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Herwict Bualleliz and Goufied P Sl bt 3o e 114 YEARS OLD. T few laggards; while the south is only about half represented.” The fact is pointed out that seven southern states are s out against it, although the democratic national platform ' calls for this change every four years. It certainly price. 1Ze = weeks S0c & maouth: $6.00 a year. Otfice, Reom 2. Marray Telephone. 210. Norwich, Tuesdzy, Feb. 8, 1910, Willimantie The Cirenlation of Tie Bulietin. The Bulletin has the largest oir- culation of any paper im Easters nuecticnt, asd from three to four t of any im ix delivercd to over the 4053 houses in Nor- md remd by mimety-three per the people. Im Windham is delivered to over 900 houses, nd Danielson to of these places 1t 1100, and in al = comsidered the loeal dafly. Comnecticut has forty- one hundred and sixty- five postoffice districts, mn: ome rural free delivery routes. The Bulletin d onm all of the R. F. D. Eastera Commecticut. CIRCULA 1905, average February 5.. " THE SPECULATORS LOSE. ent manifested against he organizations of the to boycott certain classes of food has already lling effect and the speculators in 2= have lost from one and a half to 3 ch shows how effec- the people can operate when rey combine for sell tated for a fact that the New York 1 were found by high-priced which were con- d because > renovated for been disclosed by the American beef eaper than ch will help the representatives to make interference cannot be eculators are presenting the concerted THE BENCH. BE. Baldwin “omnecticut be- brings to the judicial honor in mself and with jus- The Hartford Courant remarks that off the ®ench worn out at “he is just worn further predicts & something. > justice up- ember he will retire, having reached eler of Bridge- port will g0 to the supreme bench as his success advancement week, Judge Gardiner takes his seat on eminently fitted; folcomb of Southington will take the | D of the state the assumption that date the republican state couvention will have been held and the governor will eppoint to the y the candidate named by the ty at its convention for the office.” Courant savs REPORTING PROGRESS. n for the election of United States senators by the people in the west and soath, and here in the east we are not the contending states are to forcing congress to call ation 14 ' con venty-five states have force the calling of a c ntion, and two other and Wyoming, ha resolution asked con- to submit the amendment wi & a convention. ty-seven states that have thus already action are the following: The twen- North Carolina, Pennsyivania, South Dakots, states of California and heir resolu- others, only four more legislatures would have to e the pecessary two-thirds and compel congress to this list of states, however, the ming were to chanze vote to mak: New York and New England are not represented, and would hardiy be ex- pected 1o be represented in this move- the great west is in with looks as if a constitutional convention might be procured before many yearst A TRUE AMERICAN. Theodore Roosevelt, in declining to permit Kaiser Wilhelm to entertain him as a ruler of a great people, show- ed how true he is to the principles upon which this government is found- ed. His true eminence is In his Amer- ican citizenship and he proposes to put up at a Berlin hotel and in his relation to the kalser to conduct him- self as he would toward any famous man in New York. He does not care for the pomp and splendor which is so necessary to, royal life in Furopean countries. It is sald that Mr. Roose- velt insisted on stopping at a hotel, but would be delighted, if agreeable, to drop around at the house and have a quiet little chat with William and Mrs. William. So it is left that way, and it is safe to say that two most | strenuous and conspicuous men of to- German court. Africa. A POLITICAL SIGN. resentatives i to be democratic. being more anti-Taft than anti-Can- lows: next fall expect that from now on the insur- gents will poke into all the republican districts, erving: ‘Down with Can- nonism!' but really meaning ‘Down | with Taft, down with the republican party and up with the democrats who have promised us political re- ward if we help them win.” tion on the part of con- forestall anything the in- If there is a neg- resent it, and that the republican ma- | EDITORIAL NOTES. | often it does both. he gets what he was waiting and working for. is the greatest yet in ocean rescue manent value, The Chicas the meat packers, if it is expected to do them justice. It is said that the King of Belgium was once a newspaper reporter. Then he learned what real trials were before he came to the throne. he has risen in the market he must be expecting that a halo will appear around his head before long. ite smoker is doubtless able to hat. | are in the price of his wife’ No suffragette will complain because | the census enumerator inquires If she mean she is old enough 'to marry. Treasurer Hale is no that he is wholly responsible for the thieving in the Southbridge Savings bank Scripture: And the ass spake. Ice next summer w because of the scarcity of the crop. Sixteen varts of ngland with no take | Now it is claimed that the high cost | of livinz was what bankrupted a bro- kers' firm that failed for seven mil- lions. What haven't the speculators done! Commander Peary realized $30.000 on three meteors which he brought home with him from the North pole. worth. A Chicago paper, having referred to Colonel Bryan's wild dreams, a contemporary feels sure that it will take more than the White house to hold them. The pupils of a Massachusetts tech- taught is: “How to find the perimeter of a rectilinear ding-dong.” Mighty important. Speaker Cannon must be aware that he js regarded as the Jonah of his party, courage to toss him where the whale can,swallow him. Jefferson Davis, of Arkansaw, is making unpleasant remarks about the “high-collared roosters of Wall strect” who he predicts will get away with the postal savings deposita. day, with so many characteristics alike and pronounced ideas in com- mon as to good citizenship, would thoroughly enjoy and profit by 'an ex- change of views absolutely unhamp- ered by the glittering ceremony of the There is no question but the em- peror will himself find most pleasure in the jolly good fellowship which Mr. Roosevelt prefers and insists upon. The kalser having a real taste for hunting wiil find pleasure in the ex- periences of Roosevelt in the wilds of The democrats are all pointing with pleasure at the recent democratic vic- tory in the Sixth Missouri district in which, at a speclal election, C. C. Dickinson was chosen by a majority nearly twice as’ large as that given to Judge De Armond two years ago, as the sign that the next house of rep- The Kansas City Journal does mot like the complexion of the situation, although the regular democratic vic- tory of the Sixth Missourl district is 2,000, and it cudgels the insurgents as non. It comments on results as fol- “While professing their loyaity to the republican organization and to President Taft, the insurgents played their treacherous part in the Sixth Missouri district, as they no doubt will do in all parts of the country|James Dean. “That the insurgents who have been beaten in Washington will continue in a bushwhacking warfare against | the republican party in the coming congressionaF campaigns is more than probable. They are smarting under | the futility of their efforts at the | capital. If they can defeat President Taft, so much the bettér. Revenge is sweet, however ignoble, and we may { creature, an ass, and a defamer of the of popular measures and the old | policy of delay is ventured upon, there a »spect that the people will | jority may be wiped out is likely, The insurgents cannot effect this—it will take congress to accomplish the em- barrassment of the administration. Money is not a quiet talker. It! ‘hollers” when it does not brag, and It is not so infrequent that the man | { who is in politics loses his hair before There is no doubt that the wireless work. That alone gives it great per- | News_ thinks that a | new language is needed to talk about | If the American hog realizes how | Happy thought for today: The in- | tell just how many good smokes there | unparliamentary expressions and inti- is old enough to vote, which may also | confident | i 1 not be high | inch ice is lurking around all | That's more than the North pole is | nical school claim that one thing ut 1o one appears to have the There is mothing to hinder Cham- pion Jackson from becoming the champion police court rounder of his In renovating Killingly’s oldest burying ground, lying south of the road leading from Putnam city to the Heights, the Daughters of the Ameri- can) Revolutfon find an ancient but ‘well carved and preserved stone bear- ing this inscription: This stone is erected to the blessed memory of the REV. SETH DEAN, ° Pastor of the Church of Christ in Rindge, Who died April 25, 1782, in his 65th year. So sleeps the saints and cease to groan ‘When sin and death have done their worst. Christ hath 'a glory like his own, ‘Which walts to clothe their waking dust. z No one was found who had any knowledge of this reverend personage. Remembering that in 1885 1 met Messrs. Charles and John Dean at the genealogical bureau in Boston, who had some connection with North Killingly, I applied to that society and received the following Biographical Sketch: Rev. Seth Dean was the first settled minister in Rindge, New Hampshir He was a son of William and Sarah (Olcott) Dean of Plainfield, Connectl- cut, and a grandson of James Dean of 'Stonington and Groton. He was born In Plainfield. August 7, 1715, and died_in North Killingly, Conn., April 25, 1782. He married about 1745 Mer- cy Fenner of Proyidence, R. I . She dled in Rindge about 1776, and he married (2d)_widow Allen of Brook- line, Conn. His children were: Amy, Seth (killed when 13 years old by the overturning of a cart), John (born 1747), Esther, Annie, Eunice and Sa- rah. Rev. Seth Dean was graduated at Yale college in 1735, and was licens- ed to preach by the Windham County association of Congregational minis- ters August 28, 1739. He went to Rindge carly in 1765, and was ordain- ed there November 6th of that year: he remained there fifteen years, until 1780. He then removed to Connecticut and supplied the pulpit in North Kill- ingly. where he died. Born in Plainfield, married in Brook- Iyn, dying and buried in Killingly surely some trace of his “blessed mem- ory” should be found in Windham county. A-graduate of Yale college, a licentiate of Windham County Min- isterial association, honored in New Hampshire clerical annals; surely his name should be included among minis- ters raised up Connecticut. But among the fourteen worthies accred- ited in official report to the Congrega- tional church of Plainfield, Seth Dean is not noted. He bore a name that Plainfield held in honor- in memory of its first most excellent town clerk, ‘We might infer connection between James Dean, town clerk, and Seth Dean, grandson of James of Stoning- ton and Groton, but present Plainfield disclaims any knowledge of the ante- cedants and descendants of their much-esteemed ° official. Some _years | since a_query came to me from an Ohio offshoot respecting & very re- markable “Great Bible,” bequeathed to his son, James Dean, by will of James 2 A LOST LEADE asing § \_--—_———;_—"‘_'J mdmu-‘:d‘ham eplsode. Not ‘l Dean, town clerk of Plainfield, but no | Dew one, for it was precisely the same light could be gained upon i, Tor upon | 1%° when R: Teleased his_wife for mily connection. “Biosrappical Sketch” of its | Sort of conduct would preva~- graquate correspomds mainly with that | lont -and wives gall in love with other from Doston. It makes a gap of twen- | Men, and get releases from their ty years or more between graduation | and settlment in Rindge, apparentl Spent’in Rhode Island, where he mars | (hrown into a turmofl. It might Aot Thed Merey. daughter of James ama | be: but then the most cutrageous fash Amy Fenner. He probably slipped | fons sometimes come into sf down to Providence on that convenient thoroughtare and there found a bride and field of labor. Both sketches err | Married woman who falls in love with the date of Mercy's death at Bindge In 1776, For = tie authentic| church records of Brooklyn show that | Rev. Seth Dean of Plainficld married | Sent to the penitentiary. Tt would be Mrs, Lydia Allen, Sept. 17, 1762. Hence | Well to rescue such cases from the haze We deduce the fact of Mercy's death | and Seth's return to Plainfield. Whicn | Since Rusiin polnted the way.—Ohio, of the four sons of that thrifty Killing- ourn; : iy settler, John Allen of Marlborough, Had been'the husband of this particu- lar “Widow Allen” was not easily de-| ..what do you think of the Jericho termined. ~Thomas and Jabez had | cjcrsyman that married the . young farms given them in Killingly. Family | S5ie nan o HEE TaETeC S o the | notes Indicate Isaac, the'recipient of | roct of his clerical brethren had de- that beautlfil farm in Brookiym. in- | clined to do {t? What do you think of Cluding “Allen ML a8 e musband | {he wholo affair, anyway? What about past 50 vears of age, he died June 19,/ acainst ‘such marriages?"—St. Albans disconsolate widow and nine children. She might have scrupled to accept new he Jericho minister, you'll responsibilities, but there may have [ parucon Of the Jeric s been unpleasantness in the settlement| o¢ this man, who Is unfortunately giv- of the estate, Isaac left a will Dot or- | on the right to be called a clergyman, daining division of his land among his | honestly © expressed, would debar i marriage to Rev. Seth Dean in the sec- | States mails for fitty years. But let ond vear of her widowhood. There s : e B ne evidence of her residence at Allen all good citisias §0 on depirihg. the Hill, which in time, by purchase from i d do nothing in the wa: other heirs, passed into the hands of | b2 Sorare 21,0 BOthae 18 B8 we her oldest son, John Allen. In Febru- | that it would be impossible for such a ary, 1764, her son Isaac married her | GomtorMo"iniis "MPOGCPl TG SUCE S stepdaughter, Amy Dean. This was| i, occur. It is in the interests of hu- the date when many of our Windbam | 1o 25" ¢ & 20 Gilorce Jaws. con- county sons were building up new | (inue ‘while the present lax marriage Plainflelds, Pomirets, Woodstocks In | faws prevail o Northfield News: Seth and Mrs. Dean fol-| o, k or white, red or yellow, lowed the tide, finding home and pas- | Stae%; black or white, Ted of ye or torate in Rindge, New Hampshire, | 20 6 Common hindrances in the way where we trust !hgh" tr}x;\flrgo{%l is {h:}l‘u ished. After the death of Mrs. Lydia | gargless of any man’s gpinion or any Dean n 1776 her husband returned to| i to tho eontrary. \hat busincss s native county—a lonely old man, it| = would seem. His children, of whom hould it be..of yous, or ming, or_the we hear nothing, had probably settled for life in the mew country. We B 7ot hear of him in Plainfleld or Brook | fuweul way. Amerita fs o mixed na- e may have found 2 home w . L~ > Al o ey b3 B e tion, anyway. There are age: ‘We find brief reports of baptismal o e Ch:";g fl‘hk‘u‘““" Hill | fore why not with the negro? Is there S e g S (PRpLismA) - st anxd = in being black, or half or vices in the church at Killingly Hi ol e 2 g and the memorial stene in the old| it in the veins? There are worse mix- urying ground gives the closing rec- | iy o A . St Whether Placed by relatives or | Largs than Ck and N e on parishioners we have no kmowledse, | mixture forming half the Dago crim- but there it stands, neglected and for- | inaig in Cuba. You canmot separate a none living to recall his “blessed memery” and faithful ser-|an 120" avar passed or that can be Ferhaps some descendant of the | pa oq™ whirC O it has been tried parent Dean family of Stonington and | it nas caused trouble and complica~ Groton may have knowledge of this| ijons ending as usual after causing particular branch. Possibly some de-|,nany hindrances in_ignominious de- tached, wanderine Dean mav discover | goot’ The negro 1s human as much here the long-sought ancestor and be | oo’ the white; and you cannot consti- enabled to pay filial tribute to the Jone- | {ute it a crime for one human to mar- ve in that old historic Killingly |1y another. The Jericho clergyman ‘burying ground. Thompson, Conn., Feb. 5, 1910. e T &3 the artist 5. But suppose this Dbecome bands_to marry these later affinities, the whole matrimonial state would be At any rate, legislation should come to the reseue and provide that any another man shall be sent to the luna~ tic dsylum, and any man who falls in love with a married woman shall be of romance to which they are drifting, Marrying Black and White. such a law as they have in_the south the ase of 81. leaving a | \essonger: “If you are asking the News fits! have to excuse it. The News' opinion | This may have expedited her | from transmission through the Unite lew which makes divorces fairly easy | countries _northward, and | 7 P o AN | love each they should be allowed to marry, re- what shade of color a man fan- | provided he fancies it honorably akes that fancy to his heart in a Ta; and’ Intermarriages with about every race and color under the sun, thero- quarter black, or even with a tinge of fard: and Chinese, for example—this man from his heart's choice through shonld be upheld. Z Newport, Ve. Bx- ED. | jress «nd Standard. ELLEN D. LAR times. He is so fond of notoriety that it seems to be his sreatest temptation. Now Tom Watson has risen to say that Andrew Carnegie is “a despicable Scotch race” because he says the lowest negro knows as much as the best Scotchman -did two bundred years ago. i The Origin of Kissing. Almost everything of value has its beginning in the Far East. There civ- flizatlon _ started: there government first established; there religion, printing, gunpowder and the mari- ner's compass were there given to mankind. Now comes a learned pro- fessor from Yale who tells of still an- other claim which the east has on us for undying admiration and gratitude. His profound ethnological studies and investigations into the social cu of bysone ages disclose the fac kissing was discovered in India. He to say, the invention of lovely woman. The poet says “she laid her mouth to my mouth and made a noise which gave me pleasure.” There we have it complete!—the culmination of long ages of vearning for something unde- fined and unrealized, given life by the | genius of a woman' inspired by low and coming into being like Minerva from the head of Jove, full grown from her lips. Other things born into the world_have been added to and im- proved on in the course of time, or have grown stale and been flung aside, The kiss remains as alry and evanes- cent. as impalpable and elusive, as ‘blissful and ineffable, as precious to man as was the first one those long vears | ago_ when the Indian maiden laid her mouth to her lover’s and he responded born caress—Washington Post. | | The Mercurial American. | When Mr. Taft talked to the mews- paper editors the other day he urged them to be calm. to avoid exagzera- tion and to refrain from so overload- ing their criticisms of public men with mations as to lack of honorable mo- tives that no one would-pay attention to them. This was the president’'s way of “calling down” the editors for thelr muckraking exploits. He might have gone further and told them that they | Pac o | that it _no longer recelved the same notice from the public as at first and is now largely discounted by its read- ers. . Mr. Taft would like calmness in the treatment of all subjects at all times | questions. He is a man of serene temperament himself and of judicial mind. Impulsiveness, emotionalism, hasty judsment, the town-meeting method of+ disposing_of matters, evi- dently disturb him. But he must sub- | mit fo them i« = ion to speak ra “"The French were classed asy emotional to the point of hysterics, the Irish as effervescent, the Germans as r slightingly of cer- Btate of Onlo. Cuty of Toledo, 5. Lucas County. | Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he s semior | partner of the frm of F. J. Chenes & Co., dolng | business in the City of Toledo. County and State | aforesadd, and that sad frm will pay the sum of NE HUNDRED DOLLARS for cach and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's 3. CHENEY. wy pres- V. GLEASON. (Sean) Notary Phulle. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken tutermslly. and scts directly on' the biood and. mucous surfaces of ‘the System. Sold by all Drugststs. Toe. Take Hall's Pamily Pills for constipation. A Safeguard to Children. “Our two children of six and eight years have been since {nfancy subject to colds and croup. About three years ago I started to use Foley’s Honey and Tar, and it has never failed to prevent and cure these troubles. 1t is the only medicine T can get the children to take without & row.” The above from W. C. Ornstein, Green Bay, Wis., dupli- cates the experience of thousands of other users of Foley's Honey and Tar. It cures coughs, colds and croup, and prevents bronchitls and ~pneumonia. Lee & Osgood. vehement and demonstrative. We hear mp. candel! less of this comment now, perhaps be- which srows cause of tacit recognition that these jjons of acres of semi-afld land in are coming to be among the marked northern Ae American characteristics.—Indianapolis Arizona end New Mexico, contains | Not the First Tim | Garn—Providence Tilbune. When Was He In It? So far as he is able_ to alrbanks fells. that hie has no reason sSccret society has existed In the Dec-[ to regret he Wit Made in Boston. With a boycott on ome side a higher prices on the other. how cz the retailers make both ends me Boston Record. Strenuous Days for Arehi Considering all the walking he has Military Ald Butt should have an extra allowance for shoe leather.— Boston Herald. A man out east had a wife who loved another man better, and so out of love he had for her he let her go to take up with this new affinity, and not only that, he was a poor man. | GLEANINGS AND GOSSIP. abundantly_upon mil- | ico and_parts of Texas, from 3 t0 4 1 now beinz extracted by & process n= » number are to be started in New | Meoxico—Popular Mechanics. ¢ The Tondon Times that a murderous | out of it.—Des Mo Releasing Wives. The hus- The Spectator notes the avowal of the young who_ killed an English magistrite on the theater sill, that he did so because his victim had sentenced a _seditious Brambin to_transportation. “The mur- Novelty | der of Mr. Jackson means that in oer- tain parts of India every civil servant Wwho Nonestiy Pertorms i Juuicio. wd- ties carrjes hie life i hie | “The cause of revolution is not likely | to be furthered by the sssassination of men like Mr. Jackson. who was a aistinguished oriental scholar, a man of high character and moted for his extreme sympathy with the natives.” Bill Commissioner Kenney remarks: The navy yard episode recalls the com- ment of an Irishman who salled with Admiral Farragut: “In my time, bhoys, it was wooden ships and fron men, while today, Legorra, it is- iron ships and wooden men."—Boston Record. _He Thought He Knew. John, what rwere the he Sunday school “I dom't know, exactly, but I think they were the wives of the Apostles. More Knocks Due. It is gotiing to be a long time since Japan turned down a pPropo: lon Secretary Knox. — house. “And naw, m ASON’S PAT TOUHEY i - Jrish a g % Soioist /. Reel Dancer. 18 and UNG Ecce) German Dancers. DeVEAU TWI ISTERS Dainty Dashing Singers and | " MR. and MRS. COLBY Black Art Musical Novelly “KIMO” Motion Pictures ochanged CHILDREN AT MATINEES Go—3 SHOWS DAILY—3.90, 7. & indu of Naisk Chicago Record- Turn the Faucet, Vonted by a resident of Monterey, Mex- | Elixir of Senna, as'it acts gently on and headaches, To get its beneficial effects, always genuine, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. ige from! A Bombay correspondent writes to| by and How to Reach a Green Old Age Keep the bowels regular and liver by systematic use of Sehemek’s Ma Pills, and you wiil eseape all serious {liness. They cure stomach and liver disorders— dyspepsia, indigestion, sick headaches, ma- laria, heartburn, jaundi: ulence. Used and proved 70 years. lutely harmlese—plaén or suger coated 5c a box. Sold everywhers. free beok and diagnose your own case. Dr. J. H. SCHENCK & SON, Phila.,, Pa. vegetable— Sond for the Buns Rolls Muffins Biscuits Waffles Pop-overs Coffee Bread Made w SHBURN-CROSEYS GOLD - MEDAI FLOUR Makes Bredkfast.a Success Call and dec24d QUALITY Come to think of it, this lewt the ico. The manufacture of this vese=| the kidneys, liver and bowels, cleans- All Best Teas 25¢ Ib. first time that a great many people table wax is already sald to be on a.| : & have vowed that they would ot spend paving. commercial pasis. Extracting ing the Sy!ffll}l_efiflchfllgj:h“ con: Best Coffee 20c Ib. on_their tables every cent they could plans are being worked in Mexico, and stipated, or bilious, and dispels colds | .y o money back if 1t is mot so.” Up one Featurin OSTRADO European Equilibrist ADMISSION—10c, very Day DR mid-night, dawn or dusk, any- | time and all the (ime, The Rund Instantaneous Automatic Gias Water Heater furnishes hot water in unlim- ited guantity in all parts of the The Ruud Does the Rest. one in operation, Gas & Electrical Dep't., 321 Main Street, Alice B A BIG PACKAGE OF BEST ROLLED OATS weed, o desert plant,| A Pleasing Sense of Health and 8 by Soen Strength Renewed and of C Ease and Comfort This package contains 20 more oats than the edvertised brands cel v i 1 igs and | and costs you 20 per cent. le: r cent. of wax, which 18| follows the use of Syrup of Figs a saving in cost of 40 per United Tea Importers Co., aht, Over Somers Bres, Franklin Square, only one in town. our show window. san26c Jan20d STAND FOR. THE BEST IN SERVICE AND ECONOMY J. P. BARSTOW & CO.,, 23-25 Water St., Norwich. C. H. BACON, Danielson. PERRY & BROWN, Putnam Iy248TuT A Fine Assertment ol at ilttle mic octld ical sclence can devise. vitality. Lee & Osgood Electric Wiring We do all branches of Electric Work and carry a complete stock and Electric Chandeliers, Mantles. Visit our show room — the WINDOW DISPLAY The varioty of our stock of Wire | Goods can be partially appreclated by inepecting the few lines displayed in EATON CHASE Company, 129 Main Street, Norwich, Ct. | Hardware Electric Goods HECKER’S Prepared Buckwheat and Pancake Flour at CARDWELL’S. A. D. S. ALL CEREAL COFFEE only 10c a Ib. LIBRARY TEA STORE 3 ... MILLINERY MRS. G. P, STANTON, NEWMARKET HOTEL, 715 Boswell Ave. First-class wines, liquors end clgara. Meals and Welch n?'dll l-'v.“‘h order. John Tackle. Prop. Tel 41-& More people are taking Foley's Kid- ney every year. It s consider- ed tho most effective remed kidney and bladder troubles that med- Foley's Kid- pey jRemedy corrects irregularities, bullds up the system and restores lost Februsry 7, 8, 9 VAUDBVILLY MoTION TURES ND ILLUSTRATED JULIA REDMOND & CO- Presenting THE CRITIC AND THE GIRL AL HAYNES, well known Theatrigal Star OROTHY | AUDITORIL z f i e P ARk DuUo Singing and English Talki Character | HIGH-CLA Comedianne SONGS CHARLES MSNULTY LESSEE FEATURE PIOTURE: THE CALL. BIOGRAPH STORY OF THE CIROY MISS FLORENCE WOLCOTT IN SELEOTED SONG PROGRA MM Matinee, Ladiss and Childran, jan3a BVENING Music. NELLIE S, HOWIE, Teaoher of Plano, Room 4 Central But CAROLINE H. THOMPSON Teacher of Muaslic hington Street. 29 Thames Bt Lessons given at my reslde: the home of the pupll. Same & wenlka Conservat F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect St Tel. 511, Norwic A. W. JARVIS is the Leading Tuner | Eastern Connecticul | 'Phone 518-5, 15 Clairmeun sept22d | JAMFS F. DREW Fiano Tuning and Repar t Vierk Only, "Pnome 423-3. 18 Perd sept23d Individuality Is What Counts Photography. Bringing out the real pers the flae joints in character, t trajts that make us what Toned down by the natursl s artist into perfect mccord hing of paper and pastebo & ready-made look I you want a photo of ye olf, or what your friends se and admire. eall on | LAIGHTON The Photographer opposite Norwich Savings mugisa WM. F. BAILE (Buccessor e A. T. Gerdner (Flack, Liver and Boarding Stable 12-14 Bath Strec HORSE CLIPPING A BPECIAL Telephions 883 v “DONT WORRY It Makes Wrinkles. ‘Warry over Ul-health does o alth no good, and merely cau wrinkles, that meke you look oldw than you a It you ore sick, domt werry, but g about It to make ycarself well this we repeat the words of thous. f other former sufferers from wor iy Tiis, similar to yours, when we s 1ake Viburn-0. ot 18,8 wondectul femais remecy, o o w [ T Dirvosiona 5.;"%"»“.".: printea & tx langy- son with every bothe. 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