Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 12, 1910, Page 4

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FHorwich Bullefiz and GonFied 114 YEARS OLD. Schacription price, 12c @ weeks 50¢ a menth: $6.00 & year. Entered a nn. as second-class matt Bullet: Faliett et Bane Umantie e Postoffice at Norwich, Telephome Calla: n Business Ofiice. 480, n Editorial Rooms, $5-8. 2 Job Office, 35-6. Office, Reom 2. Murray Telephone. 210 Norwich, Saturda—, March 12, 1910. The The The — i i Put sve The culation of asy Norwich. 3.000 of the and re ot delivered to over 900 housecs, 1,100, and in Eastera postoffice districts, and om a Circulation el Buliefin. Bulictin Bas (he largest eir- paper i Easters theut. larger 1 d by uimety-three per the people. In Windham sam and Daniclson to over of these places it ldered the loeal dally. Commecticnt has forty- ome humdred and stxty- and forty- free delivers routes. is sold in every of the R. F. D. stern Commecticut. rat Bulletia CIRCULATION S vk 1 v v 34k .5.920 FINE PHILANTHROPY. ons are spent for this country every appear, it reaches the it will do most good. hosts of deserving poor in who need comtinuous help nce which comes stablished funds for The Carnegie hero fund i tom; so is the fund es- an actor recently for the sewing women—women 5t a threadbare life mak- omfortable clothes for oth- wages than they possess; and now rancis Parker of , Springfield wi 2,000 to be devoted e care of the un- r and crippled. What a lanthrophy this ny size needs. the wan to be met many ity them. that; and i hat Hello, = : om we get angry we are romptly waited upon abor Commissioner Nefll of the bu- sau of commerce and labor has been £ his attention to the status of ators in this country THE CENTER their mi: bands to the divorce courts, whers a kerbs thing signals can answer, efficiently calls an hour, and Some- ng and E ed 30 in the mornin neon—so many cz the operator cannot th the flashing signal supervisor who stands r must assign some of other nimble fingers. A + e way of al attributes. Tt position must have a a good appetite” “a n.” Of 6.152 appli- were rejected. Some were h. some too young, some few declined to work on ous holldays whils half ned to be vaceinated, and ons ated by | 1 appear- slation it is ap- t too much of prejudiced remem- OF WEALTH. great there are workmen and the nd degrading cond sec of the to ligh ne of the Sage fund s up the y. In Al- 000 men ™ saye: “We the ent against tions oward national by registering a protest name of the Lord” but what this do if the Carnegies, the Coreys are to keep ons of their supremacy this twentieth century upon religious profes- cency as this? onument in devoted to why should n hanglng pieces of nds is what leads wives and This fals “change kicks up a is—one | SCHOOL CELEBRATION OF DAYS. It has to be conceded that there is no better way of teaching patriot- ism than in the celebration of days of importance in the history of the na- tion with special services in the schools, March 4th was so celebrated by a few schools in the west aa “Tn- auguration day.” with befitting serv- fees. ind this has prompted newspaper opinion that "a day now and then miven over to observing the anmiver- sary of the birth of some great Amer- ican or of some epochal event in the history of the country is a day well spent—better spent than in droning constantly over the routine of the cur- riculum crammed into the pupils with so few interruptions. During the school year an aggregate of at least one week might be profitably and ap- propriately be devoted to such exer- cis whose direct educatlonal value is Incontestible and whose variety would instructively vary the monotony of the long school term. If there is not room for such observanves, room should be made for them. The impression is that the children {are crowded with studies now, and this is one of the reasons wh: uch a profitable relaxation from routine as the one susgested ought to be the quicker accepted. A good thing is usually too good to be delayed, THE TURNIP SEED. The wonders of the mustard seed have been Scripturally set forth be- cause from so flne a seed & evolves in whose branches the birds of the air build their nests. The tur- nip seed is as wonderful in another if it has not attracted equal at- tention, From planting to fruitage is a short season of six weeks. It akes 14,600 turnip seeds to weigh an ounce. A turnip that welghs 2 pounds 14 ounces grewn in this time has in- reased its seed weight 671,600 time: and each week it haw increased 111, 933 1-4; each day 15,990 1-2; each nour 664 1-4; each minute 11 times This speed of growth is reached by fine mathematics. is counted, and the weight of a seed is found to be 1-14600ths of an ounce. The weight of the turnip is reduced to ounces, and then the total of seeds per ounce is multiplied by that num- ber, which zives the exact number of times the seed weight has been in- creased: then by regular processes of division the rate of turnip seed srowth or multiplication per week, day. hour and minute, Is reached. As the boys say in these days, the turnip ed ch increases its size 11 times a minute Is going some. A seed that more than doubles its weight every ten seconds must be regarded as in the rapid class, if not a miracle. EDITORIAL NOTES. The Ohio man who sawed off the Jimb he was sitting on should not blame the tree The March thunder shower gives vidence of a good omen despite the sround hos ogre. Congress will honor Peary when he shows it that his achievements are | deserving of it. That's business. | 1t ie not profit that is gotten out f these great strikes, but satisfac- ion, and that always is expensive, Albans is developing materializ- rs. She feels certain that she put in evidence a heavenly hotel. Norwich is progressing all right; but should keep our hilarity and our n due proportion to other things. voungest son of Kais e navy. Roy sous to idlen it | breea | ance. Some people commence a heart to | heart talk like a pugilist parleying to | get in the first staggering state- { ment. President Taft in weater and cap shocks Washington society, but his in- Gependence of character pleases tha people. | 1t is surprising how many ques- {tions a comgressional investigating committee can ask to bring out one | small fact | Happy thought for today: The sci- fentists haven't been able to tell why | a fat girl a lean one, laughs so much easier than When it comes to a dict of eggs from China forty vears old, we should need something more than water to wash it down. The Princess de Sagan finds that her contract to support her first hus- band's parents until death Is indis- solvable, anyway. We are teld that Baltimore needs a go0d advertising Her papers eem to be en to keep her con- ntly before the country. IS vouth who inherited it at the rate of 90 days in New York, the time of his life. nsas nd spent for had dou; Nine millions are to be expended on the Kennebec river, Me., for the con- struction of three big dams and the development of 92,000 horsepower now going to w | In New York, a teamster can abuse his horses and the humane woman who interferes, and then get off with a reprimand lack chivalry, at least has taken just sixteen years to ke the czarina a nervous wreck. the Princess Alix of Hesse she a happy woman, but Russlan au- 3s tocracy w3s too much for her. e New York judge who sent a witness who could remember only t was convenient to jail for six ont iid what ousht to be done aftener 1 defeaters as well as | defiers of ‘the 1aw. i Artificial Sunlight Illumination in Church, Artificlal sunlight as a part of evening wedding Mumination. was re: cently produced in a forelgn church, in a manner truly as ingenious as it was original, savs Sclence Siftings. A canvas hood was placed over the out- side of four of the church windows, | and these hoods and a couple of feet outside the glass of each window was ung o flaming clectric are. At the besinning of the ceremony ail the ehts inythe church were furned out and the flaming arcs turned on. The resuli of the light streaming through the stained glass was like that of sun- rise, then. graduaily the lights Inside the clurch were turned on and the ! sort mellow glow slowly changed and became more intense, as if the sun was brightly shining through. The use of waste lumber in this country is ten times ag great. per cap- ita, as that of France 5 By tree | An ounce of seed | York judges must | THE MAN WHO TALKS How we often run to words, it is &0 much easier than the performance of dutles. I was entertained the other day by a sermon that called attention o the misuses of pious and piety, the former being a substitute for faithfuil- ness often, but not a good one. The word pious is not to be found in the Seriptures, and the word piety only once in one of the Episties. “Well done, “good and faithful servan the Lord’s commendation, not and pious servant” When a person is faitnful he is genuine in all which commands his faith—he cannot be a hypocrite or a pretender: but lots of falks are pious who have not learned how to wear their _halos straight. Since this is not a Bible word It is surprising that it plays such a com- mon part in things religious. I was talking the other day with a tleman. so methodical in his hab- that he 1l to a cent just t it has cost him to live any year t up hous for him- remarke the com- made about at he had just counts. and it had_cost han in 1908; of having fes, or of ed his diet. at the high connected mplain- ue. When piain we all i heing o zone and | refrain gladly join th The past winter has been severe the length and breadth of the land. No section has been immune. Fair Flori- da and frostless southern *California have had to entertain the frost king. A_Chlifornia correspondent writes: “We ‘have had the coldest weather I have scen in California for 50 years. On five days the thermomemter went down 26 degrees here and in the val- leys in the south to 24 degrees. The frost cut the tops of the fuchias and geraniums, but now, February 23, the almonds and cherries are in bloom and the narcissus and hyacinths are at their best and the tulips are coming forward rapidly.” They do not have ice-making weather In southern Cali- fornia oftener than once in half a cen- tury. Five days six degrees below the frecsing polnt Is an execptional rec- o The dahlia fiends in this part of the world, looking out on icy ground or snowbanks, do not think of the dahlia fields in Australia now in bloom. They plant the bulbs there in December and January and they have a blooming season about twice as long as we do, and a florist there declares that “the dahlia has a greater range of color— delicate color—from pink to deep u roon and from white to o low, than any other flower. latest novelty there is "Les! dahlia growing to a helght of six feet and covered with a pretty pink flower. The critics, of whom thers are a large number, deelare it to be “magnificent.” We have tree-roses. but whether tre dahlias are to be successfully grown here remains to be demonstrated. | | | What a little tiny day our day is to the world’s complete day with its med- leys of work and play, jovs and sor- rows, songs and moans, honesties and hypocricies, crimes and _tragedies, calms and’ storms, tidal ripples and tidal waves, its new-born and its born- again, its unspoken farcwells, its sung songs, its unheard petitions— what a whirl of evi <m, what a commixt what contrasts of su heartaches and faith and hop: eart ass: endeavor and cheer required to make just one world And hearts wonder if those unspol Words and unsung songs will eve revealed to them; and I can't help thinking that they will be. Where or | when 1 de not know, but Love | rev all that is noble and hat is | true, 1seful fost. o good or | ‘was interpreted the other day and d ever since. We are al- rpreted by our friends | rces, but few of them are frank enough to turn round and &ive you their measurc of you. This Wwas an automobilist who invited me to Yide fn his motor car, and atter 1 had | declinea with thanks, because I find no | pleasure in such a he turned to | his driver and said: Go ont” | Of course, swe cannot iate one | lanother's excuses for not doing as we | do, or understana their declination of | some things others are just cager to met. We have taken motor trips on | business and the more we take of them | the less inclined we feel to take a trip | for pleasure. We have never been guilty of doing anything vet for the mere pleasure of being in style. It is a truth that attempts are here and there made in human life to treat mates and companions as ideals when they should be simply treated as hu- man beings. It makes no difference what love makes us appear to be to another, we should ourselves realize just what we are, and let no dreamy conceptions of life make slaves of others. Those who know themselves and have mercy upon themselves de- spite their faults are equipped to have mercy on a companion despite his or her faults, There can be no balance without this natural conception of hu- ! man relations. Expectingtoo much of |another is the source of many disap- {pointments; and doinz too much for }another often mukcs 4 tvranny all human, with t e im- , and need the patient con- sideration ' which we bestow upon others. _ The price of progress in this world is work. Nature gave to man ey see with, ears to hear with mouth to talk with, and then saii: g to business.” With a mind 1o |analys and strength and hands lo g0 ind | feet to get Nature furnishes us power and hen expects us 10 prodice; o brins « hout results, ana the achieving man does it |and the others do not, for 1t is theit | business to follow. The lessons. of nature arc written in the earth and the heavens and in the human heart. and man has to get them o1~ ne | Auliara. Nature has no favor: | find"and perception. to ‘Thtern et | wonders or sense her heauty. | You have theught, of cou [fective men are through spec | We call them great and the take the greatest college presiden the country and make him a ca police and he would be a faliuve ereat admiral could not run a Sunday school although he could commi.id a fleet of battleships in great style. 1'ut tut in ot scholars like Carlyle or Spencor inin a pulpit and thev would be at a los. Low to conduct the services: ar.d greatest miniater would be laughel at by the powder monkey charge 0f & mun-of-wa tendent of & will would he he by the printer's devil if ho dertake to run a new. .y and the greatest edilup Ciwn to @ bobbin ho¥ il ook to run a mill. Tha: places like wheels in a w of place they are.all poo useless creatures, It is not a good idea to risk petting fign. orant end The (Written for The Bulletin.) To the child, all the bright 1 tness and sweetness of her fair young life seem- ed to dance and twinkle and bloom in the morning glories that climbed the lattice outside’ Gran'pa’s kitchen door. The moment she was dressed, she would go speeding down the kiichen stairs and along the back passage to the doorway, where, on the threshold worn round ‘and slippery and shining through the years by the tread of many feet, she would balance herself on the tips of her toes, or else, for safer footing, would jump to the broad stone doorstep beneath, while she spoke or sang or laughed her morning greet- ing to the world. The morning giorics greeted her. Great bells of white and blue and purple fluttered their gauxzy, gossamer petals against her heck and Welcomed the caressing touch of her small fingers, not shrinking, because seeming to know that she loved them and was akin to theni, a young thins, a mere blossom of the morning like themselves. She knew they would zo | to sleep as soon as the sun was high, that their little hour was hers, that if she were not thero in the moment to greet them ethe early glory would be | lost out of her day. were friends, | she and the blossoms of morning. | What the child loved were the long hot summer days all shimmering in golden sunshine, with baby breezes stirring the air and the hum of in- ects making sound in the silence; the | spring of the morning, the deep drow- siness of noon; the bird calls and tw | terings as she was led reluctant to | bed; the sleepy sighing of the tree: the chirp of the cicada and disputes of the katvdids: the low murmur of volces rising from doorway and door- vard, from garden or river: and, often- times, when she lay long awake. the shining in upon her of the friendly Stars of night, The child loved every phase and feature of the little old homestead to which she was lovingly brought from the great city, vear after year, to p: ber golden summers. The house self fronted close to the street, there was a carriage drive at one side with a great gate fo swing on; and, at the back, the dooryard sioped down to the river's edge, a path leading from the door—the morning glory doo. —stralght down to the curling water. Here, too, the child came every morn- ing and stood far out on the broad g at the boat landing, looking up stream and down stream, and aeross stream to the meadows, then up to the sky. then Gown Into the depths of the riipiin Fiver. To watch her, you misht £t she was afraid of missing something. But no, it was only her way of greet- inz the world, talking silently to river and meadow and sky, her way of list- ening to what sky and meadow and river, the light the air, the crisping water and the wind-swept grasses had €0 say to her.' She knetv that thes knew she loved them. it- but I High above the river path, and or both sides of it, stretched long beautiful gardens that were linked together by 2 wooden bridge, and bulwarked from the river by rough walls of stone. These walls afforded easy footing to an expericnced climber like this enild of ours, Every morning she asked her self which garden she should first. One had a long gravelled path leading from a summer house atop th stone wall to a little “wicket gate opening upon_the carriage drive, was bowered by three arches clamber- ed over by vines and creepers and tralling things and by all the roses you could think of—giorious vellow roses and waxy ones, pink rosss, red roses, tea roses, all mingling thei beauty and fragrance with a myr Little Old House by the | bushes, while the entire stretch from | village street was one mass of grow- | ing. | bearing vines and plants and shrubs !and slim-stemmed trees. The garden | @top the wall, then a big brown space | Eiven over to potatoes and things; but, | was a chicken ‘coop, and a mother hen | clucking, ! threshold and rings | her a stalwart uncle: River other delicate growths. Near the sum- mer house grew clumps of tawny tiger lilies, between the summer house and the bridge rose battalions of currant the garden paich to the edge of the flowering, swegt-smelling, frui on the other side of the bridge was plainer, merely a strip of grass plot farther on, up mearer the dooryard, and littie downy vellow chicks venturing in and out between of their mother's ~ wings. Some one steps upon the library the great bell that The child laughs a bunds far afield. response. ing to breakfast and to the familiar faces about the = board. There is gran’pa, with his snowy hair and stooping _shoulders; her - first good morning kiss shall be for him. Next him sits a pretty auntie, and beside Young cousins, | whom she will greet but not kiss, are | ed in here und there around the Father and mother each suf- hug from her an hour “the boys,” her two brothers, chums and playmate: her tyrants and teasers, sons of gi imagine their submitting to any show t table, in the terrible eyes of the big boy co! mocking, and overbrimming with child pur- from keeping rorm front hall up the hich, latch Jifting, opens ¢ old oaken stairs whpse the gen- reakfast finished, t enchanted way 2 shining peril. Creep- and _carefully into the 11-fours i forthw by peering i nd’ behind boxes and ba into the queer old halr-cov ks that were brought f by the nderful people long hivering, upon aking floo ms to be to_creak up ts secrets s back over tider at some ess ancestor three, hape, who come across t¥ or behind her v turn to the spinning-wheel, the 1id of a trunk, or rustle ts (such as last wills and | . until at I with her from her and her | she stops just n the ¥ oven rey and se y namely: the 1piess, T risp victims of th then instantly stirs, pl and brea door to find z by the sun needlework upon g o Fer sh t glanc 1 door in her mile Have a the lady of the pinning-w he asks: “and the squire of th lis and deeds? Well, them, little child, come out into the | sunlizh 1 r the glory of the morning be wit USE. strange dogs and horses, never mil how much one esteems animals knows about Chem. All creatur not brought up to be petted, wh human or domestic. It Is da g0 about patting the heads of dogs o the necks of horses. A story is being told of a woman in a neighboring city who wae so fond of horses that she could not keep her hands off, but ju took pleasure In patting strange horses s to | and talking to them. The quiet horse standing beside the curb was her de- light and she had practiced the habit without mishap several years, but the other day a curb horse took except to her headgear and when she touched his neck he began to tear aw chew up her great inviting hat, which looked like a basket of fodder. She screamed and finally disconnected her- self, to find that the hat was chewed into a rare new shape and she went away declaring it looked better than ever. SUNDAY MORNING TALK KEEP ON TRYING. Life's a try. Success depends on continued trying. One or two failures or even more need not prove disas- trous, provided ome is willing to try and try again. Commonplaces these. Yes, but com- monplaces that need to be frequently reiterated. For our natural tenden- cies are all in the other direction. How enthusiasticully we enter upon a = task. the blaze dies down. We did not an- | ticipate theso obstacles and discour- | agements. e run up against a strange lethargy within ourselves. Let's quit the job or, at least, intermit it fo while, and In ths meantime try som thing that goes a little easier. Is that musici: the way ns, poe Oh, you quitter the famous artists, y at and | But when it begins to go hard | inventors, discoverers and capfains of | industry have behaved when they were facing what seemed to be an impas- sable wall? Had they turned aside when the road was hard we should never have had the paintings and stat- " HAVE YOU HEARD of prose and in e inured i and forgett vements in the to mate th which en that ti one’s patie Now will come her greet- | 4o ¢hoce | pushing forward | to pass public, under | | to returning long |} | anybody vith & | who themselves to the pursuit of - ness. But the daily battle with fmpure thoughts, or a hot temper, or the drink habit, or laziness or monotony, grew too hard and they stopped trying. Per- haps also the effort required to meet this or that responsibility, to main- tain the devotional habit. to sustain the regular institutions of the church wearied them. Of persons of this type the apostle was thinking when "he wrote mournfully, “Ye did run well.” But even such can try again. We have plenty of instances of men now successful in business who in former years failed In the commercial sense | the_slats or scurrying to the refuse | of the terms but who were too plucky The child | t5 give up the fight. Trying again they | must say good morning to both the | gardens; see? Her only question was, | to which one first? climbed high upon the ladder of suc- cess. And, thank God, many & man has, by trying again, recovered the moral status that be lost years ago through ceasing to try. And our thought is of special worth charged with the duty of some reform or bringing definite but difficult things in the church, the.home, o the world at large. Just keep on try- ing. You can cherish big hopes of the man of whom it can be honestly said “He's trying” To such these words of Canon Scott Holland of Lon- don carry great incentive. “The very | moment when our hearts despair there comes a sudden and swift movement; age-long barriers crumple away: walls fall flat; the work of years is fulfilled in a rush, in a flood; the impossible has happéned before we can belleve THE PARSON Bonfires Are Outlawed. ne-honored bonfire, the chief in den pyrotechnics, the lcome to_seed time and an sanitary function, is outlaw- The ban of fllegality has been placed upon it. The enthusiastic su- burbanite who yields to the call of spring and sallles out in morning or after work with a nd a pocket full of matches in- on getting rid of the weeds and that have accumulated and him s now a pariah in his arden. That flaming bonfire may into_the police court and cost of living by two hun- The early given in the news col- enounce it as a fool statute books, put e late unlamented legisla- several amazing things one thing it reduces peo- ple to the grade of school children who must get teachers permission,tio 40 various things. The grownup kid who iesires to clean up premises must 2o to the and get a written rubbish on his own ss he happens to own & in which case he may appar- nily have a continuous & tracks without say is 2 may s on the but it there bv t ture. Ther about it. F nderful piece of legi on the side of moderation, t orrs s gt the aetrycr o 2 criminal offense along with of concealed weapons.— Danbury.—The traveling salesmen represent _manufacturers and olesalers of hats are preparing for their spring trips through the country with samples for next fall's trade. Cnilaren “Cry FOR FLETCHER'S Foley’s Kidney Remedy is a safe and certain remedy for all kidney and blad- der diseases, whether acute or chronic. It is a splendid tonic for middle aged ind elderly people and a sure cure for 1l annoyances and irregularities of the kidneys and bladder. The Leo & Os- good Co. 1o Buy In Norwich OSTONIANS--$4.00 that Bostonians m §3 Mo .50--B he best the Special Agency, P. CUMMINGS, (Premiums) 52 Central Ave. Custom Grinding| TUESDAYS and FRIDAYS at YANTIC ELEVATOR. R. MANNING, Yantic, Cona. Telephone. dec14a OUR WIRK Rogers’ Domestic Laundry. Tel. 958, Rear 37 Franklin Street. sept2 A meets the eritical QUALITY should always be comsldered. espectally when it costs no more than the inferior kind. Skilled men are employed by us. Our prices tell the whole story. STETSON & YOUNG. may27a n work | | | | | | Joseph F. Smith, FLORIST 200 Main Sircel, Norwich. ivia Sweel California Navel Oranges 15c doz. OTTO FERRY, 336 Frapklin St Free delivery to all parts of the city. DR. JONES, Dentist, §5 SHETUCKET ST. Room 10 ’Phone 32-3 may1ia C. S. FAIRCLOUGH, Prop. the attention calls ot amesville the fact that like to have you call at the store and Store, your to he would see the goods that we gudrantee. ABOUT THIS ? Dough rises-best when made from BROADWAY THEATRE .. Mon. Tues. Wed. r. 14, 15, 16 & Jackson’s Vaudeville— 100 10c—Sheedy GUS HORNBROOK' BRONCHO BUNTIONS, conatating of 8 people and 3 horses—A % ST. JAMISS AND DACIU, Comedy Sketeh. LAUDRY BROS., Equilibria CHILDREN AT MATINEES Go—3 ) jonul Wentern Nove 1 NI, Mabe Comed Pouitively Complete 5w Tooth A GOOD VARIETY 131-133 Main WHITE’S MULE CIRCUS Vouitivel Amimal ¥ _the ¥ or A1 A Comed, TOOK & W > Bar i The Originnl Brushes SPECIAL SALE 15 cents TO CHOOSE FROM | See window display. The Lee & Osgood Co. Street, NORWICH, CONN. marédaw NOTICE Dr. Loui located in her naw offic Room 1 Frank!in Miner Is now Breed Hall, Office hours, 1 to 4 p. m. Telephone 660. augi7a | wure of public approval. satisfactorily off our premises. Just way of keeping WINE! Come in befor Stirring Up Business has been forced upon us by the Becaus know how to buy and to sell goods o | that they absolutely fly our _stirring and LIQUORS up to the mark. We expect to stir harder than ever soon, because of the extra good value of our new stock the cream'’s off the top. Geo. Greenberger, Norwich, Conn. fevld Building ARE YOU THINKING OF DOING 1f s0 you should consult with me and get prices for same. at reasonable prices. Excellent wourk C. M. WILLIAMS, General Contractor and Builder, 218 MAIN STREET. ‘Phone 370. san17d Rose Bowling Alleys, LUCAS HALL, 49 Shetucket Street. octisa 3. 3. C. GTONE. Prop WHEN you want ness befora tne puolic dium betier than ih-oig) Ing columus of The Hul to put hers i your busie no me- tha advertis. Y FEATURE PIOTURK: *“Ihe Trapper and the Red Skin, | and | An Outlaw’s Sacrilic | MISS FLORENCE WOLCOTI | 1¥ sELECTED soNG rmoGRANMME | Matines, Ladies and Children, [ | Music, NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teacher of Plano, Room 42, Central Bullding CAROLINE W, THOMPSON Teacher of Muasilc gton Street. Lessons glven at the home of the | pwed at Behawen | in. | F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect Bt Tel. 511, Nerwich, C A. W. JARVIS is the Leading Tuner In Eastern Connecticut. 'Phone 518-5, 15 Clalrmount Ave sept22a | Spring Style: ineluding the best in d fubrics 7 prices & Order stor comes THE JOHNSON CO., Merchant Tailors, 65 Broadway Chapman's Building. | At CRANSTON'S Your Easfer Requirements | have been anticipated with an c 1y bectio reasonak » with Early n Maroh | unusually choice variety of Noveltle: Call early and secure (he cream. Fiorai Designs and Bulflflwers For All Occasions GEDULDIG’S Telephone 868. 77 Codai 1260 | | | | | Street |JOSEPH BRADFORD, Book Binder. Blank Books Made and Ruled to O 108 BROADWAY. Telephone 363 do LONG, Spe HARTFORD. CONM. 8014 by Druguiets, .;?:;;..“A.‘\ém;l aprese e kot WHEN you wani vo rour Bust nees hefore the public, 1hers in 16 me- @lum better (han cAronkl ihe adver ing columns w Fue Bullenn.

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