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Lend gnn&e? 133 YEARS OLD. wma-mnm- & year nuMn(u‘a LS g at Norwieh, as gecond-class mintter. Telephone Calls: nlllfln Bu&m&lmfi w- u-u- Job ‘Willimantie Office, Room 2. Murray Ballding. Telephone, 210. Norwich, Tuesday, Nov. 16, 1909, THE COCAINE HABIT. . The cocaine habit is one to be met and abated since It 18 rapidly spread- ing In all parts of the country, and In such cities as Baltimore the sale Nof the dangerous drug has been car. ried on through the agency of black and white agents, known as “walking books” and “stands” who dispose of ihe cocalne from house to House or from regilar places of marketing, such as dark corners and alleyways, and demoralize a community with no local Jaw to deal with the offender, and ‘when an ordinange was adopted by the city government it was assailed as unconstitutional upon the ground that a state law covered the same ground. and a year or two has been consumed in carrying the matter up to the eourt of appeals for decision, and the decision {s of interest to all live com- munities because it states the power of the municipality plainly. ‘With the exception, says the court, of the clause of the ordinance fixing as one of the penalties forfeiture of the license of any druggist found gullty, the law is valld. The court holds that the city has no power o affect the property interests of an of- fender, while it has entire right to prescribe penalties in the form of fines and imprisonment. Tho stat. fine is lower than that imposed by the eity, but it is progressive for re- peated convictions. The ity or nance prescribes a Jjall sentonca in every case, along with & fine, the range of both being ample for tho exercise ©f the dlscretion of the court. “Now that the legal difficulties have been cleared away” says the Bu:ti- more American, “it 18 the duty of the law officers to pursue the prosecution of the cases held in abeyance pending the appeal with the rapidity anil cer. tainty with which this class 6f crimos should be handled. Nothing is more menacing in the modern city than tife sale of the drug that turns its vic- tims into manlacs and is an incen. tive to the foulest afd deadliest crimes.” PURSUING INTELLIGENT LINES. In the war against tuberculosis the contlict is too often with results in- @tead: of causes. The great white plague is never going to be eradicated ®y working from the top down, but by getting In and making the ground floor sanitary. The Bristol (Conn.) Press calls attention to the fact that New York is conducting the fight along intelligent lines. With reference to this, The Press says: “It has for years been alleged that typleal tenements in the, larger cities were favorite breeding places for the disease. There has been much dis- cussion over the matter, but appar- ently little practical work for better. ment of conditions. Mrs. W. K. Van- acrhm Jr., is now taking the Initia- a will flfivntc about one million to bdilding a number of "Bhiveley Sanitary tenements” in New York, They will be attractive and cheerful, with plenty of light and alr, and made as healthful and sanitary a8 modern means permit. Dr. Shive- ley, a tuberculosis expert will have charge. In order to test the efficacy of this plan the houses will be leased only to families having a member suf- fering from tuberculo Unsanitary, disease-breeding tene. ments, damp, dismal and cheap, are too plenty in all American cijles, and there certainly should be :uygnruy to stop the leasing of tenements to poor families which an intelligent citizen would not regard fit or profitable to keep dumb brutes in. APPEALING TO THE LEGISLA- TURE. ‘When murderers do not feel satisfled with their trials in the eourts of Vermont, they have a legal right to appeal to the legislature, which thus becomes the supreme c urt of that state, and, as may be igag- ined, from its numbers and Asheiy on ponts of law, is no credit to itself or the state it represents in this farc- dcal capacity. There is much dissatisfaction with the custom and the prospect hat Eivey Kent will. be given another trial by appealing to the legislature is cail 4ng forth proper protésts. The St. Al ‘bans Messenger, referring to the cus. tom, says: “We not only have well-nigh the English parliamentary ot ary government is not representatie of the people, but s built up on th “English - rotten-borough _system, in Which the insensate land is entitled to tmore recognition in the making of the laws than the flesh and blood men jend women that are to live under ‘them. “It is mockery of our theorins of gwhat constitutes good governmen:, an bsurdity in logic and fact, for aymen gathered from Canaan to Pownal, most whom do mnol know the first principles of law or the phil. osophy of. jurisprudence, to it ay 1 great solemn high court if appesls and overturn the findings of the courts of the commonwealth. “Let us.have no mers of it." This i & good practice to drop. for it is discreditable to a state t» per- mit an appeal from the courts 1o a weak political body to settle or unset- tle such crimes. The women of St. Louis have dis. tinguished themseives by devoting time to the cleaning of the windows of the street cars. This might create an impression wherever street cars do Bervice. A report from Missouri ays that a farmer picked up in his lot 46 wild ducks of a recent morning that had been killed by lghtuing in the night. He'll have to show us. The candidate who captures an of- fice with the outlay of a postage stamp is not rnued by the politiclans for his economy,! Ho must ante up to ~ mpecial delivery style. The citizen who freely owns that Be has more money than he can spend ’Ifln looms largest on tha tux list. —_— m of thrmr suburbs, nm the balfmillion INDICTED. ‘The human race, after all its in- countable of existence, is now indicted by and other expon- ents of thorough mastication of food as not knowing how to eat, and dls- ease and the doctors and what.not ard pointed to as the existing évidences of our folly, and who can deny in toto the charge. The average hurry- ing American by regular restaurant time {s charged with bolting a com- plete dinner in just ten mouthfuls in thirty-seven seconds and that is why we are now facing the, primary ! struction to chew each mouthful thi ty times, and then when it has become fluid and nearly tasteless to chew it thirty times more—that an ounce of well_chewed provender really ousht tc welgh when masticated and salivercd for entrance to the stomach at least three ounces, and because it #dis rot is the cause of more than half our physical woes, to say nothing of our mental idiosyncrasies. But Metchinkoft disagrees and says that too much chewing creates a-poi- sonous acid, dangerous to the stomach and gemeral health, and the cult >* Fletcherizers are informed that if they persist in thelr deadly practice, they must eventually commit wholesale gastronomic suicide. Hence thére is likely to be & rush for the quick-lunch counters by cer- taln classe$ to prevent getting the chew-chew disease of Bradfagy, yro- vided they do not find buttermilk a sufficient diet for everyday use. Considering the superabundanse of dietary, medical and scientific advice there 1s no reason why the Ameri:an public should not learn to eat soun and eat correctly. ‘THE MINER'S NEED OF PROTEC. s TION. There has never been a day since Prestdent Roosevelt lent his pen to the interests and protection of the miners of America that has not borne evidence of the wisdom ,of his words and the necessity for his action; but the repeated horrors from that day to this have not prompted the mine op- erators to do anything to lessen the fatalities—to reduce the dsath rate or to correct the bad repute of this country for holding human lifs cheap, and neglecting to provide ihe protec- tion which right and mercy anl jus- tice demand. The mine horror at Cherry, IlL, where over three hundred men are entombed and the few sur- vivors in the earth are signalling for help still, cries out for the vublls sen- timent which will demand that Amer. ican miners shall be as well protected as the miners of European count- and everything be done which shall protect the workmen and eava the country from this burning disgrace, EDITORIAL NOTES. It is not infrequent that the city au- thorities of a New England city do things as if they were tired of their Job. There is noéthing original in the saying that the turkey not yet dressed for Thanksgiving is the happlest bird, but it is true. Dr. Shanklin did not mince words in his condemnation of eleccive studies in colleges, when he called it scrap- heap educatien. The jag that it takes two assist- ants to carry through the public streets on Sunday is 2 jag worthy of police attention, The walking habit is belng revived, and there were never pleasanter No- vember days in which to strike a twenty-elght-inch pace. There must be an old home feeling here in Connecticut to President Taft, for he never fails to accept an invi- tation if the way is open. : Some men remember better what they thought yesterday than what they think today. This is a bad habit. The Toledo Blade is certain that & motion properly seconded is enough to turn an Ohlo teachers’ convention into a beauty show instantly at any time. There are many people who prefer to have it said that pellagra is their affliction than that the hookworm has them, although it is one and the same trouble. President Taft came off his iong journey weighing so much morc than when he started that it is suspected that he never has tried worrying to reduce flesh. Candidate Bannard, who aever got into New York politics vary deep, now says that he is out of politics for good. He is too valuable a citizen to so resolve. The fact that.less than twenty thousand QGermans emigrated . last year gives the impression that induse trial conditions and thrift are becom- ing better there. - Out west 'they are talking ahout hailstones as’ larke as billiard bails, which means that they were mot ce- signed “to improve one's health ‘when strick by them. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. The Ferrer Case. Mr. Editor: The calumny which ‘blames the . Catholic church for the conyiction and punishment of Francis- co Forrer, the notorious Spanish an- archist, spreading and becoming world wid The punighment meted out (o Ferrer was inflicted by the Spanish govern- ment. The ¢hurch had nothing to do with it Ferrer was allowed, by the nfliit code, twenty-eight days for (hé pres- entation of téstimony, 4nd cou was provide Fifteén . witnesses ~deposed at his trial that he incited to riot, that he personally led a group.of rioters and that he fnstigated the burning of con- vents. If. Ferrer had perpetrated, in any city in the United States, the out- rages Which ‘he committed fn Barce- lona, he wonld have been strung up to the ‘first lamppost. The prospéctus of the “lay schools™ established by Ferrer were so revolu- tionary that it is surprising that any government would tolérate the schools. This i a sample of the teaching: “The flag, a rag of different colors, stuck at the end of a stick. is the bol of tyranny and misery. Soldiers should use their weapons to kill those who armed them. When war is declared, every soldier should déclare a strike. Every evil, every suffeting, every In- justice is due to that stupid and bru- tal thing called “native land. The anarchigtic programme; ;found in Ferrer's house, corrected, ncorrllng to the testimony of experts, own hand, included the lbclmon nt the bench, the army and nnvy, the seizure of banks, and the pr ty of cfficials, as well lm nt would Indd m:: :h‘ "ot to 3}: luce 0 8O 24 ner. He I;IIIM that wild horses could not drag him out. He brought 35t osainle tor i To. g0, His Dest not lor im . shoes metoo small, he had no dran suit, he couldn't bear society--and so on. His roommate listened patiently to “Well, you may think it is- manly to act like that” he said, “but I don't see it in that light. I've been patient with your nonsense long enou Now, either you act right or it's all off be- tween us, that's all” “You talk like a melodrama,” de- clared Barton. “If I prefer a book by the fire to dining at your fiance's house it'’s no reflection on her, since I never saw her in my life.” “It's the Mirst nung T've asked you " said his' roommate . ‘And this is the elegant way 1 get turned down.” “I don’t see the use of treating it as it it were a personal matter,” said Barton. “You know I'm a erafk who doesn't care for society. “I know you're a goud -looking, In- teresting fellow, and you make me everlastingly tired,” 'returned his roommate, “Your _ statements don’t agree” laughed Barton. “But thank you for the bouquets just the same.” —_— “I shall take it as a personal af- front if you don't go with me to din- ner at Alice’s, when I'm going to be married and leave you in a few weeks,” insisted barton's roommate. “You know I haven't a dress suit” said Barton. “You don’t suppose it's as formal s that do you? It's just the family.” “T don't know the family.” “That doesn't make any difference. Be a sport. That is, if you care any- thing at all about my feelings.” true; I'm making this a Barton heaved a sigh and his room- mate walted till his back was turned before he winked solemnly at the electric light. The battle was won. Barton changed his mind a thousand times before the evening of the din- mer, but his roommate always con- Morrul, who attempted to assassinate Kimg Adorso and his bride on their weading day. Ferrer was arrested and chatged with complicity in the gruve, but was acquitted, as no proot Was forilicoming. 'The government of Spain punished Ferrer for the part 4 rlayed in the trasedy of pillage, and murder at Barcelona last The crv falsea by anarchists, so- ciolists and communists, that the Catholic church secured his conviction and punishment, expresses their hatred for the church’ which stands for law | and order, cominands obedience to du- ly constifuted civil authority, and is the greatest bulwark against the dev- astating power of anarchy in the world. WALTER J. SHANLEY, wbury Conn, Nov. 11, 1909. Miss Terry in Her Own Defense. Mr. Editor: Carl Schurtz has writ- ten “There will be & movement either in the direction of reducing the ne- groes to a permanent condition of serfdom—the condition of the mere plantation hand, ‘alongside the mule,’ practically without any rights of citi- zenship—or & movement in the direc- tion of recognizing him as a citizen in the full sense of the term. One or the other will prevail.” Washington Gladden has written: “It 18 not accurate to say that there will be such a movement as the one first described; the movement is in tull progress, and it ap) ars to be gaining strength evi day Today I can say: There is such a movement, and this movement is the one first 'described and it is taking place in the town of Canterbury. From all the facts of the case, one cannot help taking a retrospective glance at the time of Prudence Cran- dall—to the antebellum days. It seems that the seed of harted against the race to_which I belong is still germinating. ‘When I began teaching the Raymond school -in September, 1908, all of the eligible children came in the first week except Mr. Zelotes H. Plke’s. All of these did not come until the second week. Things ran smoothly for a while, until T had good cause to réprimand one of Mr. Pike's daughters. Shortly after this an entire afternoon’s session was broken by various untrue com- plaints #rom Mr. and Mrs. Pike, which Dr. John A. Smith, the acting school Vvisitor, presented to me in their pres- mncnmw:‘:g mlgd to he o as though they his companion only half guessed how T Enacn rae *hedoorwuop-nu"tmn Bumn gasped at wnnd]er h:u;'md had so even!| ing the whs Se.;r ’s finacel and d some joke and he hM a mintte A!t‘h to look at her before he was presented. In that minute he had noted that Mer eyes were brown and her hair gimplicity and honesty i self. He had had an idea that all girls wore false halr, but t.hl; girl didn’t, and she was the most charm- ing creature he had ever seen. “Mary, 1 want to present you my chum, ¥red Barton,” Geor; ing. “Fred, this is her sister. Where's Alice?” The rest of the evening was . blur to him when Barton looked back upon it. He met Mary's mother and father and an aunt and the sister, but he didn't remember how any of them looked, so dimmed were they by the one great light. He talked, too, and talked well, and she smiled up at him several times in genuine liking. After dinner they stayed an absurd- ly short time, though George said his watch showed it was 10 o'clock. George's watch was always wrong, Barton remembered resentfully. It was a lovely moonlight night and Barton insisted on thelr walking home, because he ted to However, he didn't say a word. George cast sidelong glances at him from time to time, but it was only a# they neared home that Barton spoke. “I pever saw a prettier girl!” said Realiziing that they were talking about different girls, George swallow- ed a laugh and choked in the process, but Barton did not notice it. “Say, old man,” he asked diffident- ly, “where did you have your dress suit made.”—Chicago News. ence. I had no difficulty in proving these accusations false. From this time there were various annoying things occurring to which 1 paid little, very little attention, as the trouble invariably rose from the same family. Whether my work has been satisfac- tory or not, has been allured to by others. I politely beg to correct Mr. Lathrop’s statements in The Bulleti sue of Nov. 2d. know from excel- lent authority that there was no vote | taken at the district school meeting in June, 1908, to forbid my being hired again by the district school commit- tee. The only voters raising objections to me were Mr. and Mrs. Zelotes H. Pike. During this same school meet- ing Mrs. Pike was heard to remark things too enormously insulting to_be repeateq here. It is Mr. Pike who has taken the contract to transport some of the children whoes parents allow him from the Raymond school to an- other. The only discord and discontent of which I am aware arose from Mr. Pike's family. Knowing the conditions of the sit- uation, I sought reliable advice before accepting .the position again. I had no personal motive other than a de- sire to earn an honest living. | Althongh Dr. Smith on September 14th told me everything was satisfac- tory and the chiidren who were not present would be in soon he had al- ready told some of the parents he would never compel them to send their children to me, Mr. Lathrop apparently overlooks the fact that in September some of the children, acting on Dr. Smith's advice, attempted to attend the school at Westminster. To the teacehr's credit let it be said, ascertaining the condi- tion of affairs in the Raymond school, she refused to accept these children. For a whole they remained at home, until the North Soclety district teach- er accepted them. In Mr. Lathrop’s letter I find no place where he tells that the letters, petitions and protests were started by Mr. and Mrs. Pike. He does not teil that these petitions were sent to the state board of education and this board refused to act upon them. If race prejudice does not enter into the question in Canterbury, why am I able to retain a state certificate? On Monday morning, October 13, 1 went to the schoomouu preparatory to beginning work as usual. The lchoolhouse ad an extra lock. At the same time there were four voters fromRoyllaneCmmd‘l‘m —made from Grapes— \) Finest, Parest Food BELLS SEASONIN(‘E).f Has delicately flavored the D Tarkey,Chicken GameMeats Fish servedin NewEngland during the past40YearsIts theonly ongmal.'Refuse substltutes AT OR TU A O%-3 mxtv‘nkufl"l' ater to meltbutter ao ¢ plcen e 3 nl:" e ‘well e e oAbt ot 8 o Place in a doep disn, 4 mdu‘v{ ‘butter size of .mm w‘:d ma o right cons| ), and all b mma.r misery ends. est hanny or blu!der rheumatism pains, don’t continue to be miserable or worrhtl. ‘but. cent treatment of Pape’s DI your rected, with th?‘knowledn that there is no other medicine, at any price, committee. ‘who put the lock om, but they did know other symptoms of clogged, sluggish kidneys simply va.nhh.o“‘ Uncontrollable urination (especially at night] om ‘water t-the slight- lisorder, or feel you_ su: a fifty- uretic from taking as di- of the district present, one the former Not nn:’ of these knew it had been placed there during Sun. dng night n ctobef 23 two members of the town school board, Mr. Lathrop and Mr. Appley, came to the schoolhouse, and admittance was gained while the lock formerly on was still locked! At the present writing the schoolhouse remains doubly locked. Human nature demands a right to live a complete life and I am merely asserting my rights. - The president of the university of Virginia has written: “There is but one thing to do with a hi eing, and that is to give him a chance.” I am only human. President Kilgo of Trinity college, South Carolina, has said: “For a superior race to hold down an inferior one simply that the su- perior race may have the services of the inferior was the soclal doctrine of medievallsm. To deny the negro the strongest and highest influences is to enslave him to a life of moral deg- radation and the God who made him in the final settlement of human hi cory will not likely overlook such un- ighteor conduct.”” I ask simply for justice. All I wish is to be given an opportunity to earn a living, using the education for which I have been to the expense of provid- ing myself with. FELICIA CORNELIA TERRY. Hampton, Conn.,, Nov. 1, 1909. To Whem It May Concern. Mz Editer: A-fine large English set ter dog, in. good state of nrelsrvnfl% {eTlying on the inside of the north e of the C. V. R. R's trestle at Bart- lott's, Herewith I append description, viz.: Body and legs white, lightly tick- ed with_black; one smail black spot near right hip bone; fine large evenly marked head, black and white, black on cheeks, edged with tan. a white cefit treatment. —anywhere In the dog wlll know from the above his fate. The remains show no signs of violence or injury, but every sign shows his having been a well bred Pn(;:lmnl glfln‘ a civil service, examination for how far it was from New York to Con- =" ntinople, reply, for me, i den't want the Job.” of the mall carfying routes recently Ahulln'fll? sty, wugb'quzwmmnnd mm Individuality " Feaponsit ; Is What Counts In " Photography. out the real Diuretic — fifty- Accept onl; o any drug store stripa yuns €rom aéck to nose, with @ round black spot ol middle of this whlu stripe. Had leather collar around neck with regl tration Ledyard. top of dome in ready-mad O L vod want . phote of your res) If, or what your friends ses to love and admire, call on LAIGHTON, The Photographer, opposite Norwich Savings Soclety. auglsd Evening School tag marked “No. 28,066, 190f Any sportsman having lost such a RTSMAN. Uncasville, Nov. 13, 1909, He Didn't Want the Job. It is related that young Irishman, e position of mail carrier, was asked “I don’'t know,” was the ‘and if that is the route ye have awarded a contractor in Alaska is even more formidable than that. It is six IN CTY HALL hundred miles long and the letters and papers must be transported on sledges NOW OPEN drawn by dogs and through “The Great White Silence.’—Boston Transcript. 4 The Swine Flower? FREE Also in Taftville Schoolhouse H oct26d J voice, “‘Bebold the source of lard!’ 1 mdnv.flddmuend-th o::&&dun— roses pure and ( wm- bub'nfldnrkpuiofln.u PYROGRAPHY tainers, whose lVesta Tilley Nat Wflls of these and & own home for There are and Amberol dealer or from us. Plaut-Cadden Building, —EASY TERMS— N In what other way can you hear so cheaply and so comifortably such an array of talent as that engaged in making Amberol and Standard Records for the Edison Phonograph. —— } To mention only a few of these star enter~| ,ands, there are: | IMal:scl McKmley Grace Cameron { Albert Spalding ~ Harry Lauder/ There are several good 1 rmd.s from each hear at the dealers and own and hear in your ‘Bdison Standard Records - ndlsonlmbcnlnmzd- (r-msulm)wc Linings, Etc, at prices 11c to ) o e ] 316 per yard LOWER than any nd hear the Edison Phonograph play both Bdison Standard Records Nationsl Phonogreph Company, 75 Lakeside Ave., Orangs, N. J. THE PLAUT-CADDEN CO., Main Street, Norwich, Conn. Headquarters for Edison Phonographs and Records OUTFITS 98¢ Hand Mirrors 25¢ Pretty Placques 6o up Alling Rubber Co., 74 Main Street, Norwich w State Street, New London Operating 15 Stores Surprises Awaits Everybody | rexan Housy Who Trades Here. Dress Goods in all the latest pat- terns at the most tempting prices. One profit between the manufacturer and a very small one, too. Others have learned whers to buy cheapest — why not you? BRADY & SAXTON, records are the joy of thous-; Ada Jones | Tel 308-3. ° Norwich Town. Marshall P. Wilder' auglsa e . s | Purchasing MARSHALL'S 2cney: 164 Main Street. Here you can buy ALL KINDS of Dress Goods, Silks and Coat hundred others that you can a trifle. “Big” Store prices. A guaranteed saving of from 10 to 30 per cent. Agency for LeWando's Best French Dyers and Cleansers, With Norwich Cir. Library, ere. Go to the nearest and get complete catalogs from your FUNERAL ORDERS Artistically Arranged by HUNT .... TheFlorist, Special rooms for demonstration. Tel. 130. Lafayette Strost. Bec:use it removes fl\e cause. - We not su T did not succeed. But ¥ 1t should COUGHS, COLDS AND BRONCHITIS are cured to stay cured by your mmey.,mbnmmmoflermdlhouldhmmd. B N. D. Sevin & Son, Druggists, Norwich. have not known a case wherein not in your case, we will retum the sentiment AL = mecting in Washiggten, atiended by leading educators Spee. Broadway Phar.; Lee & Osgood Co. Chas. Ouflod Utley & Jones: Dunn' ECONOMICAL means getting the most value for your i I can give It to you In Plumi Ing: R llN'I'ON D!SBLE 46 Asylum St A. D. S. ALL CEREALCOFFEE g only 10¢ a Ib. IJIIAI“ TEA l'l' | o S e g ctortes with an e ented com; knntnp Smpany o ‘ul ncing "&: oifarings gor the -‘aln - e of ‘6L !‘fi Modern 4 Ve Wh ll n Th dey lr; A"Thief in the ursdey nig) jof In FrIy TIALNER xersre. .,‘ii vy Friday night. . A Merry Widow's Saturday matines 0020, Tou Kl‘ Saturd: nl lt s S o, M e thses 10c, 20e. Seats on sali at the Box Offica Wau. ‘hn Pitcher "P" s ac ofmance. ars to REED L THEATRI:” SPECIAL ATTRACTION Monday and Tuesday Only, Moving Picture Sen, . sation “Flfilfl FOR LIFE®> s ‘uh CM y. m- uly man in human histo: :vo ed the desperate n an uup.d MISS FLORENCE IGI.CO‘“‘- Prima Donna Soprano, in Sel Songs. Matinee, Ladies and Children, novisa & MuUSIC. ERTEL NED AT 1 st BB NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teacher of Piano, - Room 48, Central Bulldingy" | CAROLINE H. THOMPSON ’ Teacher of Music 46 Washington Street. L. H. BALOOM, . Tencher of Plano. 29 Thames St Lessons given at o residence % the home of the pupil. Bame meth }ufll At Bchawenka Lon"lvllbri oct: v comEn .3 TUNER 122 Prospect St, M Tel. 511, Norwioh, A. W. JARVIS i is the Leading Tuner in 7 Eastern Connecticul. *Phone 518-6. 15 Clairmount Avil sept22d JAMES F. DREW fiano Tuning and Hepauur Best Vork Olli. Phome 423-8 o, SPECIAL THIS WEEK Crystalized Rock and Rye, bottle 3 Star Heénnessy Brandy, nmo b 3 Star 15 Schlitz donn $100 JACOB STEIN, 93 West Main &, WM. F. BAILEY (Buccessor to A. T. Gerdnery Hack, leory and Boardlng Stable 12-14 Bath Str.’.‘ HORSE CLIPPING A SPECIALTY, apr2sd ‘Telephone £93. DR, C. R. CHAMBERLAIN Denta/ Surgeon. In chargs ot Dr. 8. practws " uriog pis inst 3& 161 Main Streek, Norwich, Cenn, novas