Hennessy Brandy, bottle $1.75 * 3 Star Martell Brandy, bottle $1.75 Schlitz Milwaukes Beer, dozen $1.00 ’ Adam’s Tavern | jcos'sin s West Main St. —— 3 T —— 1861 Bk e : Telephuone 26-3. WASHBURN-CROSBY S offer to the public the finesi standard grees and the absolute minimum 25| Uncle Sam's children are bent up- | drive degrees. The accumulated excess since the beginring of the year is 357 de- @rees. In precipitation the previous deficlency has been intensified. Only 347 inches fell, ainst the thirty- nine-year average of 3.6 inches. While rain has Reen sorely needed, its lack has perhaps been borne with more resignetion from the fact that the of the season has been en- ced thereby. Eleven years ago over seven inches of rain fell during the month, conditions/under which foliage ocould not Me expected to show its hest. The accumulated effi- elency since January 1 {8 194 inches. The prevalling direction of the wind has been west, and its total move- ment 7,414 miles, its greatest velocity being at the rate of thirty miles an hour and e average ten miles. There were twelve clear days, twelve party gloudy and seven cloudy. On the 20th ghe first killing frost occurred. The mean atmospheric pressure was 30.01, the highest 30.5%, and the lowest 20.64.” Lady Cooke says that man can do anything he wants to do; but Dr. Cook doesn't want to re-climb Mt. MeKinley; but he has got to, or be permanently Barrilled. They grow seven hundred bushels of_potatoes to the acre out in Mon- and some whole New England ' do mot turn out such & crop. A Pipsdaini i on cheating him every day; but Loeb is convincing them that it is a dan- gerous and unprofitable occupation. Boston Is elated over raising over half a million for a new Y. M. C. A. building in two weeks, and may be excused for celebrating the achieve- ment. The woman who never speaks a cross word 1o her husband is said to remain beautiful. This must account for so many fine-looking matrons here- abouts. Prophecies by Opposites. The next congress will be democratic. If it isn’t Champ Clark is mistaken, and who ever knew Champ to be mis- taken as a political prophiet?—Kausas City Journal. Easier to Believe. It is much easier to believe that there will be no mare cheap meat than it is to remember when it was cheap.— Providence Tribune, Came in Droves. Not one office seelser has Besieged Mr. Taft since he bas been in Texas.— Houston Post. The homebody—What's the principal industry in New York, near as ye could jedge, Abmer? Tho traveled man—Step- pin’ lively, I reckon.—Puck. has an outlet into the yard the re- frigerator will be damaged if unplug- ged, Carrot Preserv ‘Wash the carrots and boil just long enough to enable you to peel -them easily. Peel and_siice crosswise into pieces about one-quarter of an inch thick. Put into boiling sugar-sirup flavored either with lemon or_sliced ginger-root. Cook until the carrots can be pierced easily with a fork. Pack in jars and seal. For the sirup use three-fourths of a pint of sugar to a pint of earrots and an ounce of ginger root tu one-half gallon of sir- up. WHY YOUR BOY DOES NOT LIKE SCHOOL. When a boy won't go to school there is gomething wrong, and the parents should get at the very bottom of the trouble. All boys heartily dislike some studie Girls are net lacking in this respect, but ‘they are really more ambitious students, taken collectively, and go to school much longer than boys. One teacher offers this explanation for the boys ‘refusal to go to sehool: They get behind in the class, have little ambition fo get ahead, and do not care to be plaged in a lower class. The second fault is that they want to earn money. Now when a boy fails at schoel he must be encouraged. - If his teacher in- sists that be be demoted the boy should = G oLD MEDAL brands of Beer of Europe and America, | STABLE and STREET Bohemian, Pilsner, Culmbach Bavarian Beer, Bass' Pale and Burton, Muelr's Scotch_Ale, Guinness' Dublin _Stout, C. & C. Imported Ginger Ale, Bunker Hill P. B, Ale, Frank Jones' Nourish- ing Ale, Sterling Bitter Ale, Anheuser- ‘Budweiser, Schlitz and Pabst. A. A. ADAM. Norwich Town. Télephone 447-12. jyaza THE PLANK Headquarters for Best Ales, Lagers, Etc., in Town. JAMES O'CONNELL, Proprietor. Telephone 507. oct2d DENTISTRY The dental business established by my brother, "h ‘-nuunl ;,'bll r Many years, will we contnue el by Dr oD Eidee Y ™ Tt will bo a pleasure to see the tormer customers of my brother and as many | eat13d new ones as will favor me with their patronage. Extracting 26c and up, novisd DR. CHAS. B. ELDRED. We are headquerters for NARRAGANSETT BANQUET ALE. Family trade supplied at 660 per doz. C. E. Wright, § Cove St. Tel o0ot3t? BLANKETS We have a large assortment to choose from at lowest prices. The Shetucket Harmess Co 283 Main Streel. WM. C. BODR. ‘Telephone 865-4. octid Rose Bowling Alleys, LUCAS HALL, 40 Bhetucket Street. 3. 1. C. GTONE. Pron CHANGE IN ADDRISS. DR. N. GILBERT GRAY, formerly at Hodge's Stable, is now lo- cated In rear of No. § Franklin square Tel 574 Foley's Honey and Tar “oauu‘u’.‘_ A 1

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