Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 12, 1909, Page 11

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the Reformed chi _to_ whi ot , all about . it.- Drmfl B oS S To the Working Man a bank account means enjoyment when he is. well, care and attention en he is sick, and the feeling of security and comfort all the time. This vank welcomeg all accounts—small as well as lgrge. Open SAlurduy evenings—seven-thirty to nine. THE THAMES LOAN and TRUST COMI'ANY 28 to 34 Shefueket St., last. No. What and Where 1o Buy In Norwich $4.00—BOSTONIANS—§5.00 Stock No, Blucher, full doul Ic m lfluourl will ‘continue, however, order Scotch whiskey and there *will e trouble for all colored walters why neglect to get in a hurry~Chici is ly tar POSel the bull‘x‘fl’\( now ts the Sigourney even- ing school on $8yhum street, says The | Hartford Pcut The teuher; bzvg{:& yet been selected, but other «y ing put in opei An there will be much d.ano thfi wlnur towards the definite {annd!:l" of the new idea in sehools as ene the im- portant facters of the already exeel- lent system in operation. A stockade wlll be bullt in the rear | of the Sigourney school. Within the confines of this will be erected tents and chairs so . that those - children whose illness makes it inadvisable to keep them in the public scheols and who need only bracing, out-of-door air to make them well, can get the best of treatment by téachers in regular classes and all” will be held out of doers. If the weather gets stormy or toq cold, children, blankets and all will be packed up and taken into the house, which is not occupied days in the winter, This means the practical continuance of the Sigourney summer schoal thraugh the winter, the ?u'bllc schools of the care of these cuNad ni Norwich, Conn. THAMESVILLE STORE 2352 is l ‘Wine Poplar | ‘White Rase , on the C. G.| paye got a liné of £ sia Calf, But- ton, Johnnie Jones qu 22,401" is a | Goods. The. Best Progress Flour. If partfally ill and gives the pupil an ex- Tan Poplar Bmc% th an extension cellent chance to be cured. top, made from l)ow calf. Just the | you want a good article, there .is no Food will be suppKed them at meon Ve guar- and before they leave at night. The right shade for a tan shoe, antee full value for your money. oct30d W. COOPER —— UPHOLSTERER FIRST-CLASS MATTRESS MAKER. | Special promptly attended to. Furpiture repaired; and laid; and made over. 259 West Main Street, Norwich, Conn. | | better, although we have cheaper grades if you choose to buy them, Joseph F. Smith, whole system is one of carefully plan- ned ang effective usefulness to the city and its welfare. The board has the co-operation in its project of John B. Lunger and Dr. Henry ¥. Stoll, who have a thorough grasp on the details of out-deor treatment for sick people. P. OUMMINGS, 53 Central Avenue. low - price. Mail orders | FL.ORIST Wetss Suibts Adecilite: Cazpets fitted Notwiuz'.afm‘ilinz v‘rmiu Kefxcecfdlnlgly a 2 small rainfal in allingfor ast Mattresses made to order| 209 Main Streel, Norwieh. | ITC0i, ™ilcre is ' considerable more water 'in Paugh pond, the barough Ivla municipil water supply, at the present Fancy New Rye for Seed A. R. MANNING’S, Telephone, time than a year ago, the depth in the pond being 20 inches morve today than it was November 1908. RYE Polatoes 75¢ bush. O. FERRY, Tel. 703. » 336 Franklin St, Free delivery to all parts of the city. Lodge’s Heart Is Chilled. The great heart of Massachusetts seems to have no uncontreliable yearning to beat against the tropie bosom of the Hon. Henry Cahot Lodge, —New York Sun., | | —at— | Yantic, Conn. | novéd A Mere Moliycoddle. meets the approval® of the critical Rogers’ “A frigid, caleulated lie," is hot stuff from Mr. Balfour, unanticipated in British politics.—Brooklyn Eagle. OR WORK DR, JONES, Dentisl, 35 SHETUCKET ST. Room 10 ‘Phone 32-3 maylid people. Domestic Laundry. Rear 37 Franklin Street. | Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA IR A P YD 2 P e 700 7 A 70 5 0 0 BAY STATE FURNACES MEET ALL DEMANDS FOR HEALTHFUL HOME HEATING, FOR HONESTY IN CONSTRUCTION, EFFICIENCY AND FUEL ECON- OMY THEY HAVE NOT BEEN SURPASSED IN 70 YEARS, J. P. BARSTOW & CO., 23-25 Water Street, Norwich. ANDREW MEECH, Danielson. A 72000 1 S A A AR 70 7. Vo 7 4rd Rlings lfi Gemli" e u i : t relieyes |” ;qchom;uwgy uw. th locomative en- gineers of ‘the New York, New Haven fand Hartford Ell_}road eompany have ®iven the thirty days’ notice required previous to a rman for a rev)plgn % -ehndlue m cn-n,l is }huught mufiu is a pu.n nl the g::firfl m:\'r:metutthot th‘e rx:.lrond'ago eratives e 0! e 5sigsi) ask for shorter lwurl.u ncrea:“d and full day’s pay for a fractional flm This movement, it is stated in railread eirzles here, ects all the railroad trainmen—conductors, _engineers and fim’w‘ch the MI: ssippi a north of the Chesapeake and Ohio ra.fl road line. This would h?vollv’- ch: England also. of Gmfim fot fiho@u Hours ani M ; PQfllmn of New Haven Road in the ln"m-n Mova Matter, B:vx:. poflu.n g‘t e Nex.gork, New d Har <0l in the nntter is ufl WD“;{ strongly op to an ine on the (an of the present good pay of operatives, aud the fact that the com- pavy hag heen compelled to vesore to extensive financing for improvements "which were largely held up during the business depression, which was se seri- ous that they were untable for two years to earn full dividends. The present movement,~therefore, ~of the opera‘ives i3 considered most inop- portune, and from present appearances, so far as the New Haven company is cancerned, any general movement for rndlulnq wages wouald be sharply resist- ed. FIRST TRIP TO U. S. Australian “Merchant Came Over to Euy Danbury Horse, R. C. Hannah, a leading merchant ef Melbaurne, Austha, came ta Dan- bury Tuesday from New York eity for the {:urxmu of looking over the noted trotting stallion, W. W. Hstell, own- ed by Jack Kenney, who has a farm near the Dnnbuw Fair grounds. Mr, Hannah is making hig first visit to the Ulinted States, and came for the ex- press purpose of looking oyer the Dan- | bury horse, Mr. Hannaa lef: Scotland after a six months’ visit and teok a boat for Van- couyer. Arpiving there he took a'train for New York and secured apartments at the Prince (eorge hotel. In speak- ing of New. York, Mr. Hannah gaid *This is my first visit to the United States, but I like New York so well I fhould like to locate there indefinite- .l Being a lover of fine trotting horses Mr. Hannah is desirous of owning the best obstainable in trotting stock. If the stallion owned by ' X Kenney meets all qualifications, Mr. Hannah will add the animal to his stable in Melbourne. Mr. Hannah was accompanied on his trip to Danbury by Joe Burke, a fam- {ous driver and frainer of fagt horses. ! Mr. Burke is the driver and trainer for Willlam Bradley, owner of the Ard- mere Stock Farm at Raritan, N. J., and has trained and driven the fameus | StaTiion Ringen, heside Guy Axworthy, Sweet Marle, Major Delmar and George G. The Apdmere farm consists of £,§00 scres and has upon it 102 of the finest brood mares in the country. Bingen {5 the sire of Uhlan, 2.02 1-4, the fastest trotting gelding In the warld. Uhlan was later sold to €. K. G. Billirgs of New York and Cleve- land, the owner of Lou Dillon. Mr. Burke will assist Mr. Hannah in deeiding upon the merits of the Dan- bury stallion. Both gentlemen visited vhe Kenney farm Tuesday, but the ab- { sepce of Mr. Kenney made it impossi- ble to complete the deal by which the Australian merchant seeks to become the owner of the Danbury horse. Possum _Caught at Roxbury. Fitch A. Hoyt has a live possum which he eaught in Roxbury. It aroused considerable interest Tues- day. . Mr. Hoyt had it in a 8age in his automobile and a crowd gathered to see it, as possums are seldom seen as far north.as Connecticut. Accord- ing . to g statement by Dr. Long of Stamferd, these animals are gradual- ly working their way north. Mr. Hoyt has a fine specinien of a mink in his collection, also. 1 ‘What Ails Reosevelt. Mr. - Boosevelt -escaped the sleeping sickness, but there are signs of hiome- sickness. -—Wuhingtan Star. WINS E. MERIT PROPERLY : T BAGKED is not a matter of chance T l that the Feigenspan Breweries are the largest producers of Ale .in the United States. Our process ¥ of brewing and aging is not ', a secret one, but our patrons ¥ and the great consuming public appreciate that the name FEIGENSPAN on a bottle of Ale, like an award medal, is a stamp of quality. @, The genuine has our name on the neck label. This insures its being our brewery bottlinc. conditions in our new and modern bot- tling department. @, Leading clubs, cafes and hotels serve our Brewery Bottled Ale. On draught where draught goods are sold. Wholesale Dealer and Distributor JAMES B. SHANNON Commerce and Market Sis,, Norwich’ 'Phone 223, L TITILITIV OLD ALMANACS. Louis Theurer of Danbury Has Some ‘of Eighteenth GCentury, —_— Louis Theurer, registry clerk at the Danbury postoffice, has a valuable col- lection of old aiamanacs, which he is showing to hi- friends and which are being examined with a great deal of in- terest. Among the collection is one which was printed for the year 1799, and another for the year 1809, just one hundred years ago. These curious litge pamphlets dem- onstrate that in afl the years which have passed there has been but little change in the style and character of that family necessity, the almana The aimanacs of one hundred years ago have the same tables shawing the signs of the zodiac, the times of the rising and setting of the sun and moen, the seasong of the stars and the fa- miliar predictions of the weather. There are also the customary jokes and other reading, varying with the general character of the almanac, agricultural, religious and of household matters. In the almanac published just hefore the close of the eighteenth century there were printed some comments on the question then much dicussed wha‘her the century ended with the end of the year 1799 or 1800. It will be remembered that the same discus- sicn arese in 1 regarding the end of the nineteenth ~entury. Thus does “history repeat itself.” ‘When these early almanacs were printed Danbury and Fairfield were the county seats of Fairfield county, Briidgeport not having then become a place of importance. The courts con- vened in each of these county seats once each year. GENTEEL BEGGARS Pest Denounced by Wallingford Citi- zens. Warning is given by the police, clergy and other citizens concerning genteel beggars who have been seen about Wallingford off and on during the past several months, says the Meriden Record. With what one cler- gyman calls “fantastical, nonsensical pleadings,” these mem go from house te house and withdut credentials of any kind manage to get away with a goodly sum. Oecasionally there is a worthy cause. but local charities and the sev churches take good care of hame con- ditions and contribute to out of town charitable causes, no reason why money should be given professional beggars, for the great ma- jority of these people calling in the name of all serts of supposed needy in- stitutions ara really nothifig else. A borough clergyman was accosted recently by a calored man and asked to give something toward the suppert of a southern school for the blacks. He could produce no eredentials when asked, with the exception of a list of names obtained in other communities | he had yisited. He was refused aid and a few days later was seen el where by the same clergyman and as ed concerning his luck in Wallingfer He said he had done fairly well, hav- ing cleared up $15 while here and he had spent just one day in the hor- ough. This is a fair sample of what money there is in this kind of beg- ging. > William Torrey Harris. There have been many distin, educators in this country, an few of them are, still living; but it may be doubted if any man has exer- cised a more powerful influence upon education than William Torrey Harr He first came into general notice as the creator of a fine system of public schools in St. Louis. His great work was done in the twenty years while he was United States commissioner of education. In this post, under hamper- ing conditions, he gathered a vast uished not a amount of* information of incaleulable value, and kept himself in constant | touch’ with dther educators, attending conferences and conventions, and put- ting himself and his learning at the gervice of every good work. Nor was his interest confined to his profession He was a student of philosophy of great learning and remarkable lucidity of style, the foremost Hegelian in Ameriea. His last task was his editor- ship of the new edition of Webster's Dictionary, reviewed in the Journal yesterday. Such men are forces in ths community who live in the lives of others long after they themselves have passed away.—Providence Journal. Cause for the th:hty Chicago men are dying off much faster than the women. No wonder. Look at the life the women lead them. —Washington Times. and Heating Department witho submit'an estimate of the prob: manlike manner. scene at once. and there appears | Warm houses... ~alip— DO THEY APPEAL T0 YOU? If so, you should get into commumication with our Plumbing heating system — free of charge — and all work done through this department will ke finished to your entirg satisfaction. Barstow & Co. are Licensed Plumbers and Steamfitters, and are fully capable of handling your business, large or small, in a speedy and work- Telephone or drop us a card and have our ’Phone 897 —— 23 and 25 Water Street W his hmlmund duty when congress opens. khz #F, :it fiw&.,' mur- i Il o T Dr. Nefr, the director of the depart- ment of health of Philadelphia, ?a et:?:fl a movement to u‘-t; noi n children . o Quaker at’;.’ X Theodore Roosevelt's book, “The Strenuous Life,” has just been issued in the Portuguese guage, for cir- culation in South America, under the title, “A Vida Intensa.” Pt <l Professor Jevons, of Cardiff univer- sity college, Wales, addressed a meet- ing of the members of the Cardiff ex- change on the theory of a connection between the spots and trade cycles. The work of writing the life of the late President Daniel C. Gilman of Johns Hopkins university, has been committed to Dr. Fablan Franklin, newspaper writer and formeg profes- sor. Prof. Brander Mathews has sald someghing that is worth passing along to the rising generation: “The man who is in love with his job gets more contentment out of life than any oth- er.” John Muir, President Taft's guide through the Yosemite park, as he was for President Roosevelt, is an autheri- ty on the great western parks, which he has described in his book, National Parks." ur Since the Dutch philesopher Leeu- wenhoek discovered that the pupa of the flea was sometimes preyed on by the larva of a mite, it has been well known that various small insects have their external parasites. The death is announced at Des Moines, lowa, of Edward Entwhistle, who was the fireman of George Ste- phenson on the Rocket when it made its first trip on the Stockton and Dar- lington railway, in October, 1820. Mrs. E. Delphine Luckey, widow of Levi P. Luckey, at ene time secretary to President Grant, dled at the res dence of her sqn-in-lawy, Sydney R. Ja cobs, In Washington. She had been confined to her bed for several months, William Hubbeil Fisher, who recent- ly died in Cincinnati, was a successful lawyer and public-spirited eitizen, but he was best known as pregident of the Audubon saciety of Ohio and the Cineinnati Sm‘lfly of Natural history, 0. A. Black of Da]lm\ now fourscore years of age. was postmaster of To- wan a half century ago and singular- ly has not visited the town since 1864. He promis to be one of the “old homeé comers” next June at Towanda, the “City of Promise, Robert Burns’' “Poems Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect,” a rare gctavo print- ed by John Wilson, at Kilmarnogck, in 1786, was purchased at the auction sale of the private library of the late James Brown, a publisher, by George Clark tland. of Kilmarnoc! | Judge Kunkel of Dauphin county, | Pa., instead of lending his judicial aid toward severing the marriage tie of a couple that came before him, advised the husband thws: “Just court her again; court her as hard as you did | before you married her.” Moses Grant Danjel, educator and author, died at his home in Roxbury aged 78 years. He was graduated from Harvard and wag principal of Chauncy Hall school for 12 years. He was the author of numerous works of Latin us:a in the public schools. Brogklyn will have ta get along without Rey. Dr. Len G. Broughton, though the Baptigt temple in that bor- ough offered him more than twice the salary he receives as pastor of the Baptist tabernacle in Atlanta. He will continue his work in #e Georgia city. Samuel Endicott Peabody, long lden- tifled with banking interests In this country and Eurepe, but who had been retired from active business life for several years, died at his summer home, “Kernwood.” in Salem, where he had been since the | summer. i o8 L | Ferdinand Schleifer of Nashville {111, lays claim to be the oldest active { hunter in the state. He is 80 years | old. He still has a license, of which he made use during the season, hunt- . | Ing quail and other Il game. He strongly belies his y { and hearty, | et | rs, being hale years old, Louis Nicolovian, 97 and for 52 years cdshier, and office man- ager for w York firm, has b pensioned. In more than half a een- tury he has heen away from the office only 14 days and he told his associates {that he disliked to see Sunday come | because it interrupted his work Robert M. Howard, who, with D, L. Spllenberger and W. 8. Guiterman, founded the Shamokin Despatch about | 1887, died suddemly in Milwaukee, Wis., aged 68 years. Howard was a former Washington corfgspondent for the Milwaukee Sentinel, to which jour- nal he rt‘turned in the early "90s. Cyrus Washburn, the oldést engi- neer on the La Crosse division of the Milwaukee road, is dead at his home, Portage, Wis.. aged 82 years, He had been a locomotive epgineer on the Mil- waukee road since its organization, had served in that capacity for 58 years, x different roads located in of the country. ut delay. They will cheerfully able cost of installing a complete man on the land. isville Almost Ul- Hearst s: {: that Vhaad be s goud ma ".':a & up ag man ograt. Well, he grew up.— Inquirer. Dr. Bull & ough Syrup for common ¢ol nnd rlp ln [ rorlu— when !ho Lou h had ‘ mmt d“l of Dr. n-lr- c-un syr-n u for it -.l cur Housework is hard work without Gold Dust Gold Dust cuts housework inkalf, It does all the hard part of the work without your assistance, Gold Dust cleans every- thing cleanable in the home— clothes, dishes, pots,« pans, floors, doors, woodwork, refrig- erators, path rooms, sinks, pipes, ete. It will do better work—it will do more kinds, of work than séap, or any other cleaner. If you are to run your home without Geld Dust, you are not doing your ’ work in the shortest, easiest and mos t €Cco- THE BEST BAKERS Save coal bills because scientifically built by honest methods and honest . materials. N, S. Gilbert & Soms, | NORWICH, CONN, l N Womng over a red hot stove, with your_kitchen full of steam fiom a boiler full of dirty clothes, is certainly not an enviable position, The Wet Wash Wi AR this, We do your o Vi ton sty chuim Norwich Steam Laundry 183 Franklin Street. ‘Phope §98. | mevidMWE

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