Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 11, 1910, Page 4

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Forwich Bulleliz and Goufied. 134 YEARS OLD. momths :& = Entered a: the Postoffice at Norwich, Cenn., as second-class matter. Telephome Calls: Pulletin Business Ofiice. 480, Bulletin Editorial Fooms, 33-3. Bulletin Job Office, 35-6. Willimantic Office, Reom 3. Murray Bullding. Telephone. 210. Norwich, Friday, March 11, 1910 year. ES The Circulation of The Bulletin. The Bulletin has the Iargest cir- culation of mny paper in Eastern Connecticut, and from three to four times larger tham that any in Norwich. It is delivered to over 3,000 of the 4,053 houses im Nor- wich, and read by nimety-three per cent. of the people. In Windham 3t is delivered to over 900 houscs, ia Putnam and Daniclson to over 1,100, and in all of these places it is comsidered the local daily. Easters Connecticut has forty- ime townss, one hundred and sixty- ome rural free delivery routes, The Bulletin s sold in every town and om all of the R. ¥. D. routes im Eastern Commecticwt. CIRCULATI 1901, average 5820 1965, average DEALING WITH MOBS. The way in which Philadelphia is dealing with the mob is a disgrace to free government. The recklessness on the part of Irre- sponsible men in the crowd should not lead to recklessness on the part of the authoritles. The running of a car beck over the trolley line filled with armed men to fire into the crowds re- gardless of their guilt, is no more commendable than the storming of cars filled with innocent passengers who are injured by the flying missiles and broken g'ass. The men who represent the police or military power should not quibble to their duty, or hesitate to obey orders when law and order are being defied and innocent le are becom- ne the victims of disorder and ill-di- rected vengeance. ‘There a remedy for all the {lls now menacing the peace and good or- der of the city of Philadelphia, and there is no defence for the destruction of property and the filling of the hos- pitals with injured Innocents. Vio- lence must be put a stop to by firm action, It does not do to ask the rioters if they will not please stop rioting, f{or that so smacks of the mol- Iycoddle style of doing things that the world must laugh—it makes a farce of the whole matter. Every known means to detect the aders in lawlessness and violence should be made, and when caught in r- work they should be summarily ¢ with. There is nothing that will irrational and unjust conduct - courazeous and decisive action. Philadeiphia papers are right they say that “no price is too to pay for good order!” ,Law be respected, and every citizen ould invoke protection to life nd property must be loval to the laws and those who have been appointed to enforce them, THE AMERICAN CHILD. The American child is given to. much freedom—freedom which on the face tells for neglect and often degra- dation. Just now the children in the mobs of Philadeiphia are disturbing the au- thorities because some of them are getting accidentally killed and others becoming permanently crippled. What the Philadelphia Times has to say up- on tb bject is worth reading. “As for e ldren to be found in e ceots,” s, “the ponsibility rests wholly upon their parents. Im- , seven, eight and nine year is ne a5 :nd ‘boys the thick of a o avoid being tram- sort of man and ho, knowing the their children to be bevond their care at this time?” They are the same sort that let their children spend ali their spare time in the streets, picking up the lingo they ear, and getting initiated into the vsteries of waywardness which they see, and acquiring bad habits from evil is There d not a city in not thus suf- in which protests from the not uttered to promote more care and better citizenship, these chil- are filled fraitful and 15 to go and charged stands s 1an who pays the e led purse, regardle: r husband. ing thinks that the as good as which han society, better About the ould able to I Hall Lee's as knock- e felt grate- was a doctor. ven in inis- for the Newport fly s | far west as Norwi ™ iy The Virginia minister who advises us not to make a vulgar display of our wealth, need have no fears unless he is able to furnish price, 12¢ & weeks 30 & —— RELATION OF ALCOHOL TO CRIME. ‘When the Episcopalians of Iilinois appointed a committee to investigate the relation o§ the drinking habit to disease and crime, it did a service to the sane and sober thinkers among men. Among the things this committee found out were the fact that 50 per cent. of the inmates of the asylum for the criminal insane at Menard, Ill, and 85 per cent. of those in the penitentiary at Jollet, are there as the result of alcoholic liquors, either di- rectly or indirectly. Investigations made by medical ex- perts show that over 25 per cent. of the patients in the insane asylums of the entire country are insane directly or indirectly as the result of the use of intoxicating liquors. The superintendent of the St. Charles school for boys asserts that almost every boy there has been de- moralized to a considerablc extent by the influence of liquor, and has either patronized the saloons himself, or is the chily of parents who have done so, The matron of the Geneva home for girls states it as her conviction that if the saloons in Illinois and adjacent ates were done away with, the home could in time be closed. A large ma- jority of the inmates of the home are Is born of drunken ents. At the state reformatory at Pontiac, 251 boys out of 1,050 were users of liquor, and In 141 cases the fathers of the boys drank liquor to e % Twenty per cent. of the 1,700 insgne patients at Dunning are there as the resuit of the excessive use of aleohol, while at the poorhouse it is estimated ‘hat 95 per cent. of the men and 59 per cent. of the women, and in the con- sumptive ward 94 per cent. of the men and 23 per cent. of the women have been users of alcohol either in excess or moderately; and the report of the house of correction, Chicago, for 1908, is even more startling than this, show- ing that out of 12,427 commitments, 8,763 were for “breach of the peace,” or, in the words of Superintendent Whitman, “drunk and disorderly.” Superintendent Whitman _ estimates that 75 per cent. of the 1,600 inmates are there directly or indirectly due to the influence of the saloon. The saloons of Chicago are open twenty hours each day and seven days each week, Every year 8,763 men, women and boys go to the house of correction, forming a procession of | more than onme every hour that the 1ot enjoy [ b > sounded | b saloons are open throughout the year. It is estimated that there are 160,000 epileptics in the United States alone, and that 32,000 of the persons so af- flicted owe their disease to drunken parents. The committee reported that the tes- timony of these men in authority at the public institutions of the state of Illinois and elsewhere is testimony which cannot be overlooked or ignored by reasonable Christian men. WANT DEATH PENALTY RE- STORED. The experience of Rhode Island shows that the abolishment of the death penalty does not decrease the number. of murders in that state, but that it does largely increase the ex- pense of maintenance of penal insti- tutions, Recent deliberate murders there have resulted in a measure be- ing put before the legislature provid- ing for the restoration of the death penalty. This has led to a general discussion of the matter, and the Bos- ton Transcript bad this to say upon the subject: “During the year ending May 31, 1900, according to the last national census, the state of Maine, which has ubolished capital punishment, had, in proportion to population, almost twice as many homicidés as Massachusetts, which Tetains that penalty. Rhode Island, the only other New England state which has abandoned the death penalty, had during the same year, on the same basis, almost two and a half times as many homicides as Massa- chusetts. Compared similarly with New Hampshire, which in 1900 had capital punishment intact, Maine had four and one-half times as many hom.- icides; Rhode Island six and one-half times as many. Compared with Ver- mont, Maine had twice as many homi- cides; Rhode Island almost three times as many. Compared with Connecticut, Maine had more than twice as many homicides; Rhode Island more than three timgs as many.” This is not a very of the a ore humane plan; and those who support the abol- ishment of the penalty do mot see that there are some things w h may be worse than death. Just what the duty of the state is in the premises is not casy to decide, and it is not surprising that the tendency is to favor the ex- ecution of convicts guilt; 14 crimes. S TN EDITORIAL NOTES. Now and then the glassed egg proves to have been a “rogue.” It is surprising that cranberries do not show a tendency to climb a little. The poet who can exc for & ham in these days to complain. ange a poem no reason Happy thought for today: meanness A man’s appalling when looks for it. the call of « Senator Lodge ought not to try justify the of today by what they were 7 s ago Massachusetts has a debt 000,000, but she has a These are fin hts England aeroplanist that bird for 45 minutes ain, for t ale to go Talkk about boycotting the butcher! What If he should lock out those who | promise and prove to be poor pay? wiss city has built a street a ile in length loer for as smooth as a the use of roll z0 had Th wom, nar:s Words Unspoken. It ix suspected that when the fever of killing got into presidential blood Mr.. Roosevelt sal Herée, Will, you bold down this job while I go to Africa and kill a whité rhinoceros. Ill relieve you of it later.”—Rochester Herald, According to the last official returns the fishing fleet of Canada consists of 1414 vessels and 39,965 boats, the whele manned by 71,070 men. to| “Will you kindly tell me the secret of your success?”’ asked the young man fresh from the flelds of Jersey. I will,” replied the head of the Pe- troleum Monopoly. I have aiways made it & rule to l}’a"ax'im'x” the peo- ple with whom prac- ticed friendliness and mfil‘t‘y unf it is as natural for me to be genial as it is for the sun to shine. Startin; with a carload of pipe, back in 1875, B o ety Sl bY G g n the country, simply by - Dle with courtesy. T hove yoa ‘will profit by my example. Now you must excuse me, for 1 am expected at a mecting of our rebate department.” The young man went around the cor- to the offices of the Iron Octopus. ‘What is the secret of your suc- he asked the president. 1 owe my success to the fact that I do not allow small obstacles to dis- courage me,” the great man answered. ‘Whenever I find a. weak competitor in the way I never let the disappoint- ment make me blue or alter my resolve to climb to the top. You will find B ces: the it. You ask me f¢ 1 was a youngster I sent a man in Connecticut, who tised that he would part cret of success for that you fifty cents?” “No, sir; 1 am a poor starting out in life, and I money. “Some other time will do,” Squeezem. “The secrct is this: N let a penny g0 to waste. If you see man being careless with money, quick and take It away from save it from being squandered. wtzh one g‘ yo\llll;' T you candy, cut down pay. one of your tenants buying flowers, raise his rent. Never let a cent go to waste. * Follow that advice and you may one day own g The y walk and pondered W “Courteous to others, cheerful in the face of oppesition, saving of the pen- he thought; “those are the act government expedient. vernmen BO! and Wed. Coming Mon.. Tues. atuting of 8 people and 3 horses. The largest act ever CHANGE OF PIOTU] POSITIVELY CO! “Gus Hornbrook’s Broncho Bust resented in this ity DAILY. CHILDREN AT MATINEES Sc—3 SHOWS DAILY—2.30, 7, 8.45. Dramatic Playlet THE i MUSICAL |JA NORRIsEs|Pa Novelty Act resente. —HEADLINE— LAW of the DESERT 55k feor™ b AVID PORTER & CO. FEATURE, CK LYLE |[McLAUGHLIN [Auditorium n American|BROS. [Comedian cheerful determination a great help to you, my boy. Thank you, sir: 1 am sure I shall,” said the youih, and proceeded down the street to the banking house of Henry Squeezem & Co. . “Mr. Squeezem,” said he, “I want to | know what you regard as the secret of your success.” 8it down,” responded Mr, Squeez- em, “but not on that chair. Sit on this . When these great men repeat them, they don’t sound right. I won- der what s the matter with them.” Fortunately, at this critical juncture, a wave of homesickness swept over the young man and he took the first train back to Oaktreé, where he raised chickens and lived happily ever after. —Newark News. —Allinois for the Income Tax. The opponents of the income tax in the eastern states have been watching the Illinois legislature with solicitude. That was because, as a Boston paper recently said: “Hlinois is in so many respects pivotal as the-great state of the Mississippl valle: Now that Tl- linois has spoken, in a practically unanimous vote of its legislature, we hope there is no rooom for doubt as to what the other states of the Mississippl valley will do. Now #t is the turn of New York to/ declare itself. If Gov. Hughes' argu- ment against the amendment had been unanswered the legislature would have voted against it and given his argu- ment as a reason. It has been pulver- ized, first by Senator Borah and now by Senator Root. But the opposition to the income tax amendment in New York did not originate in a baseless fear of the taxation of income derived | from state and municipal securities. It is @ue to the fact that the concentrat. ed wealth of New York city would con- tribute more under an income tax which was not apportioned on a basis | of population. i Senator Root rebukes that selfish and | unpatriotic spirit. He tells the New | Yorkers something they are too apt to overlook. It is that “the incomes of New York are In a great measure de- | rived from the country at large. We have the wealth,” he says, “because ‘behind the city stands the country. We ought to be willing to share the bur- dens of a national government in the same proportion in which we share its benefits.” This applies to Massachusetts, Con- necticut and some other eastern states which it has been assumed would vote against ratification, almost as forcibly @s it does to New York. If the New | York legislature shall be governed by the arguments of Senator Root and nat by the influence of aggregated wealth dreading the possibility.of just taxa- tion, neighboring states may be affect- ed likewise. If so the constitutional amendment would have more than enough votes.—Chicago Tribune. Where Can We Get Our Wheat? James A. Patten, the wealthy grain operator, before sailing for Eurove a day or two ago, made this statement in response to questions: The wheat situation in this country, so far as production is concerned, pre- sents a serious question. 1 make the prediction that within five vears pro- ductions will not equal the demand, and that the people of this country as a result will go to Washington and demand that the duty on wheat be taken off. They will get their request. Where can we get our wheat, then? Mr. Patten was asked. From Canada—from Manitoba, Al- berta and Saskatchewan. Manitoba is an empire. Its virgin soil will produce if necessary 500,000,000 bushels of wheat annuaily. Manitoba has a land area of about 64,000 square miles. Kansas in the United States alone has an_area of nearly $2,000 square miles. Why not at least 500,000,000 bushels of wheat trom Kansas also, whose soil is almost as virgin as that of Manitoba? Mr. Patten ended by saying he was a “bull” in both cotton and wheat, and added: “I am an optimist first, last and all the time.” A queer sort of optimism, to be sure, which enthuses over pros- pects of scarcity In two of the coun- try's great staple necessaries of life and industry! But, as has been indi- cated, his belief that the United States will_within a very few years be de- pendent on Canada for wheat is base- less, except in so far as the nation de- liberately prefers to turn its labor and capital generally into manufacturing, to_the neglect-of agriculture—Spring- field Republican. Death by Drewning. The mere statement of fact that more than 600 persons were drowned in the New England states between May 1 and October 1, 1909, without any to the broken hearts and homes that followed the trail . idents is sufficlently even the careless n pause and ponder. Nobody with red blood in his veins and a vivid remebrance of the days of outh it he could, rear an in- surmour wall around the hickor: limb on the favorite shady bank, thus keep the boys from leaping off | uldn’t it be th for the parents of rescue in | into the river, but wi part of common s to see that proper mear cncies we rov i0ys or plain plank Mar at are lost might be saved if familiar with the sim- resuscitating persons tak- | water unconsci mmer is coming. Now, arrives, is a good time for - vacationists to make a few iutions, viz., that in 1910 the: ock the t for fun; that keep low in the tipsy oe they paddle; that they will bathe the safest pla nd Jook for rocks before they indulze in df Boston | Jobe. She Stayed as Long as Possible. During the progress of a big “pro- | i i tracted meeting” for which the- south | famous an ardent sister of ti church who usually came in an old- fashioned buckboard drawn by the family horse was late for a particular- ly important service and was being verely censured by the pastor. Explaining the reason for being late, the good s said that the horse had taken at a passing train and | sited and that the wreck of the rig ated her from being on time a prev r sister, such little things not_make you late for You should trust in thel brother,” she replied, and ? l there was a look of calm peacefulness on her face, “I did trust in the Lord till the bellyband busted and then I had to jumj ~ Don’t Stop Chauncey. Senator Flint of California says that he can’t afford to run again, and if Senator Depew only knew it, he can't, either.~Boston Globe . Judson, Independent. “I know of no conference upon the subject of the senatorial nomination from the 25th district. I am quite cer- tain that no such conference has oc- curred. o committee has waited up- on me to tender such nomination, and I will add that I do not recognize the right of any man or group of men to make such tender. The nomination rests solely with the convention and that is.a principle I havs always stood for in my public career. The above is the announcement of the Hon, Stiles Judson, and it is such @ cne as will raise him in the esti- matfon of the rank and file of his party. It Is, mareover, a ng re- buke to such party leaders in his dis- trict and in such other districts as have been accustomed to hold har- mony dinners with a view to dectating nominations. In Mr. Judson’s state- ment _they are frankly told, if they read between the lines, that he does not_propose to rely upon, or respond to the crack of the party whip. It is a bold, independent and amost defiant attitude to assume, but it Is thorough ly American, and, moreover, it is square and honoraple. It may result in turning the power of the party ma- chine against him, with a view to punishing him and teaching him and others a lesson, but that will not di- minish the admiration of such voters as have watched and studied the dic- tatorial gg-l!tcy under which republican politics fallen in recent years in this state. Mr, Judson’s attitude en ables him to seck the senatorial nom- ination with a clear conscience, if not a clear fleld. His statement recog- nizes every other political right of the masses of voters, and it gives every other would-5e candidate a fair chance with himself. - Ansonia Sentinel. Protecting the Skunk. The hearing on the proposed bill for the protection of the skunk, in Massachusetts was interesting in its revelation of virtues heretofore mnot popularly supposed to be possessed by the despised and shunned mephitis mephitica. In the popular mind the skunk has been assoclated with noth- ing morz useful and attractive than a powerfuily disagreeable odor, but champions of the animal assert that its principal food is field mice and beetles, by the destruction of which it has proved itself a valuable friend of the agriculturist. The advocates of the measure ask the legislature to make the killing of a skunk an offense punishable by fine and imprisonment varying from $5 to $500 and from one month to a vear in jail. In some sec- tions of the state, and especiall in parts of western Massachusetts, skunks are now too numerous for comfort. What the situation would b ‘but of the r’rel-t of individuals, and t! to_deter congress from the —Washington Post. Advantages of Winter. An old fashioned winter has its ad- If these were enumerated in parallel columns it is probable that the advantages would lead by a large majority. In a winter like the present the ground is frozen 4o the depth of a few inches in November and thereafter the snowfall keeps a blanket over the earth which prevents the frost from creeping downward Inch by inch until it reaches a depth of four or five feet. It keeps all plant life at the surface of the soil in a perfectly dormant state, but does not completely suspend the function of deep lying roots. A continual covering of ice and snow in the cities keeps the litter and filth of the street from being dried and fine- Iy powdered and about by every ng breeze. This is one of the most common sources of colds, influ- enza, grip, infections of the nose and its Ilb]flnth!ufl sinuses and the mlt. middle ear and respiratory passages in general. Such affections have been less general this year than in several pre- ceding seasons. Steady cold, although very trying to the old’and to people of subnormal vital energies, is in reality much better than alternating warm spells and zero pinches, for the latter conditions invite indiscretions in dress. —Detroit News. Old-Age Pensions in France. The French senate, a moderately B oreved = paoaion, bl hish B b y approved a pens: it has had under consideration for two years, The bill, passed by the cham- ber, will affect about 17,000,000 per- sons, it is estimated, and will apply to wi rkers of poth sexes, includ- ing agricultural laborers and small tenant farmers. Rallroad men, miners and seamen are the great classes ex- cluded from its benefits, but only be- cause they are otherwise provided for. English papers strongly commend the French scheme and declare it to be falrer and more statesmanlike than the British. It provides for contribu- tions to the pension fund by employ- ers, employes and the state, respect- ively. The state’s contribution is equal to the sum of the other two con- tributions. The full pension is lmit- ed to those who reach the age of 65, if they have paid for 30 years, but at 556 a smaller pension, to which the state contributes nothing, may be claimed. The annual pension under the system cannot exceed $82.50 un- der the most favorable circumstances, but in France this will be sufficient to avert pauperism and misery in old age. —Chicago Record-Herald. Changing Her Mind. Down in Georgla they are originat- ing considerable law these days. It was there, the court decided, that a surgeon couldn’t collect his fee where the operation did the patient no good. Now we have another case that amounts to a psychological rarity. A woman got mad at her husband and come if the animal were protected as | concluded to get a divorce, so she the deer is may be conjectured. If |went to & lawyer and had him bring the skunk really is necessary to the | suit, but before the case came on to well-being and prosperity of the fruit | e heard, she became reconciled to her grower it is essential that it should | husband and they resumed happy re- be given some measure of protection, but_we doubt that the legislature will be inclined to go the limit and accord the fragrant animal all the year around immunity from slaughter.— Springfield Union. Ranrcad Courtesy. announcement that the Union is going to establish a school in which it will teach its employes the art of courtesy to the traveling public is of interest as showing the growing belief among modern railroad men that | it is to their interest to have the good will of the public. The day of the public-be-damned railroad man is over. It is a fact that some of the old-timers find it difficult to realize, but it is a fact, neverthe- less. The public refuse- to be damned these days. It bas come to recognize that it has certain rights which even corporations, and among them rail- roads, must recognize. And as the vears roll by it becomes more insist- ent that those rights shall be observed. An editorial writer in one of the rail- road publications a short time ago said it was his belief that most of the feel- ing of the public against railroads was due to the treatment received at the hands of railroad employes with whom t came in t, and that if these nen were taught good manners, polite attention and all that, much of tl fee ould disappear. Perhaps it is this fals be ates railroad of- nowadays that be courteous in t of patrons.—Buffalo Some State Debts. nding the periodical loot- o fufds by e of arge in- sylvania that f the game” nd_ all the the balance in he trepsury was with § 8 In the i fund besides. Wit AN ASSOss- ed property valuation of 00.000.000, Pennsylvania has a net debt of $73,000 What on_earth that little dab of a debt is kept for does not appea unless it 10 show that they ¢ h. debt | )00, ha much of Connecticut, bt of any state Imost two_times @ debt of $79,000,000. portion nd_is than the largest union, being as that of the state of Ney ¥ states hav has k. _Ten nd Ken- h is the no debts at all only $26,000, that make sridgeport Standard. tuecky small of having any. Only interested in Food. - has been found guilty of = aphors. Probably he ‘sn't so particular about preserving ths purity of speech 23 of food.—Denver Republican An Impracticable Theorist. An impracticable theorist has sug- gested that Morgan, Rockefellzr and Cargegic lease the government. and pay the people Kansus City Thues. lations once more. The lawyer bad done some work on the case and presented his bill. She refused to pay It, saying she had changed her mind. Then he brought it to collect, but the court threw out the case, declaring that “a woman has an inalienable right to change her mind.” There Is the plain law on the subject, and means, if a lawyer brings 2 divorce sult, he takes with it the risk of the woman changing her mind. ‘We haven't the court’s decision be- fore us, but take it that the reasoning is that it fs in line with sound public policy that a woman be allowed to change her mi when she pleases.— Ohio State Jourhal. Thoroughbred Jerseys. In the Press of Thursday was the story of a shipment of thoroughbred Jersey cattle from _Oristol-to the famous Hood farm in Worcester, Mas: It came as a surprise to most people that this section was producing some of the best stock In the country in the dairy and butter line. But it is fact. There are a number of breeders hereabouts who has been rafsing superior stock for years, and are re osmized as producers of thoroughbreds. Some of the cows have remarkable milk and butter records. No better confirmation of these statements is needed than the fact that critical and prominent buyers come here for thelr stock. Bristol's fame is chiefly that of a live manufacturing town, but it is well to realize that her agricnltural interests are important and that many of her farmers and dairymen are very able, progressive men ‘with enviable reputations that reach far.—Bristol Press. . They Cannot Stay. From time to time various colonies of Jews have actually returned to the Holy Land. There are records of Jew- ish settlements there as early as 1170 p in the 16th century tthe city of “where only Jews were to dwell,” was rebullt. " But it waa not until comparatively modern colonies began. In 1578 the ideas of Laurence Oliphant and the Earl of Shaftesbury took definite shape in the purchase of 700 acres of land by the Jews of Je- rusalem and the foundation of the colony of Petah Tikwah After the Rus- Sian persecution of 1581 large numbers Jews emigrated and at the end of 1888 there were about 5,000 Jewish colonists in Palestine Cook Books Too Much. g Two old settlers sat smoking in their cabin far away in the backwoods. No woman's hand had ever desecrated that sanctum, and grime reigned su- preme and triumphant. The conver- « pretense |sation veered round from state politics to cooking. aid the elder of the two, with a drawl, “I did get one o' them there cook books wunst, but I could never do nuthin’ with it.” “How was that?” inguired the other. “What was the hitch?” “Waal,” was the answer, “every one o’ them’ receits begun in the same way with the same words. Every one o’ ‘em started off with ‘take a clean dish'—and I never got no further.” Flectric cables with hemp cores to sn annual reutal— | take up the strain more evenly are a Swedish invention, {off our premises. 12x2 Band Vaudeville votion P ADMISSION— ori and_Stories Tustrated Sone; 10, TVENINGS, Wemerved Semtn—in Brushes SPECIAL SALE 15 cents A GOOD VARIETY TO CHOOSE FROM See window display. The Lee & Osgood Co. 131-133 Main Street, NORWICH, CONN. marddaw NOTICE Dr. Lou Frank!in Miner is now locatsd In her niow office, Breed Hall, hours, 1 to 4 p. m. augl7a - 25 Stirring Up Business has been forced upon us by the pres- sure of public approval. Because we know how to buy and to sell goods so satisfactorily that they absolutely fly Just our stirring way of keeping WI 28 and LIQUORS up to the mark. We harder than ever soon, because of the extra good value of our new stock. Come in before the cream’s off the top. Geo. Greenberger, 47 Franklin Street, Telephone 81 Norwich, Conn. fenld . Building ARE YOU THINKING OF DOING THIS ? It so you should consult with me and get prices for same. Ixcellent work at reasonable prices. C. M. WILLIAMS, General Contractor and Builder, 218 MAIN, STREET. *Phone 370, Rose Bowling Alleys, LUCAS HALL, 43 Shetucket Street. 3. J. C. STONE. Prop . ectiza WHEN you want to put your busis ness before the public, there is no mes dium better tha &h the advertis- Ing colUmus of LThe Bullels expect to 'stir | Jan17a | R THEATRE CHARLES MeNUL® FEATURE PIOCTURE: “The Trapper and the Red Skin,” s and An Outlaw’s Sacrilice. MISS FLORENCE WOLCOTT SELECTED SONG PROGRAMME. Matinee, Ladies and Children, So Jan3sa ‘ MUSIC. NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teacher of Plano, Room 48, Central Bullding CAROLINE H. THOMPSON Teacher of Musie 46 hington Street. ISR e S S et S SRR L. H., BALOOM. Teacher of Plano. 29 Thames St. Lessons given at my residence or the home of the pupil. Same method =% used at Schawenka Conservatory, Ber= 1in. oct11d F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect St. 511 Norwich, Ct. Tel. A. W. JARVIS is the Leading Tuner In Eastern Connecticut. 16 Clairmount Ave. 'Phone 518-5. sept22d | 1 Individuality ‘ Is What Counts In Photography. Bringing out the real permonality, | the fine joints In character, the littla traits that make us what we are, Toned down by the natural spirit of an artist jnto perfect accord, Not & $hing of paper and pasteboard with @ ready-made look. If you want a photo of your real self, or what your friends see to love and admire. call on LAIGHTON The Photographer, opposite Norwich Savings Soclety. auglsd WM. F. BRILEY (Sucecessor to A. T. Gerdner) Hack, Livery and Boarding Stable 12-14 Bath Street. HORSE CLIPPING A ECIALTY, Telephone 883. przsd '# Spring Styles includin, fabrics ¥ luce gars correct fit Order Early, ster comes on March 27th. THE JOHNSON C0., Merchant Tailors, 65 Broadway, Chapman's Building. "DONT WORRY: It Makes Wrinkles. the best in design and dy for inspeotion. The reasonable and we its with style and | | | | | Warry over ili-health does youws pealth no good, and merely causes wrinkles, that make you look oldes | than you are. |1 you sick, don't werry, but about 1t to make ycurself well. Te do this we repeat the words of thousands ot other formar sufferers from woman- Iy e, stmilur to yours, when we say, 1ake Viburn-0. It 1s a wonderful female remedy, as you will admit if you try 1%, Directions for 't Lse arp printed im x langinges with every bottls. Price $1.25 at druggists. FRANCO-GERMAN CHEMICAL OO, 1 L 129tk Sireel, Naw Tary VRV Y- LY.

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