Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 19, 1910, 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)

rwizh Aulletin and gcneicfi 114 YEARS OLD. yea: ntered ac the Postoffice at Norwich, Conn., as second-élass metter. Telephone Call: Bulletin Business Office. 430 Office, Reom 2. Murray Telephone. 210. Bulletin Job Office, 35 @ Wimantie Autidiag. price, 12c 8 week; 50¢ & should not be lost upon a generation which prides itself upon its ability to take a hint or to equal if not surpass any of its predecessors. THE BATTLE OF LIFE. A man not only has to fight for what he gets in this world; but he has to battle to keep what he has ariginated. The way the Wrights are invoking the aid of the law to protect their rights while they reap the profits re- sulting from their study and genius shows this. They not only distin- guished themselves as “crazy fools” first, but found out that the theories concerning air flight were all wrong 2 Bulletin Editorial Eooms, 33- March 19, 1910. The Cirenlation of The Bulletin. The Bulletin has the largest cir- culation of any paper im Eastern Comnecticut, and from three to four times larger tham that of any in Morwich. It is delivered to over 3,000 of 4,053 houses im Nor- rend by nimety-three per of the people. In Windham eent. is delivered to over D00 housecs, and Daniclson to over 1,108, and im all of these places it n considered the local daily. Eastern Connecticut has forty- sime towns, ome hundred and sixty- five postoffice districts, and forty- ome yurml free delivery routes. The Bulletin is sold in every town and on all of the R. F. D. routes inm Eastern Commecticut. CIRCULATION 1901, average 1905, THE WAY TO THRIFT, The way to thrift is not the road of the masses. Keeping in the social swim is a custom which keeps thou- sands out of the thrifty class. The firet position of thrift is that of being o lemder of money instead of a bor- rower, and that is what every deposi- tor in @ savings bank actually be- comes. The way to financial security in the day of self-denial and it ever will be. No one can have his cake and eat it. The power to check our wants and to create balances instead @f defieits is the first sign of mastery 17 5t does not carry more than a dime to one’s credit; and the multiplying of e dimes is what spells success. nérew Carpegie is right in say- ing that the first goal of & wage- carner in saving should be to acquire $1,000. Virtually all rich men who have given their testimony on the sub- Jeet agree on this point. Another Point hieh Mr. Carnegie makes, and upon which there is a consensus of opinion among men of his class, is that money grows surprisingly fast after the first $1,000 is acquired. Money grows while 2 man sleeps, while all the man gets who has no capital and does manual or clerieal labor 1s what he earns while he is awake, Self-denial is only inviting to those who become conscious of what it means In the end. It really means a higher and better plane of life—the mdependence, the securityand the con- Rdence which is the fruit of the ability lo meet every claim of every creditor. This is the surest way to command the respect and rezard of others—the \ t and iruest road to prosperity md to s the ambitions which harass the soul. AVErage .....ceesesene FORTUNE FIRST — EDUCATION AFTERWARDS. T railen to Deniel Waldo Field f Montello, Mass., to reverse the usual srder of things, by first making a for- me and then taking a college course. Field is rated as a millionaire, is irector in several corporations and loys 5000 peovle in his Brockton shoe factories. He has entered the Harvard business school as a student. He is, of course, especially Interested in corporation law, and the studies whieh will make him even a greater captain of industry. At his time of Nfe he will not find the college di- versions necessary to his success, for he knows his purpose in becoming a student at Harvard, and if a little late will be the more concentrated and intent upon his purpose, If our memory serves us, there Is a Aissouri woman of 92 taking a college ourse because she has always de- sired to take such a course and at hat age saw and grasped her first portunity, and she is likely to live to acquit herself with honor. Commenting upon tHe boy and the college course, an exchange says: “The uth is thet a boy may be spoiled by too Iittle in college, or he 1 by studyinz-too much aving VESTON'S WONDERFUL ENDUR- ANCE. s Westor brated 2 on the road between o> and New a sign: o5 betv York one day zed the day sen morn and have tuck- g his stunts Weston v and sport not only to 0 will give habits and cause there are illions forming country who at 72 does not a freak or other men tomperate akliings physical, has lived in the pure air, kept his lungs expanded throsigh deep breathing and his muscles like iron by steady exercise, and his heart vigor- ous by the perfect action of his body; and as the result of this physical har- mony he has the mental vigor of uth. There is no fecbleness of age smanifesting itself in him. He is in perfect health, as any man can e at his sge who has kept the faith: The ing example sot by Weston, life because he him He has kept the law of the who has fullness of and cul- | and that to win the true principles of flight must first be discovered, and they discgvered them. It is said that there is hot a single airship which | does not resemble theirs, monoplane: | biplanes or multiplanes, and it is their itent rights which they are guard- ing that involve them in so many law- suits, by The bird men of Dayton are not | only battling to reap the results of their labors, but to prevent the prod- uct of their genius being stolen and the rewards being reaped by others. They regard the aeroplane as still in the exhibition stage, The problem of safety has not been worked out. Skill and unshakable nerve are still the prime requisites for making a flight. | The efement of risk which so delights the patrons of state and county fairs can be supplied in any quantity called for. The day has not yet arrived when the amateur can unpack and assem- ble his machine, read his book of di- rections, take his seat, start his en- gine and go soaring over hill and meadow. It may be a long time be- fore the rural postman will drop his packet of papers and letters into a hopper conveniently placed among the treetops, or airships will be seen car- rving passengers and freights across New England skies. WHAT STIRRED ENGLISH BLOOD. The treatment received by Million- aire Patten in England was a surprise to this country and the conservatives rapped John Bull over the knuckles hard, preaching sermons to him upon the virtue of being a good leser as well as a good winner. He did not sit in silence and let his critics yawp; but in prompt order presented his point of view which so agitated his hooters and hissers and gave the toe of his boot such a suspicious move- ment that Mr. Patten fled precipi tately and tumbled into a cab in time to escape the humiliating climax, He set forth that the winning and losing was a part of the game which they recognized with complacency, but what they objected to was this, after they had been skinned and were sore they resent the coming back of the taker of their pelt for the purpo: of shaking it in their face. They will not tolerate the extreme of insolence, for they regard it as an insult and a chal- lenge to violence. That jeems to be so well stated that Mr. Patten and all others Americans understand it, and future skinners of the British capital- ist on cotton or any other natural product will know right where to draw the line of their operations. John Bull not kicking at wound: but he'll Jet no American rup salt into them without kicking. EDITORIAL NOTES. Only one democratic senator voted for the postal savings bank bill. The banquet designed to celebrate a divorce can only be inviting to the shapeless. | In the prejudice of the people Can- | non ana Aldrich dwell as twins of | equal deserts. There is no room to doupt th be in favor of Taft as Roosevelt wil | | a successor of Taft. Our Irish fellow citize re not only alive on St. Patrick’s day, but every day in the vear. It has become a fact that the novel get up among the best sellers. The Easter bonnet never sings: “Hard times, hard times, come again no more!” It knows no hard times. 2% x Colonal Roosevelt doesn't need the franking privilege. He would honor himself if he declined to accept it. The cigarette among the English women is giving way to the pipe. They will know what pipe dreams are now. Allowing the hatpin to exceed the diameter of the hat by one inch is undefinable license. Just look at those diameters. Flappy thought for today: ‘The person who lives up to his temper can make no pretence about religion but a false pretence. | Etbert Hubbard defends the Stand- ard Oil company as the greatest Am- erican industry and greatest benefac- tion of modern times. arnegie o for feel proud reporter, been ordered back The 1,400 remair American inte: American can t 32-page edition with perfe |« 1d in perfect shape. - Typo art 1 The American office. ope that will oth_of an inch 1 ze has vented. They ought to be able Dr. Cook’s sagacity, now. { g0 W cilral way of s an man was pleased by male pickpoeket re- \er purse. h artist saw popular candy sold in aine 3 er cent. per cent. ether oil and cent. alcohol. They do not tel at holds it together. New England does mot want a 25 per cent. addition to the Canadian tar- iff as a matter of retaliation. Tt would punish the importers more than the Canadian government. The first survey and preliminary ar- rangements have been completed by the Transvaal government for the ex- tension of the rallwav from Picters- b“f to the copper flelds at Mesina, 200 miles to the north, with an ultimate continuation across the Limpopo intg Rhodesia. The whole district through which the raflway will Tun is rich in mineral resources and agrieyltural pos- sibilities, and the construction of the line. “which is to hei proceeded with forthwith, wil niark an important epoch in Trancwmel dewelopment. spoken of as “barely decent” does not | it | | | i When I was a small boy with a loaf. er’s inclination, mother used to say: “The devil finds some mischief still for idle hands to do.”. I didn't then that his satanic majesty di have any time to fool with any one who was busy. I'm sorry to say that I regarded the quotation as a pious fiction for a great many years. Later on it came to look to me like living truth and then I realized why & mother full of solicitude for her boy strove to make it indelible. Youw'll see that if & man is busy in evil pursuits he doesn’t need the dévil's attention, and if he is about his Master’s business he has no use for him. It is thé dawdlers he labors with and it is not surprising that he finds them to be easy prey. If | was a betti willing to lay consi It you want to discover a: man ‘or point to look for it. church or his government, of = his neighbors, his home or his children, right. worth and to sell him at his own val- vation would be a quick method of get- ting rich. When we come to man’s conceit this is its center of gravity: is not naughty, but It i exaggeration and doesn’t stand the test of time. fa mot | talks: but when he comes to that it is all |ang nelghbors mine; to snug . With my sister-triend for one of our 1 tell her I tell the man d to us dream of teliing to should I do without my “friend— I, who .have no sister of my own, 7 With_her, T may ‘With her, l;‘:vu need be I may toss off whims cording to my mood of the I may chatter the {rothy nothings off the top of my mind, or utter solemn man I should be | platitudes as though they were the rable of a wWager | mightiest common or uncommon sense, upon the statement that man never |T may even pour out clings more tenagidusly to anything on | troubles—and it is a Tire Eens e earth than his good opinion of himself. | wil] Jet you do that—or I may go deep- er still and draw up from secret and woman's unshaken faith this is the |innermost recesses b Ie can change |ing which I would not breathe into his opinion of his political party, bis |the ear of any other friend or foe on earth. I would not speak out Innermost things to you, dear I would not This is how it came to be a|ejther bore nor_trust you with proverb that to buy a man at his real u‘;‘u;.r I w!:i’:" no?rmm o(ythem to any one who would ridicule my con- fidence, nor censure me, nor mis- understand. There is only one woman It |in the world to whom I can speak out generally an |of the core of my heart; and to her, friends ‘because ecause I have been not simpl, nor Hecause we from babyhood; I am sure of her; Some people are mighty shy about |know she loves and trusts me as I telling their age, and while this is re- £ love and trust her; not because she rded as a feminine fault many a man |is herself a large and noble eoul, caught declining to reveal his years. | quick to understand, quicker to ap- As a yule there is no harm done by |preciate, quickest of ail to have com- this sort of secrecy, but the outward |passion on human weaknesses and sign cannot be readily hid. We have |fears and faults and failings. a complimentary way of guessing ages | tells me that I am a -help to She er, that ten or twenty years under appearances [my questionings compel her to close for the purposes of fiattery, and the |thinking, “I | comprehend my problems and seek chance to say complimentarily: and that in the effort to should never have dreamed it!” when |their solution, her own thought be- we knew better all the while. If we |comes clarified. Perhaps this is true. g0t on to ourselves some of us would | At all events. there are few things I realize that it is safer to tell one's tru, enjoy more than to get her into thi age than to have it honestly guessed | Morris chalr in front of my bl at. We actually look older than we |fire and make her talk, while I have any right to—we have worked, too |down on the hearth to watch the hard or fretted too much and the signs | flames leap and her enthusiasm kindle, of our dissipations than our years warrant. Somehow it seems to me to be bet- one makes a new acquaintancé in let- It is better to let a stran, you have opinions, and that you are opinionated, favor or his prejudices a: easily ex- cited. Old Bombast nevs ‘blood. Opinions wanted, for they are seldom appreciat- then, if they are combaZted, their de- fense is excusable. Tossing:out opin- exercise to be commendable. Yes, William, 1 believe in avera men where there are enough to estal v did have [ hardest,” good repute and it does not pay one to |faithfully doing your best, and you reveal that he is of the same flesh and |aione know the real reasons why you re mighty good things |must do what they are ail so ready to keep to one's self until they are |t0 say you ought not to. You can- ed if they have not been asked for, and | DO Tight to e: e | hs are cleaner cut{and listen to the tones of her voice. “You can understand,” I was saying to her last night, “how much easier ter to be slow rather than hasty when |it often seems to carry ome's burden in silence, and to work out from under ting him know that we hdve opinions. |it alone, as one best can. For there think that |are not many persons in a million you e is sure to |<can tell think so, than to assure him at once |that they will understand, and see why, since his [and sympathize, and not blame.” your trouble to with any hope “It is the blaming that hurts I went on, “when you are not tell your reasons, often you have , there may be others involved. Once, when I need- ed money for a ioved one who was fons freely is too much of a hot air|slowly dying, I asked a rich woman of my acquaintance if she cared to buy from mé a certain antique which she “often said she would like to own, but supposed I would never care to lish an average; but I have never yet [part with. ‘She was not in the mood seen two average men of equal capac- |t0 buy.it, just then, but, to my amaze- ity. in this world. wage and an average minister's salary and an average citizen and an aver- age price for everything except kisses —so many of them go at sacrifice that an average has neyer yet been struck. Averages always have been and al- ways will be more or less mislead- ing. There is an average beauty, but I confess that T should not know' that {on sight. I have been so thoroughly taught beauty is that beauty does, I do not consider myself competent along that line. scripture better than they could live up to it. It seemed a joy to them | to be able to surprise folks with the lore of lonz ago. They were so much better at that than living a Godly life that they always appeared like a great discrepancy. The difference between what they were and what they ought < of & brunette. It was a case of ming to want to be good and not knowing how. Such people do not re- do not harmonize. They think the world is against them when they are against themselves and have the pow- er for reform in their own hands. A great many folks do not know what a vice is. This is the reason, perhaps, that many religious people have vices, while they declare that they are saved from sin—cannot sin— which has always seemed to be to me 2 hallucination. Now any practice that weakens the will and injures the health is a vice. Excessive zeal even in the pursuit of goodness has made nervous wrecks of some people. ~ That is a vice just as much as the excessive use of sfimulants. Excesses of any kind are not virtues. The Saviours calm- ness, his perfect self-control, wer: among the strongest evidences of his divinity. Religion which lacks this, lacks the diviner expression. | was somewhat surprised the other day to read that the unicellular lire— span-life—was the only life which marked the globe for ten million years. I wondered how the author became aware of that—how he knew exactly to a year about it when he wasn't there and ‘made no claim to personal ac- quaintanceship with the one who boss- | ea the job. If I may be left to judge | this was about 60,000,000 years before biishment of the garden of o not know that there was ime prior to the garden of on the basis of the first fact and the evolvement of the metazoon, whatever that may be, it seemed to be safe g ng. What facts we do see in books—what wild statements we ac- cept to bolster up science. I guess I'm not so sure about most of it If you wish to please just let him know that about what he sald about you. who like to irritate others pleasure in it until they know they have them goin ola Epictitus laughed when he le: ed someone had sald evil things about him, and when asked anghed replied: “Had he kno e better he ¢ have said som fake of you resentation, that The thing to a slanderer you are mad Those find o for If we look at our 11 have more charity ¢ those whose worst side side are harsh in their judgment of others. Try to know how bad you are and vow'll grow better. I have always noticed that those who desire to push everything to the bitter end discover later on that they were the ones worst bitten. Following up 2 grudge can make an ass of a person as quick as anything In this world can. Revenge isn't sweet—it is forgiveness that elevates the soul. It is queer we Christiens haven’t learned to forgiye quicker—have nol become adept at forgetiing the disagreeable things of life. To remember affrouts and things of that sort is to fan the flames of hate which often lead to feverish bru- tality. It is good to be rid of the sav. age elements and 10 feel that it is be- neath a man. The price of supremac: is to be above the irritating Instincts which mark the brute. mileage of railw: inereased last year by Canada eratinn miler in op- 1,138 I have known men who could quote | as as striking as rouge on the | alize that their words and their acts | | | | There are averages and averages | ment—for she considers herself a wo— There is an average |man of breeding—she bestowed upon me a gratuitous lecture on economy and good .business management. I had gone to her with & simple business SUNDAY MORNING TALK THE “PUBLIC BE PLEASED” POL- 1cy. That was a bold and happy stroke on the part of a new traetion company in one of our great cities when, in connection with its detailed announce- ment of its plans it added, as a kind of watchword, this Hne: “The public be Pleased” It is mot so very long ago Eince in that same city a railroad mag- nate, swelling with a gense of his own importance and power, proclaimed con- temptuously his indifference to the public in language more emphatic than quotable. The total reversal of that short-sighted and ostrich-like policy indicated by the words “the public be pleased” is one of the cheering sign- posts on the highway which humantiy is treading today. The agitation and the preachments of the last few years are bringing many persons in high places and the possessors of large opportunties to realize that it is not safe—to put a matter on the lowest plane—to ignore what the rank and file of people want and expect and mean to have in due time. How much better it is for cor- porations and richly-dowered individ- uals instead of having to be forced to please the public, to anticipate its at- titude and in_ uhe best sense of the term to cater to it. 1 was talking the other day with a man familiar with both the east and west who said that in the latter sec- tion of the country the railroads sim- ply were obliged to pay deference to public sentiment, whereas in the more egtablished east the railroads had come to feel a certain proprietary right which made them sometimes careless of the wishes of the public. I do not I am sure that the deliberate or even the unintentional ignori of the just know how true this distinction 1s, but | “But when sorrow comes I ques- tloned. “When loved omes die, when ends forsake us, when grief gnaws at_the heart?” “These, too, are but the long journey,” she answered tender. 1y. “Heart-breaking, yet incidents, none the less. We are still journeying on, all of us, and all of us r. Some have climbed a. little higher and can reach down a helping hand to us, in turn can stretch our _those 3§ Dbelow, and cheering - I, who am often weary with climbing, know how it helps ‘Come on! FoHow the path, ‘fol- o toe ajeamn Youll find Befe’ foot- ing just beyond.’ ™ —— You see,” she went on, pursuing her thought, ‘we have to learn to draw not touch our inner life, so nefther can they baffie or hinder us in the real business of our lives. “What is the real business of our dives?" T asked. She answered me with :y) ml:‘l “Why, just to. journey onm along the ath that leads—Somewhere—glad of the helps that come down to us and glad to pass them on to others; will- ing mot to understand, willing that things should not always come our way, willing to work, willing to wait, glad always, and grateful, happy and still and serene. THE RECLUSE. MUSIC AND DRAMA Edith Barker, who plays Shirley Rossmore in “The Lion and the Mouse” for many years supported Chauncey Olcott. The important w of Dina in Tb- sen’s *“Pillars of letp= which Mrs. Fiske will produce on r Monday at the Lyceum theater, New York, has been assigned to Merle Maddern. ‘Three performances are to be given of Hauptmann’'s ‘“Lonely Lives” in this country before long. They will be un- der the direction of Julius Hopp, who is responsible for “the gocialist dra~- matic movement.” Harrison Grey Fiske has arranged with Conductor Birnbaum for the use of a novel instrument, the celesta, in the score of Marschalk’s music for Hauptmann’s “Hannele,” in which Mrs. Fiske will be seen in New York. Oscar Saenger has enjoyed an en- viable reputation for vocal training end has a formidable list of opera stars to his credit: lo In, demands of the people shes e best soil for the sowing of socialistic and amarchistic doctrines. But this little phrase has wider and not In any way charged with dete: mining the pelicies of the great corpo: rations need to order our actions and shape tfle course of our thinking by this same form. We ought to preach and teach, to heal and practice law, to administer our homes and walk the gtreets with a view to pleasing, not irritating, or scorning. or deprecating, or degrading the public. This does not mean that the minister shall pare the popular palate, or the doctor or the lawyer should swerve from what he knows to be right procedure, but that they all shotild think of as wide sortment of humanity as possible. Barnum, the showman, used to “study to plea . He did it for com- mercial ends, byt the Christian man can do it from a higher motive. Here are all onr fellowmen about us lack- ing this or that or the other thing, discouraged, sulky, frettul, lonely, headed in the wrong direction, Why not make It 2 point to please as many of them as we can, to entertain them, to divert them, to cheer and uplift them? It may take only a smile on our way downtown, or a cordial hand- clasp, or a brief, friendy letter, or a “Hello there, old fellow! How are things with you this morning?” The public be pleased. After all, the public, when rightly understood, is not such a hard master, and when we seek to please It we are Tecognizing the fact that all of us are more im- portant timn auy one of us that bo one lveth unto himself, and that the more constant one’s outge of good- will and helptulness the more one -ions to speed forward the day when all men shall hive together In the =pirit of Him who “pleased himself."” THE PARSGN. Aileen Jlodgson is singing ¥ri Scheff's rale in “The Prima Donn: ewing %o the nerveus becakdowon of the stas more personal bearing. Some of us | down ‘his convictions in order to please | vice to as large and variegated an a@s- | | | tasteful design. | workmanship. | | i Women’s Dresses, e 100—S dy & Jackson’s Vaudeville—10¢ GUS HORNBROOK’S BRONCHO BUSTERS, consiating of 8 people and 3 horses—A Semsational Westers Novelty. ‘WILLIE SOLAR AND ROGERS ALICE Late Stars of Gus Edwards’ Kountry Kids Ko. Y BOBKER, The Boy ‘the Suit Case. |P-Mnl: Complete . chang pictares Datlye PR SADIE BERTINA & BROCKWA’ Acrobatic Sister Act, ADMISSION 10c—EVENINGS, RESPRVED Marie Rappold, Allan Hinckley, Henrl Bcott, and now the best tenor voice he has ever trained, Orville Harrold. Har- rold’s succesg is assured, as was shown n his two appearances as Canio In “Pagliacci” at the Manhattan. Marcella. Sembrich brought joy to music lovers at Parson’s theater, }art- ford, this week, once more giving proof of her wonderful art; her voico was perfectly clear and sweet, true in ev- ery note and ot amply sufficlent power for all that it wag called on to do. The andience was enthusiastically np- preciative. The I mpértant Problem contronting anyone in need of a laxa- tive is not a question of a single ac- tion only, but of permanently bene- ficial effects, which will follow proper efforts to live in a healthful way, with the assistance of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, whenever it is re- quired, as it cleanses the system gently yet promptly, without irritation and will therefore always have the preference of all who wish the best of family laxatives. The combination has the approval of physicians because it is known to be truly beneficial, and because it has given satisfaction to the millions of well-informed families who have used it for many years past. To get its beneficial effects, always buy the genuine manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only. Special Price FOR 10 DAYS ONLY On Tailor-made Suits S. LEON, Ladies’ Tailor, 278 Main St. *Phone 712-6. jan21d THE PLANK Headquarters for Best Ales, Ete., in Town. JAMES O'CONNELL, Proprietor. Telephone 507. £ oct2d Lagers, A Magnificent Display of Women’s Suits ' —egmm—Ready for the Early Easter Easter comes very early this year. nine days left now to buy the Easter Suit and get it ready to wear a week from next Sunday. Early as it is we are abundantly ready of the | best styles that will be seen this season are here for you to select from. Suits to mget the requirements of widely varying fancies, yet all bearing the impress of correct style and Throughout the great range there is an assortment of models, a beauty of style, and a high grade of materials, ({t and Only Our showing of Suits at popular prices we show styles embracing the most desirable models, materials and colors. Skirts and Tailored Waists at popular prices. ALL ALTERATIONS FREE merican Fur, Cloak & Suit Co. | 140 Main Street, Norwich.” CHILDREN AT MATINEES 5¢—38 SHOWS DAILY—2.30, 7, 8.45. KEITH & PROCTOR'S ® VAUDEWVILLE, Direet from New York Hippod — MME. ANITA DIRZ MONKS — Posttively the Best Monkey Act in Vi CALBOUN, Late Stur of Way Down East Folks. y VAUDEVILLE MOTION PICTURES AND ILLUSTRATED SONGS. MARCH 3me 224 34 Y deville. RALSTON & SON, 3 Ft. Father—8 ¥t. o) Funniest KWver. AUDITORIUM DUO, Tigh Cluss Songs. SEATS, March 21, at 8.15 p. m. JOHAN & HARRIS Present the World's Biggest, Best and Most Famous Minstrel Organization, GEO. EVANS’ HONEY-BOY MINSTRELS Presenting all that is big, new novel in minstrelsy. The fastest, clas: iest and most extravagantly presented entertainment of the kind the stuge has ever offered. Prices—25e, 36c, Soe, TS, $1, $1.50. Seats on sale at the usual places on Friday, March 18, at 9 o'clock, Carg to all points after performance mar1sd Broadway Thealre BEETHOVEN QUARTETTE OF BOSTON. W. B. MILLAR OF NEW YORK R Y. M. C. A. Men’s Meeting Sunday at 3.30 p. m. All Men Invited. marl7d THEATRE CHARLES MeNULTY, LESSEE . R Fenture Plcture: THE COWBOY AND THES QUAW. THRILLING INDIAN PIOTURE. Mr. Chas. J. Ray, Baritone. IN ILLUSTRATED SONGS. New Stiage, New Mael w and In ereased Seating Capmeity. New Singe: Watch for the Great Features. Matinee, Ladies and Children, Jan3a [ I:U!l@ NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teacher of Plano. Central Bullding Room 48, CAROLINE H. THOMPSON Teacher of Music 46 Washington Street. t. iven at my _resdenos the pupll. Same met! a Conservato § F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect St, Tel, 611, Norwich, C& A. W. JARVIS is the Leading Tuner in Eastern Connecticut. 'Fhone 518-5. 16 Clairmeunt Ave. sept22d Spring Styles including the best ¥ design and fabrics ready for inspection. Tha prices are reasonable and we produce garments with style and corr fit. ? Order Early. Easter comes on M THE JOHNSON Co., Merchant Tailors, 65 Bresdway, Chapman's Building, 1647 Adam’s Tavern 1861 Offer 1o the public the fuest siamdary brands of Beer of Burcpe and America, Bohewmlan, Plisner, Culmbach Bavarian B and Burton, M . Hrank Jone Sterling Bliter A iser, S Wit Anheuser. z and Pabst A. A ADAM. Norwich Twws.

Other pages from this issue: