Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, December 31, 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)

@erwich Bolletic and Coufied, GTON. ] the artist and state, the other day, did more by his 5 56 : Al i En el . y " 3 ‘public with the wild life and the mil- A - . : . s . g itgry life of the west than any other 9 - < 5 American painter or sculptor, As the Toledo Blade points out, he “drew a prairie pony that looked like a pony, pictuged an Indian such as anyone, who ever saw an Indian might recog- tion price, 13¢ a yreek; S0e a & year. Entered at th Postolfice at I(or,lcl. n the neéxt couch., “It isn't 1 - ds 5 ™11 r Sy : Conn., as second-class matter. . were too stout. I have a large Onliss nize, instead of a figure from' the f course, but not an ounce oo 1, B 6 al- she Bulletm 1) , 480. Leatherstocking tales, painted the my husband says. H: i Bv\:ll:tln “l'umfi Yooms, 35-3. cowboy as he was, not as some un- ire fine mfivrvm ,jn‘ Bulietin Job Office, 35-6. Willimantic Office, Roow 3. Murray Bullding. Telephone, 210. Werwich, Friday, Dec. 31, 1909, i i The Bulletin has the largest cir- culation of any paper In Easters 2,000 of the 4,053 houses in Nor- § wich, and road b: ninety-three per cent. of ihe people In Windham it is delivered to over 900 houses, in Putnam and Danlelson to over 1,100, and in al’ of these places it traveled artist in Brookline, Mass, imagined he ought to be.” who made an end of the conventional, imaginative art, and brought to pub- lic attention wild riders of every kind as they really appeared. He founded a new school of art. There was never but one Whistler, so there is not like- the future may know how the voy- ageur du bois dressed, how appeared the bushy haired trapper, the trader, the prospector, the cavalry soldier of may study his historical pictures and feel certain that thus the country was when La Ealle’s canoes were paddled into the Maumee, when the motley followers of Anthony Wayne felled the timbers for Fort Deflance, when It was he 1 the "'Well, 1 would” interrupted the red ‘woman. “Of all atrocious things baired “ in this world, it is fat!” She eyed the large woman and continued: “When I found that I was five above I came down at once to take @ course of baths, e sud roasted and been pounded until I've “Well, I oonfess I'm fat—just plain fat,” commented a second.stout wom- ps were black and blue. Now I'm g rolling. “Rolling?” asked the pretty little woman. “What's than?” “Haven't you . tried rolling yet?” chorused the others. “Why, you can reduce a pound In four days if you roll : 3 : g Eggg §Efat first. “Good-by,” she sang back, mocking- get first before she is through with her rubbing. Mary is the best masseuse in the place and’ that person always gives her a double tip, I'm positive, to get an extra long freatment. I'm in a great hurry. A very exclusive luncheon at 1 o'clock, and I will have to take some- i i g E | E% sors and proc tentions but e fifty cents. T must of the old wooden cho) ‘these comeny skit—PARSONS & STEWART—iack & sacx ly to be more than one Remington.|jogt three are simply ire () | The Blade speaks truly when it says: | dinguet Of course, this sea It the : BN The C “launn l "H:mln.lt:nn:el:ronlcfid,tm that are | so lun?fu“:g: m;lelg;" ;&&:’; En:l: their rumored HEAVY m-'n'n. ’ : r l'he Buuefin. passing, or have now passed, so that | slight friarge: hp o T price ,; AITKIN BROS,—5'055% scers one strina—MUSICAL IRViING—vioumast a.-m_ Reserved Seats 20c the pl tilled his bit of patch be- | for fifteen minutes night and morning, |one else!” R i hs £ is coneidered the local dally. twaeel:zotf::r %fi:k and the Enanaclns and it's the surest—" e ng e e fl E Bastern Connecticut has forty- 3| . ;ncva) forest.” fil&t ¥rn;‘ not’u-yl to rag:c.,-- sl The u;tol:t ‘woman cau m‘:fi‘e‘} b:: m nine towns, one hundred and sixty- ‘A full catalogue of Remington's ng to reduce! en why | for a sl rest An £ five post office districts and forty- §| drawings would prove him to have munl;m; o 50, She. Snres :l:t’.mum !‘;Bmm"{";‘:"m”""m 2’.:.“1': with m one 'Wo'seate!' 3 one rural free delivery routes. been among the most industrious of “I've always been thin,” meekly re-|such a hurry for a luncheon engage- 1l “ The Bulletin is eold in every town and on all of the R. F. D. routes in Eastern Connecticut. CIRCULATION workers. Possession of all the repro- | ductions of that work wculd be be- yond price. A GOVERNO cLus. The name indicates that this might sponded the little woman, “but of late a steak | bow] I've had rheumatism, so my physician advised Turkish baths for ma."" “Oh!™ chorused the envious ones. “It must be hard not to be able to wear evening dress,” said the first large woman, at last. “Of course, if ment, why was she ord smothered in onions, with a double or- der of fried potatoes? fat woman wanted to reduce, why did she order a meal of sweets and choco. late? If the red-haired woman didn’ care particularly to lose more than If the second|€ at low figures. L. L. CHAPMAN, r an. *Tve dieted and wal taken at home. Connagtionh, 858 from :m;' 2 ‘M:n | days before the Spa war, thé|active and passive a«clm‘::ul T | ‘The cat!” snorted the first fat wom- TEO first * — THE MORRELLE S| HIGH CLASS — tmes larger than tha any freighter and the scores of types con- |too tired to move, I've gone without|an. “She knew that. I was trying to m“fl(*‘“m T ey Norwieh. It is livered to OVET 2| n.0teq with the cattle trade. One | d rt. I've had massage until my and now it will be hours | Fictures changed Monday, Wodnesday and FEATURE PIOTURE: A Trap for Santa Claus GREAT BIOGRAPH SUCORSS. Master Harry Noonan, 8-20 Street, Norwich, Conn. t be a political organization, but it is|one doesn’t go about socially it doesn’t | two pounds, why was she so careful to 1 Bath y y infl i not. ’:‘hen are governors besides | much matter, I suppose.” nlmwfi'om a reducing diet? The lit- dec29daw - IN SELECTED SONG PROGRAMMY. 1905, average. governors of states. This idea of or- | , The red-haired woman winked at the {tle woman smiled to hersei—snere 1906, average. s 559 1907, -vunn..............,l I 79 ganizing self-governors and binding them by pledge and fine not to chew, smoke or drink to_ excess, originated in Battle Creek, Mich, and there is no doubt that this kind of a governor would be a better governor of a state. Following is the club pledge: dazed little lady. “My husband would object seriously if I should pro; wearing anything else than decollete every evening for dinn, the Jarge woman continued. W lmarmln extensively.” wi work,” whispered thued-huml wom- T ager she does her own house- | groan were some compensations in being lhnger. She at the secales In goi out to m second fat woman en.rlz fully consulting it. “T've gained four ounces,” the latter ed, “and I eat nothing at alll I am afraid T'll not be able to take any were a boy. At all events, unless Were' s gunerstion age, she will try. were @ eration w! 3 The uur:u.rur .:ffin that. Home haircutting died out, not be- cause of among the juvenile THE RUBBER STORE RECOMMEND THEIR Matinee, Ladies and Children, novisa Boyle’s So Academy of Skating : H : : | B an to her thin nej “Look at her | rhythmic dancin, nastic or other- Qua H . Th‘“‘;:‘d";i'“" '“:!m:‘;;h af:‘;: finger natls!” * 15, at this rate ihis winter! Would | wearers é S P recelved '"hl::.:; GWdyeal' “ly : o Feptyl Khapgs “Well,” sighed the second fat wom- |you like to buy my ticket at half|Scorn). DBecause the sdopt In Frochlichkelt Hall, 3 December 23.......... malt beverages to———————ordinary | an, “I can't even look well in a low- | price?’—Chicago News. . the gold standard or nmm' of that H y #| portions of either (not both) or: : S ; sort_made money so plentiful that a Bools Taiman St }-lnmummn ssesssesssnssssseseensasasesd | Of each and ;i hpl:;tlomf :: i PR TR ; 3 e lq:;trter hohdm no bigger than :. uddmc. 0"“ Toda d- 230 tobacco in any form eacl y o they get round to the or dam- |Is not a sl of health an pe.— her pped hatr o< 3 hours, or payment of $1 for each por- | ages. Ohio State fu,,“mll twenty-five cents seemed, after all, y b TIME FOR A HALT. The country is in a mood just now to admire Secretary Ballinger, who stands for the people instead of for the seekers of special privileges, and is not afraid to say so. In his address to the University club of New York, the other evening, he sald: “The people of this country have lost vastly more than they can ever regain by gifts of public property, forever and without charge, to men who gave nothing In return. It is true that we have made superb ma- terial progress under this system, but it is not well for us to rejoice too freely in the slices the special tion used in excess as an alternative. “I, the undersigned, agree to the rules and regulations herein defined, and upon signing my name do solemnly affirm that I will strictly, honestly and completely obey them. “This covenant is with my Higher Self and with the members of the Governors* club, and rests solely, but sufficiently, upon my Sacred Per- sonal Honor” If all the fi)lnen have “sacred per- sonal honor,” this scheme ought to work well, but this is a quality rarer than it ought to be, and it is too oft- en found on the weakest side of a man. It is a noble idea. Temperance in all things is the direct way for a A storm that could do a balf-million dollars’ worth of damage along the coast of Newfoundland must be ad- mitted to be the severest for half d century. The tramps never come around to ask for & handout until the Hebrew has been there and earned his money for ¢learing the way to the back door of snow. FACTS ABOUT FIRES. Census Bureau's Interesting Statistics Relative to Fire Laddies and Losses. ASSESSMENT OF CITY PROPERTY. | ba! « U. 8. Census Bureau Bullstin Gives In- teresting Comparisons for 1907. Washington, D. C. Dec. 30, 1909.~ The assessed valuation of property, the baslg of assessment, and the taxes d In 158 cities in the United States ‘h, in 1907, had an estimated pop- ulation of over 80,000 each, are consid- ered in United States Census Bulletin 1 prepared by Division Chief B. H. ng, under the supervision of Dr. Le Grand Powers, chief statistician in charge of the official statistics of cities, who will refer it to Director Durand. The bulletin states that the assessed valuation of property in & city bedrs a reasonable enough for cutting a boy's ir. But if the tariff goes up to fifty cents a haircut, mother will embark in the business once more and remain in it until another financial revolution ac- curs to make a half dollar seem no bigger than a quarter. There are gloomy days ahead, days that will try the soul of every boy old enough to have his hair cut, but not old enough to earn the money to pay for jt—Waterbury Republican. Means good heaith, and Hood's Rubber (Fells Arelies Women'’s and Children’s Money saved on Men’s, Rubbers. every pair. Gloves and Mittens, 24c to $3.00. Working Coats, $1.38. Hot Water Bottles, 75¢ up. Alling Rubber Co.,' 74 Main St., Norwich, 158 Main 8t, New London. and skating will continue until 1480 p. m. NO INTERMISSION. Best Skates and Best Music. Rinks in Bridgeport, New Haven, Hartfesd, Springfield and Worocester. dec3ld MUSIC. NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teacher of Plane, Central Bufldings Room 48, CAROLINE H, THOMPSON Teacher of Music Washington, D. Cj, Dee. 30, 1909.— | ciose relation to Indebtdness, and com- 15 46 Washil n Street interests have given up from the great | Man to realize what the command.|mne number of city employes of the | parisons between the indebtedness of| Sarsaparilia has anunapproached Wholesale (sir..) Refail ngto loaf of the property of all the people.” | “Know thyself!” means. No man Is|fire departments in the 158 cities treat- | different cities in the same state based | record as a blood-purifier. ‘There is nothing the matter with the ring of this sentiment. It will capable of knowing himself who Is incapable of self-control. ed of in the forthcoming United States Census Bulletin No. 105, relative to | on assessed valuation are often more accurate than those based on popula- It effects its wonderful cures, mot simply because it contains sarsaparilla but because L. H. BALOO! Teacher of M‘ Thames St e 0 B o AR L Su Lessons given at my residence find ular lodgement and enthusias- statistics of cities of 30,000 and more tion, Such a comparison between cities it combines the mtmost A tie e0pport tn all sections of the coun. | _SPORT FOR SPORT'S SAKE. |seiimaied populaion in 130T, ‘was| of difterent siates ls ot practical | reodiai values of move than 20 different The e bt S R o2 o 40PDI 29,055, or nearly three-fourths of the | however, owing in large measure to a 4 o tnal mihaliiute Jewel |y ok try among the people, Maybe Middlebury colloge is not so | number of empioyes of the police de- | difference in methods and bases of as- o bt eweler, Sccretary Ballinger has been fear- far out of the way in the opinion of partments in the same cities. sessment. for it. If ub;u,ad-?’you may g: fully slandered by the clasa he would | its delesates at tho football confer- | _Fire protection in many cities. how- | In many citles it g the practice to -idgpe - by 1oy e wishes you a F. C. GEER have called to account, and to whose | ence that the game played in this| ver, Is furnished in large measure by | assess property at a fractional part of | gure it is , COsts y schemes he dare propoke 8 permanent | couniry chould be supcrseded Ly the | [OMECT ire organizations ss that | ita value nstead of te truo value and | and yields the dealer 8 larger proéi.| [JAPPY NEW YEAR 1" q NER estoppal. Ballinger 9"” mot believe | Einglish game. There is, somehoW, 2| jarger than the police force. Call men | property that may be deduced from such wugmwu‘m dec25daw ‘ Tel “‘1 'w"":":h % In winking at any system of robbery, | suggestion of manliness, wholesome-|are numerically unimportant in the |fractional values is not comparable o S Jobbery or grafting, ness, and cleanliness about English| cities with a population of over 100,- | with values obtalned In other cities P sport that distinguishes it as sport| 000, and in the last few years there | whére the basis of assessment is 100 AN AMUSING INCIDENT. The fact that the United’ States treasury is in the receipt of a lot of Confederate bonds, from Pau, France, the lawyer holding them demanding their immediate redemption, causes a emile to spread all over this country. Tt is sald that these bonds are held all over Europe, and that the delusion prevails there that they will eventually be redeemed by the United States. The sbundance of these bonds abroad is thus accounted for by the Boston ‘Transcript: “There must be a large accumula- tion In Burope of Confederate prom- fof sport's sake and not for the box office. And we Americans are headed the other way, more shame to us. We are commercializing our fun, just as we do pretty much everything eise, and even the youth's game of foot- ball must needs partake of some of the elements of a bullfight or a circus ‘thriller’ in order that it may hold the fickle public interest and be self-sup- porting from the money point of view. Games that have to be ‘financed’ on fuch & basis or by such a policy are not recreations for the players but popular amusement enterprises for the benches. And the sooner we recog- has been a marked tendency for all cities of over 30,000 inhabitants to replace call men with regular men. It is stated that, by presenting the number of regular firemen per 10,000 inhabitants, the number per 1,000 acres of land area, and the number per 100 miles of Improved streets, opportunity is afforded for comparaing the effect~ fve strength of the departments of the different cities. The number per 10,- 000 Inhabitants is probably the best measure of fire protection. An Increase in Appropriation The appropriations for 1906 and 1907 as given in the bulletin Include the anticipated expenditures and outlays and for maintenance. The appropria- per cent. Personal Property Values. The values of personal property vary from less than one-sixth of 1 per cent. of the value of real propery in Phila- delphia to more than 50 per cent. of the value of real property in Omaha. These differences are due partly to dif- ferent bases of valuation and partly to differences in the classes of personal property subject to city taxation. Nearly two-thirds of the net debt of the 158 cities is charged against the 15 cities of over 300,000 population, and the same cities showed approximately the same proportion of the assessed valuation of ?roperty. The largest per capita net debt Is We earry a superb line of Rubber Footwear, Stockings and Overs, Rubber Boots and Low Rubbers in the leading brands—Boston, Goodyea Glove and Ball brand. Prices that ar P. CUMMINGS, 52 Central Ave. What and Where to Buy In Norwich Joseph F. Smith, FLORIST 200 Main Streel, Norwich. iyia ) PURE OLIVE OIL A. W. JARVIS 'Phone 518-5, sept22d JAMES F. DREW Fiano Tuning and Repairiay Best Vork 2!'!- 15 Clairmount Aws. ises to pay, for twenty years ago nize the distinetion the nearer we may | tions for 1907 amounted to $38,529,636, |.credited to New York city, but Boston I t mr 7:’::"‘:’-" b of all Confederate issucs which was The 2 " however, does not mean, It is stated, | third largest per oapita n:t debt, The i Bthest LAPURA leads them all m° Lmport apparently direoted from Frankfort. re is going to be a reform made | yai”the expense of maintaining the | assessment in both cities was reported G50 “Weok' Malu. Btrest. B 2R N R LI B Many firms in this country acting un- | the American game of football.| departments Increased atthat rate, for | to be on a 100 per cent. basis, but the| MATTRESS MAKING a Speclalty, | 1% Price. Let us supply you. der _ instructioas from Franitort | There Is cvidence of i everywhere. | & portion of tnls amount was apyropri- | ulletin states™hat 1t Is doubtrul 1f a N e s FALL STYLES Now e reformer is as senseless mought Confederate bonds, the going price being $1 per hond without re- gard to denomination. The supply that came out in response to this de- mand was so great that some of the American agents, suspecting counter- feiting, became cautious and suspend- as the corrector of the rules two years ago by which the game was made more perilous than ever, much is not to be ‘expected from the change! Why not accept the Englith game as played rather ‘than risk a second miscar- ated for the purchase of land, the con- struction of buildings, and for new apparatus. The per capita approprig- ;lons for the 158 cities reporting was 1.65, The per capita cost of mantenance of fire departments in foreign cities is, according to the buletin, much lower close comparison of debt to assessed valuation is justified. Anotber city with a comparatively high per capita net indebtedness was Newton, Mass., but the large per capita assessed val- uation of pro for this . city (81,771.21) suggests that the debt, ‘Mail orders promptly attended to. dec29d _— ‘Custom Grinding Tel. 703. 336 Franklin St. Free delivery to all parts of the ci dec24d ty. DR. JONES, Dentis, including the latest pattesnms, ready for inspection. Quality, minus the high priee sting, tells the story of our swe- cess. @ when compared with the city’s wealth, Whether you wish to order or ed their purchases. No clew was ap- | Fiage? than in clties of the United States, | is not excessively great. TUESDAYS ind FRIDAYS 3 SHETUCKET ST. not, we want to show you the parently ever found to the Frankfort ng = {?"’W‘a"é“";’ "‘C;-:“g e BE: m:’é‘ jihe- taxes levicd i l;hs Sigterent at-YANTIC ELEVATOR. 3 new line and fashions for FALL. belief that there was mopey in pick- EDITORIAL NOTES. R e e i 1 P dwiael ony ox MOve_Sniformity Ihel | , x MANNING, Yantic, Conn, , : ng the per capita expense in Berlin at| did the amounts enting assessed | 4- oo 'Ph 2-. ing up these souvenirs of the ‘lost| When the. sons and daughters of | 30.26. Lendon at 30.15, St Petersbuts | valuation bt there wwere notemie s | Telephone. . deciia | Room 10 - gty THE JOHNSON Co., cause.'"” Boston university sit down to a ban- | at $0.22, Paris at $0.21, Milan at $0.17, | ceptions. Boston, as. compared with maylid A MATTER OF ECONOMY. The damage of the asylum for the insane of Vermont, at Waterbury, the lother day, it was thought, would make necessary a special session of the legislature and entail considera- ble of an additional burden upon the taxpayeirs of the state, but in the height of the discussion Governor Prouty says it will not be necessary to call a special session of the Ver- mont legislature to appropriate a sum of money to complete the repairs to the state hospital for the insane, which was damaged by fire last week. The state carried a good insurance on the property; and the fire serves to bring attention to ths desirability of pro- tecting state property well in this manner, It is a good example for all states and cities. . There is no rea- rson why public property should not be fnsured as well as private, and the interests of the taxpayers require that it should be. A wise policy on the part of Vermont now saves a large additional expense. quet they count up full five hundred. George Washington ate with his knife, it is sald. A habit with such a backing as this ought not to shock polite society. Dr. Cook must realize that as the world measures up a man so must he stand, regardless of what he thinks about himself. President Taft has something of epecial importance to say to congress when it again assembles, and he will eay it stralght. The farmer who is ignorant of the price of timber now is in a fair way of having his valuables suddenly taken from him. The declaration that the stuff that pops like whiskey when the cork is pulled is whiskey was not accepted as a government definition. Happy thought for today: The dawn of the millenium will be close and Stockholm at §0.23. The bulletin cautions that the inference should not be drawn from these data that the fire departments of this country are not economically administered. The low per capita cost of maintenance abroad | is the result of stricter building pre- cautions to prevent the occurrence of fires. The foreign municipalities also make no payment for water for fire purposes, an expense incurred by two- fifths of the departments in the large cities of this country. In those cities from which complete reports were made there were 88,525 fire alrms during 1907 and 78,507 fires, of which 52,343 resulted in losses. In other words, only 59.3 per cent. of the alarms were for fires which occasioned lose. Similarly, disregarding those cities with incomplete reports, the total loss through fires was $48,676,730, on which insurance was paid amounting to $42,655,725, leaving a net loss of or 12.4 per cent. total fire loss per capita was $2.28 and the total pet loss per capita $0.28. Of the total loss reported a sep- aration of the total on buildings and the total on their contents was return- ed for $48.308,031, showing that $18.- 965,427, or 39.3 per cent. was on bulld- Ings and $20.342,654, or 60.7 per cent. St. Louis, leyled nearly double the amount of the latter and larger city, while Baltimore levied a smaller tax than Pittsburg, which smaller city. In comparing tax levies, the bulletin says it must be remembered that some cities levy special assessments against abutting property to meet the cost of street pavements and other improve- ments, while other cities meet the full cost of all improvements from general property taxes, Spare the Persimmon’s Pucker. It could not fail to arouse dire fore- bodings among the sturdy American pioneers, if they knew of it, to learn of the proposed elimination of the pucker from the persimmon by the United States department of agricul- ture. They would view with alarm the enervated taste of the age and ask if a_deplorable softening of the national character had not taken place. Those of us who have known the per- simmon in its native lair are compell- ed to grieve at its threatened domes- tication. Take away the pucker and you have taken away the tang of the brush, the odor of the wildwood. Its individuality has been destroyed, for OUR WORK the approval of the critical people. Rogers’ Domestic Laundry. Tel. 958. Rear 37 Franklin Street. sept27d meets Red Cross Stamps and Xmas Cards at Tkamesville Store and all the rest of the good things for your dinner. C Special «.THE... Studio Specialty Shop Selling Fairclough, Prop. | Merchant Tailors, Chapman Bidg. 65 Bromdway. HOLIbAY Wines and Liquors RALIAF N 1A 2 . e untampered with by man no two per- For the Holiday Trade we hgwe & % 4 at hand when one fisherman believes simmons are alike. complete u.!or(“lnl"fll of Pure Wines If it took Dr. Pearson of Chicago | the stories told by another. It is the most temperamental of and Llquors. twenty years to properly dispose of “ - fruits. Growing on the same tree, rip- { FREE! FREE! two millions for educational purposes, When it comes to indebtedness Bos- ened by the same amount of sunlight, ¢ how long will it take Carnegle to do his stunt. 1t Horace Johnson can see 2 storm coming three days before the rest of us, why should we doubt the citizen ton stands third in a list of 158 of the city spendthrifts. But Boston thinks she has enough to show for. it. When a boy gets up to the confec- tiondr's window he gets so earnest to In 1850 the wealth of the. United States was §$7,000,000, or about $307 to the person. In 1904 these figures had increased respectively to $107,000,000,- 000 and $1,310. Or, in other words, the. per capita wealth is over four times greater than it was 50 years ago. But brought to epicurean perfection by the same frost, one persimmon will draw the mouth until the unlucky devourer looks llke an imitation of a pike; the twin brother, sugary and luscious, will melt away softly llke a dream: But puckerless, what was formerly a gas- -Silk and Cloth Gowns values $25.00 to $40.00 A bottie of fine California Wine will be given to each purchaser of 7jo and over until Jan. 34, 1910. Handsome Calendars lo sur petrens, JACOB STEIN, 92 West Main 8t. Telephone 26-2, h get clome to the good things that he | It is not possible that contentment has tronomic venture becomes tame lecisd ;lgoh.:';"“ airship sailing right over Siarouect Siex Hoey g (he: it increased a particle. This is because | mOm:dn“ e Tdms t::"“.‘ decls: ad? the more one has the more he wants to | 1 0"y (00 S P7ie. o s o . bty i I b ey euve Thut oty | MO Fobosmions incrfmee SR O , o FRESH STOCK THIS WEEK scateaments’ of - crowded . postomees | L°51and will hold a corn exposition | * Fu ghere fs another consideration Serriyied Wperts- [ Cod. Pollock, Haddock, Halibut, and a ehortage of carriers. The matls |2 1910 that will make this sectlon |that renders useless this explanation. s no uncommon thing for busi- Weakash, Stnelii 1 etton. Maderel, were ‘burdened with presents three | 0% UP I the eyes'of the west. It i quite probable that a mreat pro- educational or other methods and Shell ¥ish of all &in g “burdene: presents three Eus riion of this increase from $7,000.- | customs which have proved eminently @ days behind in time of delivery. ix or seven s day. This is not the kind who sup- not af- Trinity college, Hartford, will ralse the fifty thousand by tonight which w would not think of |js required to make sure the condi- man who | tional half-million to come to it, It I8 not so_much matter about Ze- laya, Those Nicaraguans will know what it costs to kill Americans when ,000 to $107,000.000,000 has got into the hands of a few, and while the av- erage might figure up $1,310, the actual lons may nat have changed much from what they were in 1850. They have no .doubt increased some, but the millignaires and multimillion- have faster. The in- crease of wealth in the hands of & few successful in one country to be adopted in another country. Any new tific discovery, wherever and by wl - ever made, is a contribution to the know!edile and ad of all na- tions. ~ The application which .each country makes. of this knowi sure to be noted The Osgood, Suite ‘Telephone 824. 6, 32 Church St., Norwich, Conn. | Tel Ladd’s Fish Markel, 32 Water Street. novad F CWHEN You WahT 0 put yeur busi- nesg { diu iog before the pablk is no m better than through w.n solumaa of M

Other pages from this issue: