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Subscription price, 12¢ & week; 50c & smonth; a year. " Bntered a: the Postolfice at Norwich, B Conn., as second-class matter. 3 Telephone Calla: Bulletin Business Office. 0'0‘0.‘. Bulletin Editorial Roo Bulletin m Office, 35- Willimantic Office, Reem 3. Murray Telephone. 210. which is most important and most deserving—the charity which will pro- vide for.a cleaner, more wholesome and progressive life for the American ju- venile, The boys' playgrounds and the boys' clubs, with their excellent prac- tical teachings under efficient manage- ment are telling for a better and more intelligent citizenship. There js no real good reason why the crime in this great country of ours should cost over a billion a Expert criminologists are of | the opinion that 75 per cent. of this 3 culation ef any paper in Eastern % Connecticut, and from three go four i times larger than that of any § Norwich. It is deliversd to ove $3.000 of the 4.053 houses In Nor- % wich, and read b: ninety-three per cent. of the people. In Windham it 1s delivered to over 900 hou: in Putnam and Danlelson to over is censidered the local dally. : Eastern Connecticut has forty- nine towns, one hundred and sixty five post office districts and forty- one rural free delivery routes. The Bulletin Is sold In every town and on all of the R. F. D. routes in Eastern Connecticut CIRCULATION § 1901, average § 1905, avera 1 H 1906, avera 1907, average £ 1908, average. 4 3 November 8 HOME AGAIN. It will seem good for President Taft to find himself once more in ‘Washington under his own roof and #ig tree. He has had a great time and has bpeen confronted by the most kill- ing bills of fare the skill of & thou- | sand chefs could set before him, and he has tackled everything from the frothing fnsurgents to a Georgla breakfast made up of waffles, quail, fried chicken, sausage, steak, broiled ham, brolled chicken and “grits,” etc., and he is In good form and ready to Suckle right down to work, which is @s wonderful as the return of the world-encircling fleet of battleships in good shape and ready for conflict so far as condition was concermed. It is & masterly feat to be the honored guest at a hundred banquets and to #inish up without being obliged to rest He can do a or to call for a doctor. weries of banquets and not have them do him and this is so rare an achleve- ment that it must rank high. that is leaving the corn pone, buck- wheat cakes, bacon gravy, and sweet potatoes, baked apple and hot bread of the south behind him, he may be expected to find pleasure in his plain home diet and to be getting an appe- tite for the Rhode Island turkey which will give eclat to his Thanksgiving dinner. CORPORATION SALOONS, There are well-meaning men who believe that a well-regulated saloon will tell for temperance better than prohibition and one or two great cor- porations of this country have estab- lished saloons for their own employes. The Standard Oil company took out a saloon license in the name of one of its employes at Elizabeth, N. J.,, and beer was sold to the hands at what ‘was really the company’s saloon, dur- ing the noon hour; but not more than two glasses fo one man. The object was to prevent excessive drinking at the mid-day recess, and the danger of rendering some employes more or less unfit for work the rest of the day. The United States Steel company has undertaken the same experiment, though on a much larger scale, In Fayette county, Pa., where it would regulate the drink of about 25,000 per- sons dependent upon the coke ovens for their living. The steel company buying up all the brewerles in that county, intends to prohibit the sale of beer in bulk, to open its own saloons and to limit the sale of beer except in glasses. This will, if carried into effect successtully, abolish the “growl- er” and lessen the number of protract- ed sprees indulged in by some of the men. There will be & wide and lively in- terest in these experiments by the regular saloon keepers and by those ‘who belleve that prohibition is the on- ly method for preventing the drunk- enness, crime and want resulting from the excessive use of these beverages. This treating of the drink habit from a strict business basis is belng adopt- ed In other parts of the country, It follows directly along the lines of the yarmy canteen, and will ing fierce op- position from all who opposed that and finglly succeeded In its abolish- ment. A New York man who had to tend the children and make the family beds at night has sued for a divorce. This shows that the worm will turn if given time. A New Yark judge informed two bankers sentenced to prison for tak- ing the money of depositors for thei personal use that they were plain thieves, A Kansas man mortgaged his cem- etery lot in order to buy an automo- ibile. Considering the freakishness of the machine, this is extra-hazardous. Boston has just passed the thirtieth anniversary of its great fire, dbut no- body would know that Boston ever had a big fire did she not tell of it. Mrs. Peary thinks, mow that the Commander ‘has found the North pole, “that he may have time to become ac- i Kbvember elections wid not _show that an Indelible mark of un- popularity had been set upon the re- ».u‘bucnn,ylny's policles. * THe¢ fnen who banks chimney ‘does not see s0 much differ- | ence betweer hot smoke and cold- . blooded burglars. his bills in the 1,100, and in al’ of these places f Now crime would be overcome if young America was trained into good habits and taught to cherish high ideals. it John Stewart Kennedy had seen the way to have laid down just ten millions in the interest of a better would have entered a field where 1< | lions are sadly needed to stem the | current of ineficleficy and ecrime | to establish @ higher standard of | 1zenship for this republic. Some day a man of millions will | ook after the American boys as the | means of making better citizens and & firmer-founded republic. WHO STARTS THE ORCHARDS? | One would think that history would ‘ahn\v that young men start our or- chards, but Mr. J. H. Hale, of South | Glastonbury, is authority for the state- »aent that most all the productive or- chards of New England have been es- tablished by men past the half-century mark. It takes ten years for an or- chard to become productive and the young men look upon a decade as too long a time to awalt results, that ten years seem shorter to a man of 50, and they do not hesitate to start new orchards. Mr. Hale, who does things upon a broad scale, bought a lot of abandoned farms and started 100 acres of apples, and he is able to how apples from this orchard that for size, firmness and quality excel the best fruit marketed from the west. And in connection ‘with age and ap-- ples and enterprise he said: “I saw & man the other day who was 88 years of age and he had just planted an apple orchard in New Hampshire. He said to me: ‘Hale, come up the sum- mer when I ain 100 years old and we will have a devil of a time." The vim and the optimism of such open-air oc- togenarfans Is &s inspiring as it is | wonderful. | _And Mr. Hale gives notice that if | New Englanders do not improve the grandest apple-belt of the world that the westermers will' come east and settle down near the great fruit mar- kets and make this $50-an-acre land worth more per acre than any acre of apple-land to be found in this country today. This {s why New England farmers should get a move on and gather to themselves fame and wealth by de- veloping the resources of this “ex- hausted” region of ‘country. NEWSPAPER CENTENARIANS. There are $4 newspapers in this country over a century old, among which the Louis Republic is one of the most enterprising, and they are grouped as “The Century Club of Newspapers,” and of these the Nor- wich Courier is among the 30 oldest. The oldest papers In Connecticut in their order are the Connecticut Cour- ant of Hartford, the Connecticut Her- ald and Weekly Journal of New Ha- ven, the Republican Farmer of Bridge- port, and The Courler of Norwich. The oldest paper in New England is The Mercury of Newport, R. I, started in 1768, and the oldest paper in the coun- try s The News and Courier of Charleston, S. C,. started in 1732. In the New England states there are twenty of these newspaper centenari- ans, of which Massachusetts has seven and New Hampshire five. Of this Century club of 84 papers century and they all represent 18 states, Pennsylvania leading with 18 of them to New York's 15. Old Vir- ginia and Connecticut stand balanced with four each. George Knapp & Co., publishers of the St. Louis Republic, issue in con- nection with the passage of that paper across the century line a 36-page book with an illustrated history of The Re- public and short sketches of the other 83 members of this newspaper Cen- tury club; and a “Chronology of the Origin of Newspapers.” In complete- | ness and typography this souvenir | book is a work of reference and a work of art. The oldest newspaper was founded at Pekin, China, 1,400 years ago and was called The News, and suspended publication this year. Among western nations Germany stands first for news- paper énterprise. The first Courant was printed at London In 1702, and the first Courier at Charleston, 8. C. in 1782, EDITORIAL NOTES. What a lot of pious people there are who do not believe that card-playing is as bad as it is painted. Dr. Cook happily and good-natured- ly meets Admiral Chester's voluntary | assaults upon his character. We are in the midst of Indian sum- mer now, and not a squaw will ven- ture to dispute the assertion. Happy thought for toda: ‘Where there's a will there is n way, but it is nmot of necessity the right way. The minority that does n that a question settled by a\ ot oW rity is settled right, is a mean miority. President Taft declined the min€ ju- of the south. He still Ad- ale good enough for his The Vardamans of the south could | not prevail upon Maryland to dishonor herself by voting to disfranchise the negro. s The west does not seem to *be ap- preciative of the endeavor being made for its enlightenment by Senator Al- drich, Many a politician who is today standing on his record has not con- ceived that it is not broad enough to run on. | e e A = : ; When China attains te modern methods the rest of the world must have a care. A roused tiger is always dangerous, A seat in court to hear the Stein- heil murder case ut Paris has brought $200, Grand opera does not da boet- ter than that. Danbury.—~The Sunday night traim, which has been leaving this city fer New York at 7.39 o'clock, has made s last trip for the season. all but 29 were founded in the 17th | L w-zq aradiig & ‘When Sarah Morak went out for & little walk at the noon hour after she had bolted her two sandwiches and piece of cheese in a secluded cormer she found a $10 bill. Sarah usually walked along with her eyes moodily on the ground, and that was how she happened to see the gleam of green snuggled up under the overhanging edge of the sidewalk as she stepped up from the alley crossing. Even the touch of the money as her unbelieying fingers closed around it in a little breathless clutch did mot illumine her face, for it takes more than one chance piece of good luck to overcome the settled habits of a lifetime, and Sarah’s babit was glum- To be sure, her life covered only an of eighteen years, put in Sarah’s _vernacular those eighteen years had been a plenty. As she crumbled the bill In her| hands some obscure process of asso- clation brought to her the thought that never in her whole existence had she had what she wanted, never had she done what she wished. It was just outside the big depart- ment store where Sarah sold tack- pullers, wire egg-beaters and 10-cent hammers in the basement that she had found the money, right under the feet of hundreds. Realization that the money was hers —that she had $10 to spend all at once—made Sarah a little dizzy—, so she stopped before a gayly dressed window and gazed in unseeingly. The bill was wadded up in the palm of her hand. She noticed that four fingers were showing through the worn spots in her glove, which was all roughed up and gray-black from age. Well, there were some beautifully sofit brown street gloves in the window before her, on beyond that a group of pale grays, znd whites and ecrus, long and almost silky, such was the deli- oy of the kid. She might zo in and ay any of these now, instead of get- ting fll-fitting gloves at the 50-cent glove counter In the basement. Almost like a connoisseur Sarah studied the gloves, then she moved on critically. She was enjoying a brand new sensation—she was shop- ping! Heretofore she had gone and grudgingly bought things when they were absolutely necessary and had wasted no time in doing it, for she had not bothered to look around. She simply walked to the cheapest count- r and made her purchases and hated them ever after. Her heurt began to thump at the change. She entercd the store and walked by the long counters shimmering with s and laces and ribbons agd gazed at the pretty jewelry noveltfes with almost a sense of ownership. Those glittering rhinestone hatpins—she abered 1ook it =ome in the woman who had stopped at own counter and seeing them hat sparkle in the artificial light of the basement. She had coveted them dully. Now she “conld buy one or two—more if she liked. Once she stepped into a corner be- hind a radiator and smoothed out the crumpled bill. It was reaily a $10 "HER HAPPY HOUR ey 1Y e > 2 V‘)&mlil Dbill, sge saw again. Then she folded 5 :?n'flm? ‘on‘.l:bhm. b clutched it firmly 3 She paused beside the counter laden with handbags. She never had own- ed one—what money she ever pos- sessed found plenty of room in the mbby little leather purse her mother let her take when she first went downtown to work. Sarah did not think of new things for the dingy Mt- tle home when furniture ang aang- ings greeted her eye. It was not a home, anyhow, only a place to sleep and start away from. The instinct for beautiful surroundings has to be cultivated, but that for personal adorn- ment is inborn in every girl. Even when she saw that she must hurry to get back to her counter to keep from being late, Sarah felt no sudden alarm. In her hand she held more than two weeks' wages. She was tasting the power of money. The sum that was paid her every week she had to turn over to her mdther anyhow. When there are six small children in a house, money goes. Sarah’s father had gone a ycar ago, leaving to his wife and oldest daughter the burden of supporting the family. Corse things to eat, ugly things to wear, ob- curity, the neglect that comes to a girl who is homely and awkward and sullen and who in return hates back— these had been hers. She almost held ‘up her head as she neared her own store. Girls who open- ly disifked and ignored her or made fun of her would give a good deal to have what she held in her hand! To- ward not one person she knew in the basement did Sarah barbor any feel- ing other than resentment and dis- like. As she went In at the side entrance and towsrd the cloak room she met Jimmy Jones. He was the most im- pudent of all the errand boys and Sa- rah_estended to him an extra feeling of hatred, for he openly tormented and annoyed her. He was a homely boy, too, and he was loud-mouthed and swaggering. At present, Now- over, he was crying and his swollen face did not add to his beauty. He glared at Sarah through his tears. “What's the matter?” she asked In surprise. “Old_Phillips fired me,” the boy got out. He blinked his eyes fast. “Sent me out this mornin’ on an errand with ten plunks an’ I lost 'em. Hadn't got a block before I missed the money. An’ he fired me. Gee! What'll the old women do to me?” Sarah stared at Jimmie's convulsed countenance and for the instant she hatcd him worse than ever. Of course, it was the lost money, that wonderful $10 bill. She might have known some- body would claim it. She didint teel sorry for Jimmie. 'The loss paid him back for his meanness. She stared a long while and her throat was very dry. The boy starteq on toward the door, trylng gamely to swagger as he had done at other times. Sarah put out her hand in fite rag- ged glove. “Here,” she said hoarsely, it must be the one you dropped. | found it just outside—Chicago News. “HEREDITARY” CRIME. in the Edwards Family. To the Editor of the Neéw York Time< Had a “the sterilization of criminals cure for crime,” advocated by Eugene Smith In your issue of \Novem- ber 2, and by Judge Foster \in the November Pearson’s Magazine bee known and practiced by our unenlight- ened forefathers in Connectient, it would have cut off absolutely at the start the very Edwards family by those gentlemen as an exampie of the persistence throngh heredity of the “good type” in contrast with the per- sist through heredity of the “had P seen in the Jukees famil) For well known to those con- versant with the early history of Con- necticut that Jonathan Edwards was the son of the Rev. Timothy Edwards, who was the son of Richard Edwards. an eminent citizen of Hartford and the first lawyer ever admitted to practice in the Connecticut courts, and of Elizabeth Tuttle. Now, Elizabeth Tut- tie had a brother, who was hanged for committed murder, and who escapel the gallows only through the refusal of the people of Connecticut to rec- ognize the courts and government of Sir Edmond Andros. History further records that shortly after the mar- riage of Richard Edwards and Eli as it is Edwards was subjected to ecclesiasti cal discipline therefor. Though he testified that he was not the father of the child, he was punished. Notwith standing this, he continued to live | father by her of the ancestors of all the brizht Fdwardses in this country. Her e 't became such, however, that in 1691, he was. after repeated refusals, granted a divorce by the co- lonial assembly at the very time when their son, the Rev. Timothy Edwards, the father of the Rev. Jonathan E wards, was being graduated from ¥ vard college with such distinguished | her, none of whose descendants ever amounted to much. Had the penologists and criminolo- gists of our day been in power then, Elizaheth Tuttle could not have es- cayed them, s to become, as she did. the ancestress of more genius and virtue than other woman in history of this country, The late Dr. Charles J. Hoadley, long the omplished state librarian of Connecticut, used to cite the case v a8 proof of the tendency through heredity to revert to the orig- ipal type. For it ia a remarkable fact that in every subsequent generation of the Edwards family there have been in special cases reversions to the erim- inal type—among many other in- stances, note that of Aaron Burr, the grandson of Jonathan Edwards. DANIEL DAVENPORT. Bridgeport, Conn., Nov. 2, 1909, To Giear Field for Storrow. A cbmmittee of 25 representative cit- izens of Boston, with Richard Olncy at their head, will endeavor to per- suade other candidates for mayor to give a clear ficld to Richard J. Stor- row. It will be wise for those who do not desire to see John F. Fitzgerald placed at the head of the city's reform departure to agree upon a candidate for mayor, and Mr. Storrow is the man. Heve i8 his platforn 1 don’t want to pose as a reformer, nor do T want to run as a “business men’s candidate. 1 am an ordinary citizen, have made many mistakes in the course of my lite. If T should be elected mayor I shall make some more. T only want it understood that I would try to treat everyone fairly, work hard and do by level best. Just a Small Lumber Order. A telephone message, occupying per- haps five minutes, conveyed anjorder for 12.000.000 fet of lumber, and/hard- ware sufficient to build 10,000 houses in Italy, to be shipped within 15 duy The recipients at the other end of the wire resiied that the bill Would be fill- ed. The United States government forwarded this large consignment with as little display as thouglh the order had been for the janitor to put on more heat, instead of for material to re- build 10,000 homes for the sugerers in the Messina earthquake. Fifty trains of 50 cars were néeded to convey the lumber, which would make a six inch walk from San Francisco to New Confused Seeds of Good and Evil Were | cited | irder, and a sister who likewise | beth Tuttle, ®he had a child, and Mr. | with her for many years, and was the | honors. Richard Edwards then mar- ried a daughter of the Hon. John | Talcott, and had several children by the | York and half way back again, or would reach across the Atlantic to the heart of the stricken district. This vast mass of material was assembled within the Brooklyn navy yard and was loaded on vessels, which were at MORE PINKHAM 1 | Added to the Lo to This Famous Remedy. Camden, N.J.— “It is with pleasure that I add my testimonial to your already long list —hoping that it may induce others to a: themselves of Vv [ | E.Pink- | egetable cine, L; ham’s Com i | fere: | mg | side, was tired and nervous, and so weakIcould hardl; stand. L; Pinkham’s ! g =i stored me to health and made me feel like a new perso; i and it shall always have my praise.” | —Mrs. W, P. VALENTINE, 902 Lincoln | Avenue, Camden, N. J. | Gardiner, Me. — “I was a great suf- | ferer from a female disease. The doc- tor said I would have to go to the hospital for an operation, but Lydia E, { Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound com- pletely cured me in three months.” — Mgs. 8. A. WiLL1aMs, R. F. D. No. 14, Box 39, Gardiner Me. Because your case is a difficult one, doctors having done you no good, {do not continue to suffer without fiving Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Jompound a trial. It surely has cured many cases of female ills, such as in- flammation, ulceration, di?lnemen ts, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodie fams, backache, that bearing-down eeling, indigestion, dizziness, and ner- vous prostration. It costs but a trifle to try it, and the result is worth mil- lions to many suffering women. CURES List due | this valuable medi- und. I suf- from terrible headaches, pain in | back and right veileux- { ble Compound re. 5 Makes the ffin‘evo*t_ sea within 12 days after the order had been given.—Natlonal Magazine. / Governor Weeks. We are pleased to learn that Gov- ernor Weeks made, as was inevitable, a favorable impression upon our aj preciative fellow citizens of the south, during his trip down the Mlu(nlwl with the president and afterwards. No intelligent gentleman can meet the governor and not be favorably im- pressed by him. The New Orleans Times-Democrat prints the following notice, which shows that it has seen and judged the governor very accur- ately: “The most dignified governor, and one of the most dignified men of the entire party, is Gov. . B. Weeks of Connecticut.” Governor Weeks some- what reminds one of an Englishman. He's a New Englander, however. One of his hobbies is improving the condi- tion of the state charities. Governor ‘Weeks was ‘josbed’ along the line about the nufmeg groves of Connecti- cut, and enjoved the joke as much | as any of the others. While there are no nutmeg groves in his state, and \t is not the largest state in the union, Governor Weeks is for a deep water- way, improvements of any kind. in | fact, and another trip down the Mis- | sissippi whenever the promoters . of the project get around to it again. Governor Weeks is one of the popular| members of the party.” The Origin of It. "Senator.” said the interviewer, “it is | rumored that you intend to retire from politice.” ‘Well, well,” veplied the senator, | “it's queer how rumors start. I sup- | pose this one grew out of the fact that I attended church wkh my wife last Sunday."—Catholic = Standard and ‘Time: Would-Be Governors. The preliminary republican state convention js in dally session. Thus far xtreme. etween. carriage, Style--Reasonable $ | ‘grained and lightest * breads and cake. / All styles of “Queen Quality” Shoes. motor and house. The Geo. W. Kies Co. Entlre production as given d PRICES Note—Those arriving after curtain first act. ice’'s on Wednesday, Nov. 10, at the following gentlemen have been performance. nominated for governor: Everett Lake of Hartford, Stiles Judson of Stratford, Donald T. Warner of Salisb and Representative Chandler of Rocky Hill. Senator Barnum seems to have rotired from the race.~New Haven Journal- Courler. 2.30, There's a Reason. Dr. Jenks of Cornell says that sick- ness costs the people of the United States a_billlon dollars a year. No wonder the doctors are riding in auto-~ mobiles.—Schenectady Union. THE COLLBGE BOY AND GIRL Bacon—Where is your son now? Egbert—Oh, he is Illnndlnf a college preparatory &chool “Which college yell is he studying?"—Yonkers States- man. —_— How to Save Time Washing Dishes. Very few housewives realize the | amount of time they spend in the year just dishwashing, although they do ap- preciate its tiresome routine. However, if handled in a systematic way this task would not take l::;h:lbtl o8 long be’ one-half as e. Dlenty of towels and hot water. Scrape The_ dishes clean possible and those most soiled should in hot or cold Water before putting in the dish pan. ‘White of oes gelatine and similar sub- stances, shouid be removed from dishes with cold water. y foods require hot water. Cover the dishes with hot water, in which a tablespoonful of Gold Dust' washing powder has been dis- This is more convenient and effecti %p. ‘Wash, rinse in clean, Warm watel 1SSION 10 Awbl Reserved seats 200 | Mictures ! GOAL Repeiliion Means Reputation In (he Coal Business Good Coal and good service contin uously for years has given us a rep utation that can be grown In no other way. Try this Coal of ours nest time, 1t's great for the grate, E. CHAPPELL CO. Central Wharf and 150 Main Street Telephones. LUMBER AND COAL! GEORGE 6. GRANT, Undertaker and Embaimer 32 Providence St., Taltville. Prompt attention to a4y or night calla, Telephon. 9-2L asrMMWFawl Lumber nov10d 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 bullding purposes war dis- | covered in 14 Still -doing business at the Old Stand. Central Wharf. Telephone 884. COAL Free Burning Kinds and Lehigh ALWAYS IN STOCK. A. D. LATHROP, Office—cor. Market and Shetucket St Telephone 168-13. oct2?d CALAMITE COAL Wall Seasoned Wood C. H. HASKELL 489 = 'Phonss —— 402 Conservative. For Quality-- rice. If you want a good Range at a will bake well and have just such a Range. About Furniture All as wil Schwartz Open Evenings. Ranges and Stoves e 1-3 the fuel you have been in the habit of using with that old one — then you should come and see Prices from $18.00 up. “The Big Store with the Little Prices” 9-11 Water Street. Tel. 502 || 57 Frankiin st 58 Thames St may6d —— LUMBER The best to be had and at the right prices, too. Remember we always carry & big line of Shingles. Call us ap and let us tell you about our stock. F. & A J. DAWLEY mayidd Evening School NOW OPEN TUITION and SUPPLIES FREE Also in Taftville Schoolhouse oct26d reasonable price — a Range that us. We Set up free grat we have to say is that we carry fine a stock of Furniture as you | find in this city. A BARGAIN IN LADIES’ Watches Brothers, novdd See the which the ashes fall; cleanly. Either Hod the ash Hod being em motion does both. Made by Walker & M. HOURIGAN, Agent, Norwic Two Hods? One for Ashes—One for Coal (furnished free), This feature of our new range is paterited—no ofher has it. The old clumsy ash pan .is replaced by a Hod into making their removal easy and can be used for coal or ashe ptied can be returned full of coal. Every Cook heartily endorses this new idea. Another feature (patented) is the wonderful \Single Damper. It prevents ‘mistakes in firs and oven as one No other range has it. Booklet Free. Pratt Mig. Co,, 31-a5 Union St., Boston $12.75 buys a O size 15 Jewel, nickle movement, in a 20 year gold filied hunting case. Quality guarantesd. JOHN & GEO. H. BLISS 1647 Adam’s Tavern 1861 Offer to the public the finest standard brands of Beer of Europe and America, Bohemiaa, Plisner, Culmbach Bavaria Beer, Bass' Pale and Burton, Mueirs Scotch Ale, Guinne: Dublin _Stout. C. & C. Imported Ginger Ale, Bunker Hill P. B, Ale, Frank Jones’ Nourish- ing Ale, Sterling Bitter Ale, Anheussr- Budwelser, Schiitz ang Pabst. A. A. ADAM. Norwich Town. ‘Telephone 447-1 Jyaa DT T ietin for business By Charleg Klen, author of “The Lion and the Seats on sale at the Box Office, Wa ureghn Hoi $ Shows Daily WEEK OF coseoy —DAN BARRETT & €0.—sxercn ravrowrue —MWICKE FEELEY—acrosar —RICH & RICH—Y VOCALIST —fl.slfi l.s.—-'lluxm LILLIAN MORRELLE .In Illustrated and High Class Sommn | tim. uring New York engagement. :$150, $1.00, 75c, 80c, 38c, e rises will not be seated until after e and Pitcher & Serv- ars to all points after 9 o'clock. 7 and 8.45 NOV. SE CHUMMY ™S, changed Monday, Wodnestay and Friday FEATURE PICTURE, PITTSBURG-CETROIT BALL GAME and many others. MISS FLORENCE WOLCOTT, IN OPERATIC PROGRAMME. Matinees — Ladies and Children 5o octl4d i “MUSIC. NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teacher of Plano, Central Bullding. CAROLINE H. THOMPSON Teacher of Music 46 Waghington Street. L. H. BALOOM, of Plano. mes St. Lessons given at my residence or at the home of the pupll. Ssme method a8 {ised at Schawenka Conservatory, Ber- oct Room 48, F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect St, Tel. 511. Norwich, Ct. A. W. JARVIS is the Leading Tuner in Eastern Connecticut. 'Phone 518-6. 15 Clairmount Ave. sept22d JAMES F. DREW Piano Tuning and Repairia Best V'ork Only, ‘Phune Auz-3. 18 Perking Ava sept STABLE and STREET BLANKETS We have a large assortment to choose from at lowest prices. The Shetucket Harmess Co 283 Main Street. WM. C. BODE octaq Telephone 885-4. JOSEPH BRADFORD, Book Binder. Blank Books Nlade and Ruled to Order, 108 BROADWAY. Telephone 53 octind Crystalized Rock and Rye, bottls 650 3 Star Hennessy Brandy, bottle $1.78 3 Star Martell Brandy, bottle $1.75 Schlitz Milwaukee Beer, dozen $1.00 JACOB STEIN, 93 West Main St Telephone 26-3. WM. F. BAILEY (Successor to A. T. Gerdner) Hack, Livery Boarding Stable 1214 Bath Street. HORSE CLIPPING A SPECIALTY. Telephone 883, SRR ron i aprise « [ ness befora the pu u;fi:&t o e dlum betier th .