Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 13, 1909, Page 4

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2. 3 Telenhone Calls: B ot Willimantie . Offiee, Room Telephone, 210. e e Norwich, 8aturday, Nov. 13, 1809. e ——— i The Circulation of The Bulletin. i The Bulletin has the largest cir- culation of any paper in Easterd Connecticut, and from three to four § Umes larger than that of any in : Norwich. It is delivered to over 3,000 of the 4,053 houses in Nor' 3 wich, and read b ninety-three per $cent. of the people. In Windham 21t is delivere@ to over 900 houses, or burned ub} It ta the truh ‘which otes mp‘%?;\t. and ‘more practicel and the mm:fl:ng@. A FLAG ON EVERY 8CHOOLHOUSE Through the instrumentality of the Grand Army of the Republic ws may now 'boast that we have a flag on every schoolhouse, but we have not yet attained the knowledge of patriot- ic forms which will keep the flag in its true relation to the pupils and to their wel-being. i Right here In this part of the coun- v recently some Italians desired to have their children taught how to sa. lute the flag, and the. teacher con- fessed she did not' know how to &alute the American flag, And the chajrman of the board of education did not know how, At last a citizen was found who knew the proper method of saluting the flag in schools is to have the children repeat this sentence as they stand Tacing the flag: “I pledge allegiance to my flag and to the republic for which 1t stands—one nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice to all” It is more than probable that such ignorance of the flag as this may be found in many other schools. It is not Iikely that this s an isolated case. The flag is frequently seen floating union down as aAn emblem of the ignorance i 3 £ 15 considered the lossl dally. § one rural free delivery routesa. The Bulletin is sold In every town and on all of the R. F. D. routes in Eastern Connecticut. CIRCULATION ? ;No\/omber B.iieniaens i THOUGHT FOR TODAY. Sad will be the day for any man when he becomes absolute- Iy contsnted with the life he is living, with the thought he is thinking, and the desds he is deing; when there is not for- ever beating at the door of soul some great re to do t somothing larger which he knows he was meant to do, because he is a child of God.—Phillips Brooks. TO CROWN THE WORK. ‘The Bulletin this morning prints two in Putnam and Danielsen to over 1,100, and in al! of these places t Eastern Connecticut has forty- nine towns, one hundred and sixty- five post office districts and forty- 1906, average..............- §,559 3 PSR—— AT & B snces of the one who raised It ia a shameful, but an indisputable fact, tdat while other nations safe- | suard the sacredness of their banners, the American people hold this obli Gion lightly. The national emblem has been debased as an advertising medi- um; it is burlesqued upon the stage | and openly insulted by bands of so- ciaiists and other enemjes of the re- | public. But no one in authority ap- « pears to conceive it any part of his £| public duty to insiet that the American flag, be held in proper respect. 3| Since fras schools and personal Hb- 1601, average ......ceiaceens "“22 erty find their protection in the flag, +++«5920%| it Is proper that the children of this land should realize what this beanti- ful banner means to them personally. | 1t is loyalty to the flag which secures | to them the freedom and large oppor- tunities which American citizens en- | joy today, and it is only by loyalty to i it that these blessings can be perpet- | uated. THE CONSUMER MUST PAY. There is a general complaint -that trade in many branches is dull, and it- is not strange when one thinks of the way butter and eges and other things are rising In price. The necessities of life are 8o out of proportion to the wage that the working classes are confined closer than ever to fuel and provender. The real necessities are about all that they can buy. TTheee prices rise because of the high price of freight and the high price of grain, etc, and now we get mnotice that the western farmers are asking about three cents a pound more for turkeys than they did last year at this time. The excuse for this advance is, that grasshoppers have not been so plenty this year for them to feed up- on! Sothe consumer is now taxed for the scarcity of grasshoppers. What in Heaven's name is to be expected next? Is greed to ruthlessly smatch the turkey from the Thanksgiving feast of the American citizen? Are you an easy mark? likely that there is an easy mari all the world who will say “T am”; but the eaéy marks are more numerous than we think. We should be sur- prised could we see the horde ef spec- ulators and knaves who live by their wits because of the mental weakness and spinelessness of a large part of the community. ~Very few can say "“No" with emphdsis to a tempter— It is no mark mercial buccaneer. many people make a living by ad- vising other people how to invest their money. An easy mark is always be- ing bled by the sharpers and never being well spoken of. This is why it does not pay to be an easy mark. The sacredness of a prom! is not felt in everyday life as it ehould be. Making promises and not keeping them; and making promissory notes end not paying them are on a pai though many people do not think & It used to be said, “A false promise thou must_shame, 'tis a lie and theft in on He who is careless of his promises ,is_certainly not careful of the truth. Some people do not realize that a promise should be made with cantion and kept with care; ‘but are inattentive to the duty or obligation which the promise imposes. A man not much of a citizen or half a Chri tian who makes promises for the pur- pose of breaking them. A good prom- iser is a good customer and a good Christian. The birds have ceased sporting ex- cept in the warmer hours of tbe day and at other hours they are hid up in the warm spots which from necessity Blustrated pages containing opinions and estimates of the work done in Norwich during the past five weeks by Dr. Stough and his able associates, FOR THAT TIRED FEELING. Now that a toxic remedy bas been which will be of unusual interest our readers because of the recognized ualification of these endorsers to re- - /visw the work conscientiously and ac- curately. It has bedn a united, earnest, Chris- tlan, priiyerful effort to prompt hu- manity. to turn its eyes towards the Holy city wnd to dbjthe will of i 'who' dwefl have been moved to quietly resolve flo better—to live nearer to the dlvi principles and to do the will of God, Like every good work it operates for the benefit of all—united effort for good always no one will ever know. tends for the better, The ultimate unification of t! Christlan denominations hope of many Christian leaders. {ems and & broadening of Christi fellowship which will tell for harmony and atrength and the betterment all, and if this campaign for righteous- ness helps to bind sects closer to- gether and to make Christianity more practical, it must be credited with no- ‘ble achievement. In consequence of these meetings, concerned and all addressed may come into a fuller consciousness of the all fact, that “Every day is a fresh beginning, Every morn Is the world made new, You who are weary of sorrow and | sinning, Here is a beautifu] hope for you; lA hope for me and a hope for you! YAll the past things are past and ove: fh therein. Over a hundred ‘have been moved to make an open con- fession of a desire to live more up- right and nobler lives and how many is now the The allaying of prejudices and antagon- found to make an end of that tired feeling, there is hope for thousands more. We not only may be vaocinated out of diphtheria and typhoid fever, but into that fresh and animated con to ditlon which follows a good night's sleep at the end of a hard day's work. We now have an antl-toxin that will brace a weak man up—that will give him more enduring muscles without taking spacial exercise for muscle building, if Weidchardt, the German sclentist, is right. We are told through the. mediumship of Harper's Weekly that repeated injections of medium doses of this toxic extract of fatigued muscle Aevelop an antitoxin in the blood of the injected animal, and it is soon adle to stand many times the fatal dose of the extract. This fatigue antitoxin has been sepa- rated from the blovd and administered to fatigued animals, with the result that they recover very much more quickly than usual. When given at the same time that the toxic extract of fatigued musele 8 injected, the lat- ter has no effect This antitoxin has also been put in the form of tablets and given to hu- man beings, with the result that ree- ords of the contraction of some of their muscles prove them to be very much more resistant to fatigue than when the antitoxin was not given. In some cases they were able to do nearly a hundred per cent. more work be- fore exhaygfion, and this without any apparent after-effect. Comparison of these results with those from other agents mentioned prove this substance to be by far the most efficient antidote for fatigue, While this is good news to all the world, it is not likely to-be to the im to. ne he an of | ice wi The tesks are done and the tears | fi';\";"";m’i"fo l_T]:“‘mP!';:C..m“‘:” 4 are shed; - . B e, i move on” but arrest them and apply e YeSerday | the remedy frequently enough to give Yesterday's wounds which smarted and bled Aze healed with the healing which night has shed.” THE NOBLER SPIRIT, h aving said “We have not the time to be g down some other .ma; beliet of another. Yews. Will not join in this one.” This is & mwanly and Christian atti- tude. The Truth need not marshal an- lagonism and prejudices to promote known force and needs no other accompaniment is no reason / why Christians should war upon one It, for it is the greate #xcept Love. There Mnother because of their difference opinion upon religious doctrinal points, Bueh a conflict cannot be carried on =, | without injury to the premoters of and to the causs they represent. Re: may . o its record for buil v ich it has sought to tear down. is nothing in a cult it w! to nothing—if it is true, that is true will remain. The world ‘that truth does not disappear its davotees are put to tho sword ' marry a French nobleman because she The Ministerial Alliance of Kansas Pity ventured upon a united assault n Christian Sclence and invited among Mthers the Rev. L. G. Morony to join em In conflict, and he is quoted as religion. it’s not a Christian act to attack the I would mot join f Jn this movement were it against the If there is nothing in the be- Jiet of the Christian Scientist it will fome to nothing, and If it is trus only In part, that part which is true wiil yemain. I de not believe fa encourag. Ing an attack on any denomination and The Mr. Morony realizes that violenca subdue but that leve only wins Irrational opposition ha: ing up that ‘divinie law {8 what it is declared to be, ' eannot live in the lght of Intel- ¢e. As this preacher points out | them the animation and desire to go instead of stand still—to work instead of to ldle. The world hAs witnessed great achievements, but there are greatér ones right in our férefront. EDITORIAL NOTES. Think of Champlon Johnson looking upon James Jeffries and rémarking to a comrade that he looked stalé to him. We learn patiénce from annoyances which we cannot evade, but we do not like to take our lessons - President Taft is the great American traveler and no one is likely to dis- pute his title to the championship. With the 12th instant came the open geason for shooting stars, and they are everybody's game for a few days. Hartford doubtless takes pride in the plainness of its armory, for most ar- mories of pretence are given the aspect of a citadel. The worm in the chestnut must re- gard the human race as a-Jot of can- nibals. He and the cheece skipper are menaced by perils. of NI, o R T ¢ Mrs. Pankhurst would think that the American women weré serious enough it, | it she could get in on the curtain-lec- ture side of them. A New York man has sent President Taft a big mince ple for Thanksgiving, but it will have to take second place to the Rhode Island turkey. o, ey President Taft likes the kind of a welcome he raceives in old Cennecti- cut, and that 14 the reason he so fre- quently visits this commonwealth. * b4 i The American girl who declined to they are bound to find. It is & mighty dull bird that cannot find a comforta- ble place to stay. Of a recent after- noon when the sun was low, the shad- ows long and a bleak wind was blow- g, 1 was working near the deutzia bush putting #n a few spring flower- ing bulbs, and had been engaged there some minutes when the flutter of a bird darting over my head awakened me to the fact that one had selected the bush for a place of rest and pro- tection for the night. The bird was apparently sound asleep when I Dbe- gan work there and was awakened by my driving a dibble into the ground, At first 1 thought it was a bird of no sense to select o low and cat- haunted a bush, but upon_examination I had no doubt of the gdod sense of the bird, for the bush was cat-proof and where the leaves had gathered among its close stems must have been very warm. 1 placed a lot of the seed pods of the hlr{y phlox in a box cover to ripen and I was surprised one day to find that many pods were open, but that few seeds were in the cover, and later I founa that these seed pods are de- signed to distribute their own seed, as do the sorrel and the gorse; and as I sat writing one day the seed came rat- tling out of the box with truly sur- prising force. Some seed pods pop when they throw their seeds, but these are soundless, although the seed is sometimes thtown a foot or two. This Jack-in-the-box ~ arrangement for throwing seed is quité common and in a high wind the seeds are tossed many feet. It was doubtless the per- formance of some geéd pod which gave birth to the idea of Pandora’s box. The wonders of seed life are much more amagzing than that marvelous literary creation. The married man who goes out with the boys should beware of the danger signale. He should have this incon trovertible truth impressed upon his mind—that “drink first dims, then darkens, then deadens, then damns.” Ha who heeds not slides to degradation as if he were upon a toboggan slide. He soon becomes a vietim of the “didn’t know it was loaded” order. Tt takes a fool to go-straight to perdition in this way. They do not care for weeping mothers, ~sigters, wives or children—they do not care for probity or honor or decency, they do‘not care for anything of true value to them. They have been dimmed and darkened and deadencd—they cannot feel and think and resist as they could once— they know they are lost, for the re- maining spark of manhood is flickering and it will soon be gone. “That'll last longer than you'll i said a man to a neighbor who was making a permanent improvement just as if everyone should be not to do more than will serve t well in life—that all things useful of one's creation should end when he end# It Is & mighty good thing such fellows are always so few that theéy ara hardly, worth counting. It takes all kinds to make a world, and this is one of the kinds kept on exhibjtion to just show how selfish a_mortal may bécome if he only tries. No one takes to them when once thay are found out, for the reason that they are blind to what forerunners have done for them, and also as to the good they might do themselves. Niggardly thoughts dwarf a mind just as hot suds dwarf a wool- en shirt. Those who are afraid they may do something for those who come after them havent soul enough to measure or to weigh. A chickades makes a very nice com- panion on these cold days for fleld workers, and he appears to be ecuri- ous to know what thev are doing and to approach nearer than most other wild birds. A little fellow came within four feét of me and showed me his black and white and drab and buff plumage, which is as handsome as a leopard's skin, thé othér day, and his chick-a-dee-dee had good cheer as well could not promounce his name simply lost a permanent embarrassment. Admiral Chester says Cook thought that ie was going north when he was going south, and, if, this is so, it does not make of him a deliberate faker. in China has a commission this country looking at the shipyards and gunfactories with a view of investing twenty millions in fighting machines. whether Cook or Peary discovered the pole. Boston is preparing to spend mil- lions on her water front, making new strdets and wharves.and warehous to accommodate her Increasing for- éign trade. Marie Corelll thinks that the same heart and emotions move the Ameri- can woman that moved Mother Eve, but she is sure there is never a dull oné among them. State Highway Commissionér Mac- Donald has the right to settle with contracto says the state’s attorney general, without conferring with se- lectmen of towns. ‘When Portland adorns her new city hall with statues of ¥essenden and Neal Dow, there will be no disposi- tion to put them high, for they were too honest to be Quay-ed. The Bogton Post prints- a Roman terra cotta bust made in the first cen- tury before Christ which has a strik- ing res@mblance to President Mellen the Consolidated road, in | Hostess at her fifst the brand new matron the girls who clustered about the and her tones were weighty and por- s, ahe aald “the most agonized “Girls,” she said, mornipg of my life was my bridal f 4 's. It's really quite a long story. You see, just ai soon as my wedding day was decided upon and publicly announced all my friends seemed to feel that it was uj to them to help celebrate. Forthwit began a succession of showers, card dinners and theaters, which parti was harder physical work and a big- L ger mental strain than anything I'd éver known. .| had “T would reach home about 2 o'clock In the morning from some northern suburb to meet myself starting out for a luncheon down near th diana line. During the salad course of thé Innch- eon I would have to excuse myself to my outraged hostess and make tracks for Evanston, there to grace with my presence a library shower given in my honor. At 8 o'clock I was due at Oak Park, where a distant.cousin was to give a dinner for me, and following that ordeal was a theater party. A midnight supper downtown came next and the hour and a half that were left to me out of the twenty-four were passed with the hairdresser, who re- paired the ravages of the day's hilari- I can count on oné hand all the hours of real sleep I squeezed in dur- ing the three weeks preceding my marriage—and George’s. That's no ex- aggeration, Margery,” she declared as & peony-checked debutante gasped in- ¢redulously. ““The circles that developed under my eyes rivaled those of a melodrama queen,” proceeded the brand new ma- tron. ' “The bones began to show in my hands and my fingers got so thin that twice my engagement ring rolled off and hid under pieces of furniture. That's terribly unlucky, you know,” “How dreadful” exclaimed Margery. “It was very evident that if I con- tinued at the same rate, reefs would have to be taken in all the garments of my trousseau,” went on the brand new matron. “George wanted me to £0 to a sanitarium, he’s so upselfish. You know it would have killed him if I han gone away from him. “The night befbre we were married,” went on the brand new matron, “moth- er gave the bridal party dinner. The crowd of us danced and had music and talked till almost 3. And at 9 next morning I was to be married— and George! It couldn’t be a bit later, for the only train we could take left at 10. And I was detérmined, and 8o was George, to go nowhers bdut to Bois Rouge, Canada,where we had the dear- est little log cabin right in the heart of a forest. “I was too exhausted when T tum- bled into bed to realize that on the mor- row I was to be married to George. I fell asleep like a clod, with no more romance about me than if I had been & lump of mortar. I was determined me. quarter to 91° she gasp- ords were like an 'huq:: hat Cirban nairare: apprecit the cal ked sympathy. old rose ed sult was the handiest,” went on the brand enw ms tron, “and I slipped into it withoirt so much as a glance in the mirror. I slid down the stafrs, gulped a low of coffee in the kitchen and then rushed down the street, putting on a which I had grabbed in my excitem I quaked as I neared the church, but with courage born of desperation I peeked in at the door. Girls, there were no ushers in evidence, but scat- tered about the chureh, even in the ten front seats on the mid isle, were visibly excited spectators. The organ was playing, and I nearly had a fit on the spot for fear some one would rec- ognize me and give the signal for the wedding march. “f wonder yet how I had the strength .| to et around to the rector's office, which adjoined the chancel. However, when accomplished the fact, there I found - George, , disheloved and wild eyed, arrayed in a shiny old blue serge suit and a spotted tan spring over- coate, with an automobile cap on the back of his head and crumpling in his hands a- gray glove and a reddish brown one. He nearly expired from pure relief when he saw m% ‘By that time It was $.20 o'clock, and it was evident that there was no time to lose. We called in a passing expreséman and a maid wha was hur- rying to the cormer grocery with an apron thrown over her head. With these as witnesses we were married. And after the splurge we had prepar- ed! “George called a taxicab, and just as we were making for the train we met the best man in an antomobile, urging on a chauffeur who W sped limit scandalously. If luck held, the rest of my bridal party and George's, probably gathered by noon.” The brand new matron stopped to laugh. “But my troubles were all over. So ‘were George's. Jush as our train pull- ed out we telephoned mother to make all necessary explantions. Poor moth- breaking the er! Tt was rough on her! But vou yould have thought the pegdle would have had sense enough Mot to hang around that church till'1 o'clock,would- n't you?"—Chicage News. as music In it. Sant who wrote him up Mr. Chickadee, D.D.” sayifig is sect is Congregationai, the wild woods are his church, the wind his ‘choir in- visible,/ his pulpit is a birch. The sermon we should not forget; happy and cheerful be, have diligence, be brave, don't fret” says “Chickadee, D.D.” FEmerson thought the familiar little duffer worthy of & poem from his pen. The desérving bird attracts the “attention of the high and able whether he wears feathers or doges not! 3 We do net any of us like the trol- ley conductor who carries us past the station and we glare at him after he has been told where we would alight, as if we should like to have his fate in our hands for just five minutes, We do not think that we have no right to tax his memory by telling him long before we reach the station and never of the possibility that he has no mem- ory and will not let us off ‘until we signal. The time o signal is when the white pole has been passed pre- ceding the white pole at which we would disembark. Sometimes there is a conductor who does not keep his eye on his passengers and whose eye can- not be caught and such a conductor is simply neglecting his ‘business, for he should be alert for every signal the passengers make whether for personal inquiry or for alighting. Tt is pro- voking; but we are to blame for half our provocations. % It has bscome a proverb that “a great talker is a great liar,” and that because men of this sort talk more than they think and really when they have nothing to say. The unbridled tongue is always the wildest member of a family, and makes the most trou- ble, for it is an indisputable fact that “Flo who says what he likes must hear what he does not like,” for most peo- ple have not learned that “Silence i less injurious than a bad reply.” We all know how one word brings on an- other ‘and not always in good form: and when attention is called to the fact that “A° man of silence is a man of sense,” we have no disposition to dispute it. The unbridled tongue mars every day in all languagées and it is the provocative in most family disso- Jutions as well as tragedies. The man who can hold his tongue is never or- dered to “hold his horses.” S SUNDAY MORNING TALK. ‘The Moral Miracles. Entire agreemeént among though ning actuality of miracle: vsical world may not easily be secured. But candid minds cannot thi: very differently with regard to indisputable odcurrences in the moral ephere which are little short of miraculons. Here we eonfront obvious facts. Interpretations of these facts may vary, but it cannot be gainsaid that this or that marvelous’change in human character took place. Here are a few cascs in point: A new religion sprang up in the Orient a good many years ago. It was frowned upon by the ecclesiastical authorities anxious to conserve their own prestige and functions and its devotees were whipped, mprisoned and crucified. One of the most active per- secutors of the new sect suddenly faced right about and began to preach the faith of which he had just been making havoc. Not ordy was hir thinking entirely revolutiaized, but & corresponding change took place in his affections and his conduct. His will, too, was completely changed. People Jooked at him in amagement, and said: “What can have hapened to Saul of Tarsus?’ There splendld endowments and self-willed that he caused his beautiful _and godly mother ~much anxiety. He was restless and like so many other voung men plunged into amusements and even into dissipation. His eager, inquisitive mind led him to read the phiosophers, but they brought him no peace. Finaily one . day he happened m a certain passage of Scripture and as he read he burst into a flood of tears and all of a sudden his heart was filled with peace. From that time on ¥ Augustine was a changed man. mothér's prayers wore answered. He bécame the lead- ing theologian and saint of his century, flo is still held in réverence by the Yiristian church throughout the world. Less than 50 years ago a young man was serving a sentence of 15 years in Sing Sing frhon. New York. The elma for which he was incarcerated was once a voung man of ut 80 impetuous | by had been highway robbery. One night he knelt on the hard floor of his ! wrestling with his sins, humiliated his sense of guilt. a great rapture ddenly possessed his soul. It seemed if a hand were laid and as if a voice aaid wins, which are many, are forgive From tiat hour Jerry McAuley, the depraved river thief, a new man. After his reisase from prison he did a work (or (h® outcast and falgn, through the Water street mission, which he founded, that is known and honored thr.ughout Christendom. Three moral miracles among many which may be cited. Why do they not deserve to be called miracles? When a man who has been going a cer- tain way all his life and when all his habits and tastes have been estabiish- ed in conformity with that direction, suddenly turns straight about and goes thereafter in the opposite direction, what can you call it but a miracle But thers are other miracles besides these striking conversions. Hera if a man pure in the midst of impurity, a woman patient, forbearing, forgiving when constantly burdened and fl- treated, a mother tearless and resigned when her baby is taken from her, a father. steady, unselfish, brave when life is pushing him hard, a public official faithful to his trust though sub- ject to fierce temptatidns. They are all acting_ contrary to their natural instincts. They are not following the line of least resistance. Some Inward force 1s driving them to do and to bear things they could not do and bear otherwise. Such demonstrations of the reality and power of the moral and spiritual element in human life are the greatest miracles of history and the present axe. [ THE PARSON. DEVILTRY TAUGHT. Young Boys and Girls Corrupted Jails, Says H. H. Spooner. in The probation court, what it has done and proposes to do In this state were ably discussed in Waterbury on Sunday by H. H. Spooner, secretary of the Connecticut alliance and a for- mer member of the leglslature. In his introduction Mr. Spooner spoke of the work of Judge Ben Lindsay in Denver and how he had felt the lack of some system In Connecticut where- by boys, girls and offenders for the first time could be punished and yet Sy\'\wgfiés Ql Eoe s Seana Qets gently yeX promply o“fig:mwlg‘s: c\eanses the system effectually habiwal consivpalion To get'\s beneficrol ks dlways buy the e, MANUFACTURED BY THE CALIFORNIA Fic Syrup So ‘SOLD BY LEADING DRUGGISTS S0'ABOTTLE S-nrprlsesAmtveM Who Trades Here. Dress Goods in all the latest terns at the most tempting prices. One profit between the manufacturer /and you-—it's ours, and a v { small one, too. Others have le: where to buy cheapest — why not you? BRADY & SAXTON, Tel 308-2, ‘Norwish Town. augisd z . l ' AFTER PEDDLERS. Bridgeport Police Commissioner Protect Interests of Merchants, Police Commissioner Kershaw had a time of it Saturday night, says Telegram, in protect- ing the merchants on from the inroads of an itinérant g’td- dler, who was selling sweaters from a wagon in front of a store. The com- missioner found a policeman and the peddler was instructed to get a move on, as his license did not give him the privilege of being stationary, and thus becoming a competitar with merchants Some time ago there was a discus- sion in the board regarding the value of licenses to peddlers. Mr. Kershaw has always been opposed to them on the ground it they interfere with home merchahts who pay rent and are taxpayers. It was then decided that under their license a peddler could go from house to house as do the vegetable peddlers, but that the law did not allow theém become station- ary. When they located for any length of time at one place they were no peddlers in the common accepted meaning of the word. Mr. Kershaw saw that this peddler was sationary, and asked if his license did not allow him to stand and sell his goods. He was told that it dig not. Commission- er Kershaw intends that hereafter all peddlers will have to obey the sale fule and keep moving. to It's all right for Uncle Joe to have a The PRIME AIB ROAST SMALL HAMS - LEGS OF GENUINE FINE BALDWIN APPLES LARGE GRAPE FRUIT 5c each PURE LARD Ib. 16¢ Solid 30c doz. LARGE SWEET 3 Stalks Choice FANCY TABLE SYRUP - OYSTER CRACKERS PURE BOTTLED HONEY FRESH WALNUT MEATS STAR SOAP Chocolate BARS Water street | SATURDAY PRICES FOR MOHICAN CUSTOMERS Boneless Aump CORNED BEEF SHOULDER ROAST BEEF NATIVE FOWL - - - SHOULDER STEAK - 25c peck OYSTERS Faney Narragansett Bay. 31c FLORIDA ORANGES =21 ¢ FANCY TOKAY GRAPES - 2 s |5¢ Seasonable Grocery Specials MOHICAN PREPARED BUCKWHEAT> - pkg 19¢c-12¢ MOHICAN PANCAKE FLOUR bad memory. His consclence might hurt him if he sa{ alone with it ito count the skulls he'has cracked.—At- lanta Constitution. Time for Action. When a man admits that you were right and he was wrong, watch him. He has some ulterior motive.—Chicago Record-Herald. - Young Girls Are Victims ot headache as well as older women, but all get quick relief and prompt cure from Dr. King's New Life Pills, the world’s best remedy for sick and nervous headaches, They make pure blood, and strong merves, and build up your health. Try them. 25c at Lee & Osgood Co. A Religious Author’s Statement. Rev. Joseph H. Fesperman, Salis- bury, N. C, who is the author of sev- eral books, writes: “For several years | T was aficted with kidney trouble and last winter I was suddenly stricken with a severe pain in my kidneys and was confined to bed elght days unable to get up without assistance. My urine contalned a thick white sedi- ment, and I passed same frequently day and night. I commenced taking Foley's Kidney Remedy and the pain gradually abated, and finally ceased and my urine became normal. I cheer- vy recommend Foley's Kidney Rem- For sale by Lee & Osgood Co. MoHICAN COMPANY 10 = = |b G SRR et e IBe » = e AMB - = o T - - = n 1 Extra Fine |[FRESH | with an augmented company o | Wednesday night. INGTON— 05T Saturday. H"NIER. Nov. 18ih Tenth Annual Tfll.rl;rf‘gl: B‘u.hlj The Yolwnteer Organist by . Gray with Master Golden, the Boy with the angel voice, singing the soprano_ role, Bted by Master Irv- ing Glueck. ¢ A new England play of infense human interest and one that will live forever, . Prices. ..\....286, 350, 60c, 750, $1.00 Bargain Matinee 25¢ and 50cs Seats on sale at the Box Office, Wau- regan House and Pltcher & Service's on Thursda; ov. 11, at 9§ o'clock. Cars to all points after perforramnce. novila WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY, NOV. 13 Ira W. Jackson presents the fawole ite little star of repertoire, CLARA TURNER 14 ‘The offerings for tollows: known playgr up-to-date pi week will Monday nigh Tuesday matinee.....: Tuesday night..A Mod; Wednesday matines .. 'hy Men Temp . May y of " ¥ Gods & Wokn: oo Du Be jeitie o1 the Cirous The Da’ ern Lad Thursday matines Friday night Lo A Merry aturday matin aturday night . . 3 e Beggar and Mllanur’ enings, 10c, 20c, 30c. Mut 20c, ¥ night is ladies’ night. 30Q d seats at only 15 cents. FEATURE PICTURE, Mystery-of the Sleeper frunk and many others. MISS FLORENCE WOLCOTT, IN OPERATIC PROGRAMME. | Matinees — Ladies and Children 8§ SPEGIAL " Added Aftraction! Monday and Tuesday, 1 Moving Picture Sensation FIGHT FOR LIFE . Between Man and Bull place in Mexico City Bull Ring. William Pickers, 101 Ranch Cowbey, the only man human history wh ever performed the desperate feat an escaped alive. CRAN- ROASTED BERRIES [PEANUTS quart 5¢ GOLD MEDAL BUTTER 36¢ |b. MOHICAN Creamery BUTTER ' Quarts CELERY - - 12¢ MusIC. NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teacher of Plano, Room 48, Central Bullding. CAROLINE H. THOMPSON Teacher of Musie 46 Washington Street. Lessons my ri the hom the pupil used at Schawenks Conservatory, Iin. oct11d F. C. GEER id TUNER Vvl 122 Prospect 8t, ™ ¢ Tel. 611 Norwich, i A. W. JARVIS is the Leading Tuner in Eastern Connecticat. 'Phone 518-5, 15 Clairmount Avgy sept22d JAMES F DREW ‘ Fiano Tuning and Repairing Best V'ork Only, i -3 18 Perkine Ava < =« < - bottle 23c pkg. 9 2 Ibs. 15¢ CREAM PUFFs Crystalized Rock and Rye, bottle 650 3 Star Hennessy Brandy, bottle $1.75 3 Star Martell Brandy, bottle $1.75 Schlitz Milwaukee Beer, dozen $100 JACOB STEIN, 93 West Main SL. Telephune 28-3. to busie e, R | 4

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