Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
S . ® tion price, IZ¢ a week; S0¢ Zntered at the Poatoffiey st Norwleb, 8., as second-class matte Telephone o-nn"' e ety . 480, Foilatin Bunsr Ponen, 420, 7, llatin Job Office, 36r6. imantic Office, Room 32, Murra: Bullding. Talephone, 210. ¢ Norwich, Saturday, Dec. 4, 1909. 'l'ile Circulation of The Bulletin. H The Bulletin has the largest clr- culation of any paper in Easterd Connecticut, and from three to four times larger than that of anmy In} Norwich. It is delivered to over 2,000 of the 4,063 houses n Nor- wich, and read by ninety-thres per i cent. of the people. In Windham § it 1s delivered to over 900 houses, ? in Putnam and Danielson to over 1,100, ana in al! of these places is considered the locel daily. Eastern Connecticut has forty- nine towns, one hundred and sixty- five post office districts and forty- one rural free delivery routes. The Bulletin 1g sold In every town and on all of the R. F. D. routes in Easterm Connecticut. CIRCULATION 1901, average .e.ceceucsrenes 44123 -5,920% 1908, average esesassesessasencsasansssnsssasasaane THE S8IXTY-FI The first session of the Sixty-first congress will convene at Washington mext Monday and Speaker Cannon will fiave the insurgents on his hands and 4he country will be deeply interested 1n the outcome of the situation. What #e will do with Parsons and Fowler, who have savagely attacked the #peaker personelly, remains to be seen. It is now claimed at the west that morals before economics will be the word in Washington this winter; and 4t is pointed out that among the mat- ters which may be Inquired Into are fhe foflowing: . Charges by Parsens of collusion be- #waen New York republicans and dem- In election of Bpeaker Cannon mservation imbroglio between Bal- Wnger and Pinchot. Operations of Sugar trust in viola- tlon of law. Customs frauds and responsibility therefor. Merger of telegraph and telephone porporations. Operation of law imposing tax on oleomargarine and charges of whole- sale evasion of tax. Charges of laxity in enforcement of federal civil service law. Expenditures of executive branch of government with & view to retrench- ment. Charges against Judges McPherson mnd Phillips in connection with Mis- wourl freight rate ltigation. Andl this is not all, for important rajlroad legisatton and the reform of army and navy methods are among the things which promise to occupy the congreesional mind. Tt may be possi- Dble thet the tariff will bacome a hot dsmge. Congrees !s not reassémbling as a happy family, and the contentions up- on all subjects are likely to be mark- ed by ‘more or less excitement. IN MEMORY OF JOHN BROWN. On December 20, 1910, the 50th an- Wversary of the execut; @rown will be memor morthern cities, 'as -a -recognition of a brave if misguided man. John Brown, by his defiance of what Be considered unjust laws, stirred up Bhe fifteen slave states as they were Rever stirred before, when he went X seizod the arsenal, ex- Keclln' the slaves to rise and to start revolution in the mame of liberty which would have no parallel in mod- prn times. His forces failed him, but Ris spirit never yielded. He made no mttompt to escape and in the name of Fod defled the goverament and all Eno upheld the-enslavement of human eings. Today John Brown's treason less condemnable and his courage ore magnificent than ever in the pyes of liverty-loving people. He was part of the impending contlict and emed to realize it, for he said, while iwalting execution: “I believe that ® sealing of. my testimony before Fod and man with my blood will do r more to further the cause to which have earnestly devoted myself than Anything else I.have done in my life. » . . I am convinced that I am orth infinitely more on the gallows an I could be anywhere else.” And phat inspiration to the soldiers of Yhe civil war was the hymn sung in il union camps, “John Brown’s body lles a-mouldering in the ground, but is soul goes marching on!” ‘Why should not the north honor a man who dled that his fellowmen piight enjov greater freedom? His in- Rense spirit and incomparable’ valor bhave put all his breaches of the law out of consideration. The' secretary of the navy is hoping 1o get rid of the spasmodic increase of Jabor and sudden shrinkage in the navy yards of the country ‘preceding and following molitical campaigns. 1f Speaker Cannon had seen his mway to guard the people’s interests more and epecial interests less, he mould now be receiving praise instead ©f condemnation. e et 1t is now stated at Chicago that the _date Mr. Harriman left $149,000,000. His fellowmen helped -make it but ‘they were not included 4n the distribu- tion, fA SR Talk is getting cheaper all the time, for the telephone companies realize | the necemity for meeting the people ‘alfway. So 1ong as men of recognized talligonice will contribute grudgingly 25 cents for ‘e’huuh work and give 5 to promote a prize fight, they cannet object to the title of “clvilized heathen” wiich has clung to us since the late W. H. H. Murray gave voice to this arraignment. No enterprise of the chureh, how- ever imporcant or humane, calls forth with ease a halt-million of money; but we are told by the news d that Judging from the bids offered for the Jeftries- Johnson fight that the pugilists may battle for a purse and picture privileges netting more than $5600,000, for a brutal display of sclence for a few minutes—a performance which never yet added any good to the life of one of its patrons. As an exhibit of America’s advance in morals or taste, this is not. 50 su- perior to the Mexican bull fighting or the Cuban or Porto Rican eock fighting, which we prohibit as a dis- credlt to any people who profess o be Christian or even humane. ‘We are not what we profess to be, but what we put out our money gen- erously to promote. —_— A MEASURE OF THE MAN. ‘We have a judicial opimion which seems to show that the measure of a man depends upon what he may do with his pay envelope when it comes into his hands. It is supposed that every man has the first right with the pay envelope; but labor unions, in the interest of protection, have elaimed the right to open envelopes to see whether the union scale was being homored, where a collusion between employer and employe was suspected; and in a New York court recently a wife asked to have an order issued in A malntenance case compelling the husband to pass his pay envelope to her unopened. The judge sald that “to require a husband to turn over his weekly pay envelope unopened to his wife would amount to tyranny of the sort most dangerous to the per- petuation of the home'as a sacred In- stitution; but” added the judge, “the husband who voluntarily turns his pay envelope over to his wife, if she Is frugal and sagacious, is the best cit- izen in New York.” ‘The Bulletin is inclined to think that Magistrate Breen meant to say “the best husband,” for the best citizenship does not turn upon a little thing of this kind, The wife who deserves such confidence and trust has a sorry time avith a husband who does not know the value of such a helpmate, or the henor to use his partner right. WOULD IMPROVE MAN. The surgeons have found out that man is not the noblest work of Ged. Viewed by a master surgeon, with his natural abnormalities and physical handicaps, man is a victom to poor structure and does not live out more than half his days at best. One New England surgeon says that about six feet of @ man's Intestines are useless and that his life would be greatly pro- longed by their removal; another is of the opinion that it the toes of men and women were straightcned they would have a mere graceful gait; and a third points out that larger jaws and teeth would produce stronger and bandsomer facial lines. A western ed- itor, reading of these possibilitics of mprovement through surgery, says: “There are moments of anguish when everyone would like to have all his ‘innards’ taken away. The knock of the down-cast specialist &t the front door would be accepted then as a yisitation of Providence. But peo- ple’ when 'unafflicted by indigestion hold their alimentary system In too @reat prize to permit of any tinkering whatsoever. The mere thought of the y brings shivers. The graceful gait is excellent, but as it is only our meighbors who walk ungracefully where is the material for operation? As for enlarging the jaws, that is open to serious debate. Not everyone chews gum or eats hardtack or as- pires for political office, Tn fact a proposal to restrict the facial cav- ity might gain more advocates than its deepening.” The master surgeons have discov- ered that the pendix and colon should e cut out and thrown away; and that the stom- ach could be spared as well as not. It is claimed that the surgically fm- proved man might live for a century and a half. WHERE HANDS ARE LIBERAL. EDITORIAL NOTES. It is fortunate for Great Britain that she is able to do business on her credit for ‘a while, anyway. we are told that sane and shepping is jus essential and safe Yourth of July as Satan does not object to being point- ed out as father-in-law to all the trusts in existence. He approves their cute ways. Happy thought for today: The young man who uses perfumed sta- tionery is open to suspicion that he is a mollycoddle. Mrs. Pankhurst does not belleve in women forming helping hand societies, as they look best right on the front line of endeavor. In the coming six weeks the politi- cal battle In England will excel the most _exciting people’s contest in the world of late years. By contraries matters progres Rallroad Commission Doolittle Is a man who has a well-established repu- tation for doing much. Butter 1s getting so high that oleo- margerine has no reason to fret about its future. It appears to be sure of getting into good socict Tt was the Boston Transcript dis- covered that the young women who are called belles are waiting for some young man to ring them. ‘Those who are advising that Can- non be asked to resign as speaker of the house say that it better be done by long-distance telephone. The people grow, but they grow slowly, say some philosophers. Yes, we have noticed that they have their seasons of frost and thrift. The British. house of lords has not yet reached the point where it does not -expect the people to excuse it for booting the housa of commons. When it comes io uniform divores laws, says the Chicago News, we should like to see the one that d vorces municipal business from po tics. Most every young minister and old ‘bachelor is looking over the collection of fancy slippers and wondering how many will be added to them at Chris! ! November and December are tha hilarity. months of the year for the face with their festivals and their feasts; but Time changes them so that to youth and age they have a different front, To youth they aré filled with cy—to age they are filled with memorjes—pleasant memories, which, like the beautiful flowers which have faded, have left a durable impression. Age puts into these months the joy youth gets out of them—but age can- not kug in them the pleasure it once found thepe—or the cheerful faces, or the singers with thelr pretty songs, or the mothers and fal with their graclous remembrances, or the broth- ers and sisters and friends who used to picture months to ag 80 by the merry days of youth—p| tures that were and scenes which may be renewed in the borderland, and which are a solace to declining years. | received a letter not long since which referred to a man who had fin- ished his earthly career, and in which the information was imparted that “he was not a religious man ” I do not know that I ever read a more disturb- ing sentence than that. The writer, of course, thought he was mot; but what did he know about it? It came over me that some men we call profane might be more religious than some who think it good policy to perfunctorily keep up a religlous appearance. Re- ligion is not a pose and a parade, but a matter of feeling and doing, and there is good fellowship in the real thing, not an icy interest in one's fel- lowman. ~ Doing kindnesses because one thinks he must to be saved, not because he loves to, is the cheapest kind of goodness on earth and the thinnest. This man who “was not re- ligious” sacrificed his life teaching his fellowmen how to live right and to es- cape the affictions which come through ignorance, and I reckon he was as religious as those who declare such a man is not. The other day we received from “J. C. E” a souvenir postal card of the mouth of the Shetucket river where it directing our at- of “the old guard” formed by the ledge and the abutment of the old bridge on the right bank of the river on which the westerly end of the covered rallroad bridge used to rest—a better f: than old man of the mountains” or “the face of the man in the moon.' Never having heard of it before it is a real discovery to “J. C. E,” but*my attention has been called to it before. Yet it had got out of mind. It iy more prominent upon this Reid & Hughes Co. card than 1 ever before saw And by turning the photo up endwise the land and woods on the west bank of the Thames form a champagne bottie—not that Norwich takes to the bottle more than other cities of its size, but because when this was made a champagne country it beauty was enhanced by these receding wooded hills on which the aborigines found bowers of beautw and the wild birds and animals = home. The truest representative Satan ever had on earth is Old John Barleycor: He lures all who make his acquaini apce from happiness to misery. The man who smiles with him will weep with sorrow later on. John Barley- corn has landed many men in a prison cell and not a few on the gallows. He doesn’t know any road but the road to ruin, and he never advises any one to stop at the half-way house. He makes half the world weep and a great part of it mourn. He puts vice where virtue is and laughs when in- nocent and helpless children come to want. His magic consists of chang- ing men to sots and women to hags; he delights to put misery in the place of happiness; and his only ambition is to make the world stagger. No good can be said of him. The devil himself would be a failure if he kept Old John's company too long. The rear platform crowsl upon a trolley car are a recognized nuisance to the women whé have to board the car and to the conductor who has to collect the fares, and not a few find it a convenient method of sliding off Dbefore the conductor gets to them and fare. Having rode there T can really find any de- , T feel qualified to call at- tention to wha e cientious trolley éonducte a nuls- ance. It is no ant for a lady to have to cro ough a lot of rear-platformers t into” the car or to get out are times when this condition canr be helped, course, for a car aisle crowded with strap hangers is no more agreeable to ladies than crowded platforms. This could he aveided by the company if they knew when crowds are going to ‘e out. but there is really no way to anticipate such times, and there are times when all the cafs are In serv- ice ‘and it cannot be avoided, hence is not an offence We have always regarded a mother- -law as a necessity and have never with ‘those who joke | 2 She is neither a joke nor a conundrum. She would be more popular with .sons-in-law if she did not soon acquaint them with the fact that they do not know it all, and vo'- unteer to teach her daughter how o manage a husband, or the husband how to make his mate cherish and obey him. It takes two motiers-in- law to 'm the right and left wings of a family, and the family cannot be complete without them. They are the | pair who beat a full hand-—they're true trumps. A mother-in-law never wrote a book on “How to B2 Happy Though Married,” for it takes a spins- ter to direct along such lines. They have the recipes for making zhow- chow and for finding peace or pare- goric when the Arst baby is cutting its teeth. They're a help { the hour of perplexity and sometimes perplex- ity itself. i What do you suppose the reason is that peaple do not do as we think they should do? If they only would, how | much happler life would be—for us. We do not know that it would be any hapofer for them. We only think that it might be, and we are as liable to be wrong_as right in this conclusion. If half the world should be given their way it seems to me as if the other haif would have something to laugh at all of the time. We are so human that we sometimes pray for conditions which would upset us if our prayers were answered and we hgd them sud- denly thrust upon, us. What we win we are entitled to, and what we long for would mot be worth having if it came easy. What we think others should do is an assumption usually that needs a foundation, and it is lucky for us that it is never realized. ms paradoxical to say that idle ; y is always busy; but it has in our day won fame, for ‘bothering the busy man by calling him to the tele- phone. Curiosity will prompt u find out something of no special u us and to work more persistently to do it than we ever worked for a dollar we needed. We become curlous about mat- ters which should not.concern us, and when we fin t a batch of them we become gossipy. This is the way a great people get $o much to talk mbout that is of so little consequence, and so much that is not so. Curiosity bas got more than one fox In a trap, and more than one dog in the pound. A sure cure for this is the habit of glving strict attention to affairs which concern us. A good many years ago I g:t curlosity into my pocket and have ipt it there ever since—get the best of it or it will get the best of you. Good behavior may be-a back num~ “I'm glad T ahead of Mrs. D= son ar om.".vr'-nlrkod Mrs. Benson at the breakfast table. “She was S e S t. shoj 5 ynrr: older when she came home. Last - the “Geory you are not ying slightest atiention fo what 1say. Put 1 want to wille you. ik down that paper and listen.” “Go on, my dear. look at the headiines “Well, last year when I came home | from battling with the crowds the day before Christmas she sald she couldn’t see how a woman of intelligence could e her presents till the last moment. pose she meant it for a compli- FPBut it sounded—George! “Yes, my dear. . “You hivent heard s word I said. “You misjudge me. I heard you dis- tinctly.” “What did I say?” “Um. You said Mrs. Simpson was a woman of intelligence and did her shopping the day before Christmas. “I did not!” Benson put the paper aside. He re- cognized lme danger signal—molsture in his wife's eyes. “Now tell me about it” he sald. “Talk fast, so 1 won't miss my train.” “ just can't bear people who always do the right thing and make ouf that everybody else is wrong, can you?" began his wife. Ffeaning Mrs. Simpson? Go on.” “She thinks it is smart to do every~ thing ahead of time and then sit back and criticise others. 1t will make her less conceited when she Jearns that my Christmas shopping was all done last summer in Europe. I've been just crazy to show her the things I got—but T dian’t. She’ll be green with envy, for they are so different from what she can get here, She acted last year as if 1 tried to copy her things. Aren’t you glad, dear, b:{ll“ myou ‘g’on't have any Christmas’ bills to pay?’ “Yes, my dear, for I resigned myself to my fate last summer and what you did in the present-buying line was a deep and abiding sufficiency.” “You know 1 saved a& lo:hot ‘money by getting the things over there.” "efou Nl'm‘ to count the duty and he shipping expenses.” Pixven counting tgem, the things were cheap. Isn't it lovely to have presents _different from the common run? Those beads I got in Rome are gems. And the lace! To say nothing of the French embroidered—-" “Those shops took a lot of our time when we might have been seeing— “If that isn’t just like a man! Wasn't ber, but he was never known to get anyone into trouble. He never was known to trespass upon private prem- ises or to paint a town red. Red is not his favorite color for neckties or confections. He knows the proprieties and observes them, and he ought to be found in a fire company or a lew and order league oftener than he is. He isn't found In church as often as he should be. He has a permanent abode somewhere, but it 1sn't swell or dilapi- datcd. Perhaps it is so commonplace that it is easily overlooked. He might attract attention if he was in fashion, but he is above style and not below ambition. The worst that may be said of good behavior is that he lacks verve, whatever that may be. He is safe to harness to and will land us safely without going a mile a minute. SUNDAY MORNING TALK ANOTHER BATCH OF HEROES. I always like to look over the list of awards from the Carnegle Hero fund to men and women in different parts of the country. The very reading of the names of persons and circum- stances creates a series of imspiring pitcures. The latest selection, for ex- ample, includes fifty whose meritorious and gallant behavior at critical mo- ments fairly entitled them to prizes aggregatong $3,000. A large number rescued others from drowning. One ventured iInto the burning hold of a vessel and brought back to the deck unconscious_workmen injured by an explosion. One sought to detach a fel- low lineman from a dangerous electric wire. Several snatched grown people or little children from the railway tracks in season to escape the on- coming Jocomotives. And of the en- tire number of fifty heroes fourteen lost their lives while performing their valorous deeds. . Fortunately their relatives are not overlooked in the distribution of re- wards. But something more tha nan excit- ing chapter out of contemporaneous American life is sketched in outline by such a thrilling report as this. It starts several Interesting trains of thought. What made them all ready to risk, and in some cases to lose their lives in behalf of others? Had they been doing this sort of thing right along, or were they sudden and un- usnal outburits of the herole spirit? Will they continue to be heroes in days to come, or will some of them, elated by their honors and prizes be- come vain and degenerate in other ways _correspondingly? _ Would we have done as they did had we been in their places? Were they most of them just ordinary men and women like ourselves, en moderate salaries, with no great pretensions to piety? If they had up to the moment of their he- roic action been considered rather commonuplace individuals will this one bright deed put them on a pedestal for all time in the eyes of their friends and neighbors? 1If possibly some of them, up to this time, have had a rather checkered -career, will one brave act redeem their past? T have asked more questions than I have time or space or wit to answer. But I must ask one more for which I have a ready reply. Did they do it for the Carnegle award or to be seen of men? No, indeed. Not one of them was thus actuated. This is my helief, though I have no absolute specific proof. But their heroism would be robbed of all its glory had ¥t been in the case of any measured, calculating service. Who can think for an instant that those brave miners at Cherry, Ill, who regardless of themselves, went down into that foul pit in the hope of saving their suffocating companions had any other motive than the desire to save useful lives on whose daily earnings other lives depended? The charm and fragrance that in- here in a heroic act lies in the utter unconsciousness and disinterestedness of the one who does it. The motor- man who told me the other cold night that the reason why he wore no over- coat was that he wanted his sister to have an education and the “old folks" to have a few extra comforts now winter is at hand. was not posing or asking for my sympathy or alms or those of anyone else. He is a self. respécting independent American. citi- zen and T wormed the facts out of him @ who. measures up to the duty of the moment and who does it for others i3 the her Carnegle award or no Carnegie award. Our chance at that hero fund is very slight. Drowninz people do not come OUr Way very oft- en. The fires are usually out before we arrive on the scene, But the chance to be a real hero comes within our reach daily. THE RARSON, ne; “Then it can’t amount to much. You :u-nln‘ ‘;nd g me with one of one in the block who can touch you "'.‘,;‘_“tm“ o sband! it comes to looks, she can’t touch a little woman I know. latest crime?” bought downtown yesterday and—and then T was going to show her mine that 1 got abroad and—and— by the probably couldn’t appreclate—" mean thing has bought some of the same things I have—got them yeste: day In the—the Her string of Venetian beads Is iden- tical with mine and—and her lace— ohi Guorge, ler lace is a better bar- gain her a thing I had!”—Chicago News. “Judith Zaraine” in London. new drama by C. M. S. McLellan, the author of “Leah Kleschna.” return to the stage in the spring. She has recovered from her long iliness. #if fikes i .. 888 i SYESR £ $E388EF i ok i 9 i o i E # £ ok i A e Rl i i | i l £ i hose ! ! There isn't any iz 2 hat horrid Simpson woman. the meanest thing— 3 Now, what's her “I went over to ses the things “Just like her not to be impressed bargains you bought. She “I didn’t show them to her. The bargain basement: I was so mad I wouldn’t show Louise Waller 1s soon to produce It is a tle Marion Manola says that she will i i # 5e i sgi % H g i i il E i : ing diminutive lightful name, translated, means “Lit- Christmas,” and comemmorates the day upon which the prima donna was born. = i | i ik = w 8 ziEQ ] 3§ gg H E F & : g 2 5 & R 4 i is | m standing, some their appointments amon and women from the 1 ing always as head sistant. Together they worked, these two, for the love of science and in the brated his 76th birthday. For $ markets as they do here. FOUR. 39 Heavy Box Overcoats 53 Neck-fit Utility Coats manufacturer. House Block 16.50, $18 and $20 DVERGORTS Our Special ONE-DAY Clothing Sales are at- tracting as much attention in the wholesale Because it has become known — that at our low prices — we sell in One Day as many garments as are usually sold in TODAY WE PLACE ON SALE AT TWELVE-FIFTY 190 Overcoats — COMPRISING — value $18.00 value $20.00 28 Great Coats, 52 inches long, value $18.00 36 Black Kersey Overcoats 18 Scotch Tweed Overcoats value $20.00 16 Gray Me'ton Overcoats These garments are the product of a leading Each one of them is strictly pure wool and guaranteed for two years. value $16.50 value $18.00 § CHARLES DILLINGHAW'S Newest and Biggest Musical Comedy Hit WITH SAME SENSATIONAL CAST THAT DISTINGUISHED I All Spring Run at the Knickerbocker Theatre, New York Its All Summer Run at the Studebaker Theatre, Chicags and its All Autumn Stay at the Tremont Theatrs, Bosten THE CANDY SHOP —— ORIGINAL SENSATIONAL CAST — GOMPANY OF 100 —INCLUDING— Henry Clay Barnabee, the former| WILLIAM ROCK, MAUD FULTON, FRANK LALOR, MRS, ANNIE YEA- star of the Bostonians, has just cele- | yuNg MAY BOLEY, HENRY MANLEY, FLORENCE MORRISON, D, L. DON, DOUGLAS STEVENSON, EDMUND LAWRBNCE, DOUGLAS BRON. STON, MWLLE RAYO, LILLIAN RICE, ANGIE WEIMERS, and otherg, be- eides THE SURPRISE BEAUTY CHORUSES, including the FAMOUS HELTER SKELTER GIRLS. Prices 25c, 35¢c, 50c, 75¢, $1.00, $1.50 Free list entirely suspended. jeats on sale at the Box Office, Wauregan House, on Tuesday, Decepfier s th, at 9 o' Gars to all points after performance. dectd AUDITORIUM 3 Shows Daily WEEK OF <2.30, 7 and 8.45 DEC. commDY Conr orrontsrs WELCH & MAITLAND TRATSR" ue may FRANCIS WOOD wirs T moors oD e Mr. & Mrs. BILLY BARRY T, riysmmen MISTAKE CHARACTER Sivcen " RALPH WHITEREAD moxorocisr ———eee e — LILLIAN MORRELLE .In Illustrated and High Olass Sengs Evenings Reserved Fictures changed_Monday, Wednesday and Friday L i FEATURE PIOTURE: “SEALED INSTRUCTIONS.”, STORY OF THE WHITE HOUSH, MISS FLORENCE WOLCOTT, Prima Donna Soprano, in Seleated -ua:| The Vaughn Foundry Co. ~ IRON CASTINGS furnished promptly. Large stock of patterns. 0. 11 to 25 Ferry Street janzzd T, F. BURNS, R Heating and Plumbing,| b 92 Franklin Street. et 3 A MUSIC. . S F. GIBSON [Tin and Sheet Metal Worker. Agent for Richard=on and Boynton Furnaces. 85 West Main Street, Norwich, Conn dec7d Floral Designs and Cut lowers For All Occasions. GEDULDIG’S, Telephone $63. 77 Codar Strest. Jyika CHARLES D. GEER Dirsctor of {‘-’:;.'."’:":':':'afi: Private Instruction Studio, rosm @ Ceontral Building. nov27d NELLIE 5. HOWIE, Teacher of Plane, - Room 48, ntral Bulléisg CAROLINE H. THOMPSON Teacher of Musiq 46 Washington Street. H, BALCOM, Teacher of Piane. 29 Thames § Lessons given at my r the home of the pupil. S jited at Schawenka Conser n. QUALITY in work should always be considered, espectally when it costs no mere than the inferfor kind. Skilled men are employed by us. Our prices tell the whole stor. STETSON & YOUNG may27d AHERN BROS,, General Contractors 63 BROADWAY “Phone 713. f 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 wark at short notice. oct2a A. W. JARVIS is the Leading Tuner in Eastern Connecticut. 'Phone 518-5, 15 Clairmount Awe sept22d JAMES F. DREW Piano Tuning and Repairiag Best Viork Only, Tel. 511, jun3a Something |memges o fekine e for the EIOMI€ 1 yyyis il & s o, WE ARE OFFERING A FEW SUG- Tablewars, GESTIONS. 1f you have money to spend for Xmas buy something for the home. The rich, the poor, and those in moderate clroumstances do all concede that Chandeliers, Yacht Trimmings and such things Refinished. € to 87 Chastout oct there, is nothing more suitable for | Remova . " 3 ” s Main holiday gifts. Visit our sto 3 we I Sen 20 T Nl o ¥ will help you solve the always difficult [ nants, pieces In dress goods, silks, problem “what shall I give Shea & Burke at very *r'wo ‘thousand’ y 1.00 p e a v INANT STORE. MILL REW a4 0L Went Maln S¢. NEWMARKEY MOTEL, 715 Boaviell Ave. First-class wih - wanes, liguers end cl ordas, e Ko S AR SRS D ot e S S it S R e S S .