Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 26, 1909, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

- Entered at the Norwich, Comm as second-class motter. Norwich, Friday, Nov. 26, 1900. A PERPENDICULAR DENIAL. Secretary Ballinger's denial of the charges against him is of a character to chballenge from those who made them the preof of his offences. He avers that “to say that I ever have adviged, aided, or lent support to any effort to perpetrate a fraud upon the government, is not only false, but is intentionally so, if made by anyons who bas taken the trouble to inguire into the facts.” This requires that the men who ‘have declared that the secretary's as- soslations were compromising and thdt he was knowingly alding combi- natlons of capitalists to invade the public domain and to destroy the pol- icles of Roosevelt with reference to the conservation of forest and mineral | lands in the far west, should driv the eharges home. It is up to them to now furnish the evidence bt bls guilt and if they fail they can- mot look to the people for further re- spect or confidence, Careful men do mot attempt to undermine reputable officials without having absolute proof of ‘their misconduct or disloyalty. The writers who have assauited the secre- tary should new make good their aver- ments. ASTONISHING FIGURES. The advocate of any cause who do not know that misrepresentation does not pay is not sufficiently well in- formed to take the platform. A Penn- Ivania woman with her budget of statistics started out to stir up all creation, and she did. As soon as she got her statistics before the reading public an editor took them up, and this is what he said about them: “Mrs. Blank declared that 580,000 boys- in the United States became addicted to alcoholism during 1908. Now, the an- nval births of male children in this country are approximately 1,100,000, of whom over 200,000 die before they reach the age of 14. Hence her state- ment is that nearly two-thirds of the beys in the United States become vic- fms of strong drink. She also de- tlarea that in the same year 200,000 bables were smothered by drunken thers. But the census shows that fhe total deaths of this kind in one year were 1928, and these accidents ‘could not all be attributed to intoxica- tion. She stated that In one year 1,000,000 deaths were caused by drunk- en cab drivers and chauffeurs. In the last census year the total deaths from all causes were under 1,100,000, and from all accidents 67,513, and of these the largest number of deaths were caused by railway accidents. Another deciaration was -that intoxicating 1i- quor made 85,000 insane in one year, but the total insane population of the United States December 21, 1906, was only 150,151 Npr can her allegation e correct that 100,000 men and men went t6 prison in one year as the result of strong fdrink, since the total prison population of the United States was less than that figure.” In view of her exaggerations it cannot be said that she achieved much for the cause, for mot realizing the value of accuracy she queered the cause she represented. LESSONS IN COURTESY. This Is a novel entegprise which the Philadelphia Times has entered upon to attract attention to itself and to its worth as a municipal factor, The people of the “City of Brotherly Love" need a little education in the matter of courtesy to women upon the street cars, 0 The Times sends out a Court- esy Cashier who gives a dollar to every male passenger who has courtesy to give a woman a seat first report is as follows: “Between 4.45 and 7.15 on Monday afternoon this investigator rode on twenty-eight trolley cars. His Instrue- tions were to be fair and to be as accurate as possible. “He found that the average number of ngers in each car was 100. On an average forty persons in each car were straphangers, and of these ten were women. “Bach car was crowded when he boarded it. Naturally a number of women had been seated through the courtesy of men before his observa- tions commenced. “He saw nineteen men arise and give their seats to women. To each of these courteous ones the Courtesy Cashier immediately presented an order upon The Evening Times for $1. “An analysis of the total of nine- teen is especially interesting. Seven seats were given to young and pretty women. One seat went to a young woman not at all comely. Four seats The were given to women with packages. One given to a woman with a considered that of the 260 women who were standing in the twenty-eight cars visited by the Courtesy Cashier probably fifty stood near the seats of other women and not near seated men, the showing is not at all bad—for a beginning.” This will improve the manners of the sitters, doubtless, for who cannot afford to be polite for a dollar a time; 2nd if the dollar makes a lasting im- pression who shall say that the money has not been well spent? The Reading railway has ordered two and a halt million dollars' worth of freight cars, which shows it ha confidence in the future of the ca ing business. Out west they, do not know that cranberry sauce goes without the turkey in the tart, or as an accom- paniment to warm doughnuts or crul- lers. The insurgent congressmen were so full, Of spite that they could get no time to be thankful. They are bent upen making the administration sorry. The drought is so severe in Virginia the | | any common and on the decrease. divorces for 1867 1908 leaves no doubt that getting to less and less serious and more and more experimental. The government statistical reports show that the evil is still on the increase. The government experts calcula that the divorce rate has net yet reached its maximum. They calculate that not fewer than one marriage in every sixteen will be dissolved by divorce and that the ratio may b even more thap that. ¥ Tt is shown by these statisties that there are far more divorces, both in number and proportion, granted in the United States than in any Buro- pean country. In Japan alone do the figures exceed those of this country. The most common cause of divorce is desertion, and this could be checked by the passage of drastic laws mak- ing desertion perilous instead of eas: Uniform and more stringent legisia- tion will be required to make divorce less populs HOW SHE BECAME A SONG. The public has been prepared to expect about anything to emanate from Pittsburg, and that ity doesn't have the power to ecreate a thrill of surprise anywhere, As the story goes, Miss Grace W. Miller, @ good-looking Sunday school teacher of Pittsburg, consulted a fortune teller as to her fate. She learned that she was to become the bride of a Chinaman, The lines of palm, the conjunction of the stars, the fall of cards in their order— the instructions have been carried out and Miss Miller is now Mrs. Charlie Song. The quecr thing about this is that Miss Miller proved to be such a will- ing victim to an astrologer. It may be said, however, that such marriages have met always proven to be & fail- ure, but that some have really proved to be one sweet song. Miscegenation does not appear to combine all the elements of harmony, and it is only in exceptional s that it has, Charlie Song may be all his name im- plies and so live that a discordant note will not be heard from this un- fon. Let us hope that Miss Miller will not have cause to repent of her read- iness to follow the life-line which the mystic saw. EDITORIAL NOTES. Collector Loeb is demonstrating be- fore the country the virtue of doing much and talking little. a Those who were on the turkey line yesterday and have no regrets today feasted well and wisely. It is the early Christmas shopper that gets prime goods and attention and smiles from the clerks. Who expects to see the Standard Oil company dissolve itself? No oc- topus ever yet became a dissolving view, Winter mever lets us suffer for our dues, hence we need not feel worried if no haste is manifested in meeting them. The Norwich boys do not let a lttle snow and cold weathef interfere with their part of the Thanksgiving cele- bration. Some widowers have such a business way about them that they excite em- barrassing prejudices among mar- riageablé women, When congress gets to discussing sugar it is apt to have a rather bitter time. Sugar does not sweeten con- gressional debates, The good little trust is not improv- ing its opportunity. Now it might come out into the limelight and show that it is really good. Count Boni de Castellane does not disguise the fact that he thinks that it would be a pleasant change for him to try a new partner in life. Should President Zelaya conclude to exterminate the United States what might be the result? Tt is something tearful to contemplate—for him. The families who get together on Thanksgiving day are the envy of those who have not been bred to the custom, which is full of pleasure. ‘We hope that the New York ple- makers will not revedl the secrets of the trade to spite their employers, for that might cure our taste for pies. How to Homor Washington. It is greatly to be feared that the desire to be president of something or other has more to do with this latest movement to build George Washing- ton another monument than any feel- ing that he really —needs another. George has about monuments enough; that noble structure towering above Washington settled him for long so far as bulldings of stone and brick and casts of bronze need go. This latest idea contemplates that the school chil- dren of the country shall contribute their dimes and pennies to the total of some two millions and a half, and that out of that there be erecfed a memorial building in the national cap- ital. George has a better monument than ever built of bronze or stone or concrete blocks, one which is grander, nobler and more enduring than any pyramid of Cheops. It is the republic to which he gave shape and substance and prepared to outlast time. If the children of the land would have a hand in rearing a monument to the father of their country, let them be so taught in their schools, €0 imbued with love of country, €0 firmly rooted in the essential principles of good govern- ment, that when they becorge men and women every one of them' will be a working factor for the perpetuation of all that George Washington worked and fought to incorporate into our form of government.—Denver Repub- lican. “Rapid Transit. Tn response to a growing in his home, Henry Kitchell Webster, author of “The Sky Man,” once went to ‘his father's house, borrowed the family highchair and started taking it home by hand. He had to wait long for his car, and when it finally came its conduetor was a humorist. . n't you pretty big for hat offieial answered. admitted Webster, wea grew up while waiting for the car. —Success Magazine. demand that Stopped His Kicking. A dumb Dbell dropped from the hand of a student at a western university and came to a state of rest on the toe that the authorities are asked to de- ny licenses to hunters for fear they ‘may accidentally start forest fires. The man who inspired the sugar uds is not seeking for recognition. 5 did great things for the trust, and 'be is satisfied with his reward. Happy theught for today: A day's ~excesses are solld foundations for ths mext ' 4ay's griets, of a member of the faculty who op- posed college football. The professor is reported to have stopped his kick- ing.—Brooklyn Eagle. — Ruef’'s Misfortune: The initial step had been taken to set Abe Ruef free. A story is being circu- ted that he is in danger of losing his sight and hearing owing to his long confinement in jail—Los Angeles Ex- press, “Quser things are always happen- Ing to some people,” said he laid down the newspaper.’ . s s0,” 3 face lighted with whimsical interest. “There was Darley,,for example. I won't mention the time he walked east instead of west as he had invariably done on leaving his office and hadn't gone three feet when he picked up a two-carat diamond that somebody lost. Neither will I say anyth about the time he was in & train wr and helped a fellow passsenger who turned out to be a millionaire and married Darley’s sister. I pass over the other occasion when a street car broke down and made him just five minutes too late to close a deal in a mine that afterward proved to be a gold brick. However, will say a word about something very curious which happen- ed to Darley. “He was living in a big, old-fash- ioned house that had once been a fash- ionable home but had reached the boarding house stage. He had a room on the second fioor in a sort of wing with a flat roof all its own, and he was a prime favorite with the land- lady because he paid his rent promp- 1y and was at home very seldom. His business took him out of the city for 3 occasionally for weeks at a As a boarder he was nothing but sheer profit, so she humored him and Darley staved on long after the house began to be ramshackly and al- most ready for its final end. It has been pulled down now. ‘That was what had happened to the place next door. Wreckers had torn it to pieces and a big modern building was going up in Its place. It loomed so close to Darley's boarding house that the scant space between made it nccessary for the workmen to use the flat roof of the wing where Darley roomed as a means of entrance to certain parts of the new building. “From the flat roof a plank bridge sparved “the intervening bricks and mortar and cement and concrete were hoisted to the flat roof and wheeled by barrow into the other structure, It was of fireproof con- struction and lots of concrete and ce- ment were being used in it. The workman who trundled the first bar- row of the stuff across noticed that quite a little of the wet, clinging stuft dropped off the sides, shaken by the motion as the barrow jogged over the bum') where the plank walk began, but the Joss was small and &0 he did not mind. “For days and weeks those wheel- AUTOMOBILE LAWS. Toward Uniformity | Them. One of the principal subjects to come before the January meeting of the American Automobile association in Washington concerns the enactment of uniform laws by the different states governing the operation of motor cars. It is desired by the members of this organization, and it 13 desira- ble from the public standpoint, that the laws under which machines must be operated should everywhere be the same. During recent years the auto- mobile has become increasingly pop- ular as a means of long-distance trav- el. State lines have disappeared from the autolst’s calculations. A trip to New York by motor car is looked up- on as nothing much out of the ordi- nary. Transcontinental journeys ene by no means infrequent. \ The growing popularity of the mo- tor car, particularly in long-distance travel, makes it important that state laws shall be as near uniform as prac- ticable. A motorist who passes through half a dozen states in the course of a single trip cannot be expected to be familiar with their differing laws. He is likely to find himself a law breaker without intending it. The movement for uniform laws_has received a promising start in New England. There Massachusetts adopt- ed a code which several of the neigh- boring states have followed. By that beginning the campaign to be empha- sized at the Washington conference should receive an impetus. It is, how- ever, to be admitted that any pro- posal to get the states, or & majority | of them, to adopt uniform legisiation upon any subject is certain to meet delay and discouragements. As a sin- gle but sufficient example one may note the difficulty that has attended | the yet futile effort to get a uniform divorce code. The course of automobile legislation in Ohio foreshadows uniformity of state law. Until last year each com- munity was left to regulate the oper- ation of motor cars. That plan was superseded by the act of the last leg- islature which put this authority into | the hands of the state. Diverse mu- nicipal regulations gave way to uni- | form state control. The same tend- | ency carried a step further, as pro- posed by the American Automobile as- | sociation, would bring uniformity of action by the different states.—Cleve- land Plain Dealer. The Usefulness of Spiders. Despite the fach that the spider, next | to the mouse, is most violently stim- ulating to feminine sensitiveness, it is | an insect of a very good character. It | feeds exclusively upon other freshly killed insects, and they are the kinds denounced by sanitary authorities, the house fly being its favorite quarry. His service in reducing the numbers of this pest is considerable, because the spi- der is always busy and he is present in countless numbers. The reason why he is not more frequently seen is that he is retiring in his habits and shuns human_society qiute as much as that shuns him. He seldom bites anything but his food, and even when in self- defense he does assert himself, the re- sult is no worse than a mosquito bite, or a bee sting. The touching story of “The Spider and the Fly” was evident- 1y int ed to invite sympathy for the fiy, but that was before Musca domes- had had his picture posted in the gallery of insect life.—Leslic's Live bees E ice so as to keep them dorman the journey. This is particul case with bumblebees, Which taken to New Zealand, where rtilizing the red clov has been introduced into the colon: The palate is almost tickled with Scott’s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil. The stomach knows nothing about it, it does not trouble you there. You feel it first in' the strength it brings; it shows in the color of cheek and smoothing out of wrinkles. It was a beautiful thing to do, to cover the odious taste | of Cod Liver Oil, evade the tax on the stomach, and take health by surprise. It warms, soothes, strength- ens and invigorates. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS this sd. for our space and |, barrow loads were trundled across the roof above Darley’s room and each one shook from its sides its contribu- tion of cement. The unpleasant part about this was that the old house was shaken and jarred by the constant tramp. the pounding in the building next door, so came a break in the roof. This was directly over Darley’s closet, so it happened that the long crack was just where it could swallow up those ‘droppings of wet cament and concrete. You know all about what little drops of water and Mrtlo ins of sand will do if com- bined with & sufficient number of their own kind. “Darley had heen out of town for over three weeks and when he came home he was in a hurry to get ready to leave for New York to meet his employer. He wanted his heavier over- coat and another suit of clothes and other wearing apparel that was in his room. Most of all, he wanted some plans and estimates over which he had spent long hours before he went away. Everything was in_his closet safely locked up. When Darley ran into his room he mechanically fitted his key to the closet door, swung it open, but- ted in—and got a frightful crack on his head! “His first fdea was that a concealed burglar had swatted him one, but as he dazedly rubbed his forehead he saw with increasing bewiderment that there wasn’t any closet or any clothes or neat row of shoes on a shelf before him. There wasn't any shelf. There was merely a solid b%ck of granite stuff reaching from floor to ceiling— n>. smoothed down, but rough and dabby, as though a child had been plling up mud pies. He knew instinet- ively” when hé touched that nothin short of a charge of dynamite woulg make much impression on it. Imbed ded in that mass was nearly all his wardrobe and his precious plans and estimate: Darley made an awful fuss, and his rage was not as- suaged by the oddness of the situa- tion. The builders next door sald it was the most extraordinary thing that had ever happened, but, as Darley pointed out, the oddity of it didn’t pro- vide him with a heavy overcoat and also his employer _objected to.paying notel bills in New York while he wait- ed for the plans and estimates. Then the builder got mad and tareatened to charge Darley. for the cement stored in his closet and Darley was restrain- ed by main force from massacring the builder on the spot. “Finally they {ook pickaxes and lit- erally mined Darley’s belongings out of the closet, but—-" “See’ here!” broke in Perkins. “De that really happen- | you mean to say ea?” Merker looked annoved. enough cement through a hole roof into a clothes closet and see! said, darkly.—Chicago News. “You drop in a he . e e il oL “Did she refuse him?" q She said she would not marry him until he arrived at years of discre- klyn Life. RENEDY For Women-Lydia E. Pink- ham’sVegetable Compound e i of Lite soR sufiee fr0m - Pink- ham’s Vegetable Com; 'mademe uwallf:’ remedy for all female troubles, and I feel that I can il{evur praise Nltehn.o »* — Mgs. Lizzig OLLAND, Noal 3 The Changeof L!!eyia themosteritical period of a woman’s existence, ai neglect of health at this time invites disease and pain. ‘Womeneverywhereshouldremember that there is no other remedy known to medicine that will so successfully carry women through this t,;ymi. riod as Lydia E. ham’s Vegetable Com- E::ad. made from native roots and For 30 years it has been curing women from the worst forms of female ills —inflammation, nlceration, dis- lacements, fibroid tumors, irregulari. H backache, and ties, periodic nalr!vom pm":lld f&o'pedal advice ou WO -bou,t our case write a confiden- Loy, Mase,. Her advice is froes s, Her and always helpful, . AWAY GOES ALL No Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Gas, Heartburn or a Stomach Head- ache Five Minutes After Taking a Little Diapepsin— Prompt Relief Awaits Many Readers of the Bulletin. “STONACH MISERY If you had some Diapepsin handy and would take a little now your stomach distress or Indigestion would vanish in five minutes and you would feel fine. This harmless preparation will di- gest anything you eat and overcome a sour, out-of-order stomach before you realize it. If your meals dom’t tempt you, or what' little you do eat seems to fill you, or lays like a lump of lead in your stomach, or if you have heart- burn, that is a sign of Indigestion. Ask your Pharmacist for a 50-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin and take a little just as soon as you can. There will be no sour risings, no belch- ing of undigested food mixed; with acid, no stomach gas or heartburn, fulluess or heavy feeling in the stom- och, Nausca, Debilitating Headaches, Dizziness or Intestinal griping. This will all go, and, besides, there will be no undigested food left over in the stomach to polson your breath with nauseous odors. Pape’s Diapepsin is a certain cure for out-of-order stomachs, because it prevents fermentation and takes hold of your food and digests it just the sanie as if your stomach wasn't there. Relief in five minutes from all stomach misery is at any drug store waiting for you. These large 50-cent cases contain more than sufficlent o thoroughly cure almost any case of Dyspepsia, Indigestion or any other stomach dis- turbance, 20 year Gold Filled Case. Buys a Gents' Waltham Watch in a $12.00 Buys a Ladles’ Waltham Watch in a 20 year Gold Filled Case. Buys a 17 Jewel Hamilton Watch in a all New Movements in New Ca: No shopworn stuff, and fully guaranteed. FERGUSON & CHARBONNEAU, Franklin Sq $15.00 20 'year Gold Filled Case. mmum;_;nmsou INTELLIGENT COMPARISON chemist h Lee & Osgood Preparations to perfection and their PURITY and and corporations for al changed by effect on September 1. HAS INCREASED THE SALE OF Lee & Osgood’s White Pine and Tar| IRON Cough Syrup - PER GENT. " 400 18 CONVINCING EYERY- ONE THAT It is now a recognized fact that our brought the / QUALITY have achieved for them the highest place among modern pharma- ceutical products. The Lee & Osgood Co. Druggists and Manufacturing Chemists, 131-133 Main Street, NORWICH, CONN. novisdaw Electricity for Power CHANGE IN PRICE The price to be charged to persons ternating cur- rent electricity for power has been the undersigned to take . 1909, that o all bills rendered as of September say, 1st” 1809, for alternating current elec- tricity for power as shown by meter readings tal AJugust 20-24, 1909, to have been used since the last previous reading shall be according to the fol- lowing schedule: 1 io 500 Kilowatt Hours, Sc per kilo- watt Hour. Over 500 Kilowatt Hours, 5o for first 500 and 2¢c for each additional kilowatt hour. EXAMPLE, Number of K. W. H. used. 500 K. W. H., at § cents,... 500 K. W. H., at 2 cents. Norwich, July 26, 1909. JUHN McWILLIAMS, GILBERT 8. RAYMOND, EDWIN A. TRACY, Board of Gas and Electrical Cormis- sioners. Jysoa The Fanning Studios, 31 Willow St. are showing some very pretty Chairs and other pieccs of Furniture. Call and see them. Also Wall Papers, Lace Curtains, Shades and Up- holstery Goods. nov2sd Something for the HOMme WE ARE OFFERING A FEW SUG- GESTIONS. The Vaughn Foundry Co. 1t you have money to spend for Xmas buy something for the home. The rich, the poor, and those in moderate nhore Hoe NOT MADE BY A TRUST coned circumstances do all conceds ‘that there is nothing more suitable for holiday gifts. Visit our store and we will help you solve the always difficult problem “what shall I give.,” Shea & Burke 37-41 Main Street. nov2id —OPEN— Del-Hoff Cafe Business Men's Lunch a specialty. Also Regular Dinner, fifty cents. y9a HAYES BROS. Props. Bond e, mame of paper and beantiful Bavings Bauk snd Child's Sketch.Book. Each bank contains & Good enny. SCOTT & BOWNE, 409 Pearl St New York | 1chmond anses GOMPLETE IN A RRANGEMENT PERFECTION IN COOKINGC J. P. BARSTOW & CO., 23-25 Water Street, Norwich C. H. BACON, Daniclson J. G. BILL, Willimantic PLUMBING AND GASFITTING. CASTINGS “urn! ptly. stock of patterns. No. 11 to 25 Ferry Street jan22d T. F, BURNS, Heating and Plumbing, m92 Franklin Street. S. F. GIBSON Tin and Sheet Metal Worker. Agent for Richardson and Boyntoo Furnaces. 65 West Main Street, Norwich, Conn decld WM. F. BAILEY (Successor to A. T. Gerdner) Hack, Livery Boarding Stable 12-14 Bath Street. HORSE CLIPPING A SPECIALTY. Telephone 883. apr2sd Fancy Native Chickens Fancy Native Fowls Fancy Native Ducks Just the thing for Sunday dinne Apples, Basket Grapes, Ma Oranges, Grape Fruit, Etc. PEOPLE’S MARKET, 6 Franklin St. JUSTIN HL}LD.N.\M Floral Designs and Cut Flowers For All Occasions. GEDULDIG’S, Telephone 868. 77 Cedar Street. 260 noviad QUALITY In work should always be considered, espectally when it costs no more than the inferior kind. Skilled men are employed by us. Our prices tell the whole story. STETSON & YOUNG. may27d AHERN BROS., General Contractors 63 BROADWAY “Phone 716, Brown & Rogers Wish to announce to the public that they are all ready for the Fall Paint- ing and Paperhanging, in all of its branches at living prices, with Com- petent Men to do the work at short notice. Jun3a oct2d Evening School NOW OPEN TUITION and SUPPLIES FREE Also in Taftville Schoolhouse oct26d GEO. A. DAVIS We are showing some of our choicest Christmas and New Year Cards AND SOLICIT EARLY INSPEC- TION WHILE EVERY THING IS FRESH AND NE ON MANY LINES THE QUANTITIES IS LIM- ITED AND IT IS BETTER NOT TO WAIT. Thanksgiving Post Cards, Place Cards and Tally Cards Playing Cards, Bridge Score Cards and Card Tables. You should see our new Folding Card Table, mahogany finish and very light weight. Calendars and Calendar Pads for 1910. An immense line of Small Cal- endar Pads for making your own calendars. GEO. A. DAVIS, 25-29 Broadway noviodaw " Friday, November 26th, DENMAN THOMPSON'S THE OLD HOMESTEA The test of all New Eng): plays. ity-fourth ml'fl “?‘I‘I'X‘\‘. terrupted success. The original and only company, Cast of twenty-five people. Beautiful new scenary and offects. The famous double quartette. Prices. .25c, 35c, 50c. TBe, $1.00 Seats on_sale at the Box Office, ‘Wauregan House and Pitcher & Serv- ice’s on Wednesday, Nov. 24th, at o'clock, Cars to all points after perform nov2dd ance, MATINER Saturday, MATWeR. Now. 37th America’s Greatest Contra Temor Richard J. Jose in g play in four acts, by Martin V, Merle with an excellent cast of merit and entire productfon intact. Matine Night. Seats on _sals Wauregan House ice’s on Thursda; 9 o'clock. Cars to all points after performames, nov2id November 25th, at FEATURE PICTURE: THE COWBOY MILLIONAIRE. STORY OF THE FRENCH REVOLU« o . MISS FLORENCE WOLCOTT, Prima Donna Soprano, in Selected Songs. Matinee, Ladies and Children, novisa Music. NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teacher of Plano, Central Bulldtg Room 43, CAROLINE H. THOMPSON Teacher of Music 46 Washington Street. Lessons giv the home of the lin. F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect St, Norwich, 04 A. W. JARVIS is the Leading Tuner im Eastern Connecticut. 15 Clairmount, Mvey Tel. 511, "Phone 518-5. JAMES F. DREW Piano Tuning and Repairiag Best V'ork Only. “Phone 413-3, 18 Peridne Awe sept23a The Norwich Wieks! & Brass Go, chandallo::m'.::h""’frm. and such things Refinished. €9 to 87 Chestnut St. Norwicl, Cona octéd ‘l Mill Rem by 1 West Matn S¢. All kinds of yard goods, the finest rem- nants, pleces in dress goods, silks, oot ods, at very jow pri AL housand yards of ':;’o P @ for next two weeksy s - prios 19c, % in and sea them MILL REMNANT STORE, 13d JOSEPH BRADFORD, Book Binde Blank Books Niade and Ruled to Order, 108 BROADWAY. Telephone 263 octivd A T ON FUR ONTS The most genuine Fur for the lowest figares in New London County at L. L. CHAPMAN’S Bath Street Harn and Carriage Repository, nov2zdaw WHEN you want to put your ness. hefora the public. thers ix 0 m. dlum betier (ban thredgh the advertise ing columna of The

Other pages from this issue: