Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 26, 1910, Page 4

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Horwich Zalletiz and Goupied. 114 YEARS OLD. — s...,.'.n....,u.e,m-n—nu-- momth; o year. Enterea ac the Postoffice at Norwich, Tonn., as second-class m~tter. Telephone Calla: Bulletin Business Office. 480. Bulletin Editorial Eooms, 85-3. . Bulletin Job Office, 35-6. Willimantlc Office, Room 2. Muarray Bullding. Telephone. 210. x Norwich, Saturday, March 26, 1910. The Cireculation of The Bulletin. The Bulletin has the Inrgest clr- culation of sny paper iu Eastern Comnecticut, and from fhree to four times larger tham that of amy in Norwich. it is delivered to over 3,000 of the 4,053 houses im Nor- wieh, and read by nimety-three per cent. of ibe people. In Windham 1t is delivered to over 500 houses, in Putsam and Danielson to over 1,100, and = all of these places It = idered the local daily.’ Eastern Conmnecticut has forty- sine towns, one hundred and sixty- sve postoffice districts, and forty- ene rural free delivery Toutes. Tue Bulletin s sold in every town and om all of the R. F. D. routes in Eastern Commectiewt. CIRCULATION T 5.920 MONOPOLY'S INQUIRY. An attorney representing the Stand- 0il company, in an argument be- ore the supreme court of the United delivered himself of this pero- 1501, average 1965, average . ation: “But they complain that with our s amount of wealth we drove petitors out of business. Are 2 sz to conduct business on the racetrack principle and put a handicap n the man who possesses wealth? Are ou gsing to taboo weafth?” - ing this up, re- n editor, deed not. We are trying to ta- overty and our object is to re- aps, not to make them. nt in a nutshell, andard Ofl company has its vast resources to handicap ry other dealer in oil and in the ts of oil. _The supreme ed to relieve the inde- dealer of that handicap. Standard Ofl company t is to be handicap- rs been handi- answer is simply this: The st hereafter be run fairly with s for any runner. That is h as the Standard Oil company o hands as mn ONLY TODAY. The optimists of these times regard the o day that is. The vesterday are dead todays; and the tomorrows are simply todaye unborn. s the spring of energy and s its full compass; and concentration of mind and . in each day's merry activity, is ed the secret of eterna: youth. That we who do not take this view of fe and what goes with it, are 70 : old, while those who do are 70 vears young. That sounds like folde- vol to the old-fashioned woman and ko sense to the new-fashioned man. do not know what to think of it, of course; but we are told if we think right about it that we have learned how to srow old gracefully, which is @ way of saying we @o not show age st all. If we look out mot to Mye in experience, but for it, we make no note of time, but just revel in what Xnown as the eternal now! This what gives 70 the thrill of 17 and akes youth perpetual That which is, ~with t optimists, is the only thing to deal with—today is the one day in 8ll eternity. This is the latest recipe for becoming 70 yéars young, but it does not appear on casual observation to hold so much. AS VIEWED AT THE SOUTH. According to a southern view of the present situation the victory of the urgents Is a bad thing for the east 4 a rather promising omen for the The Charleston News and independence, and it has n the first battle in the war upon h it has entered. That war has its battle cry, ‘Down with Can- Why? Because the middle is opposed to the ‘system,’ per se, r which Cannonism has waxed ful? Not at all. The trouble is the operations of that sys- : middle west has been unable secure the legislation which it deemed essential to its interests ibe- cause the oligarchy in control has been representative of the speclal interests of the east. Will the situation' be changed under the new arrangement? If so, what is the east going to do about 1t? “The republican party now posses- ses two distinct wings. At present ng means of equal n themselves they are not nequal because of the dem- eoratic support which the lesser- is able to en®zt. The middle west and now standing together.” this make you smile? The an party has not gone to pleces, and there is no antagonism be- tween New FEngland and the middle This is a case in vwhich the wish is fat] of the thought, There_is no serious fault being found with tariff in New England. The eorporation tax and the income tax ere the hookworms that make New Englanders tired A German visitor has reached the conclusion that the Chicago stock yards are the most poetic thing in America. He finds the Muses in a queer place. The insurgents claim that they are not only overthrowing tyranny in the hou forcing the carrying out of the es of the republican. plat- form, Sometimes a legislature will get ac- tive on a freak bill just to have an excuse for omitting antion o» some- thing more importans A DISEASE, NOT A HABIT. Arthur F. Zimmerman, alias Buaron von Lichtenstein, who was accused of marrying twenty-four women, has been sent to prison for four and a half years as a.perjurer. When he was extradited from Canada, the charge against him upon the papers was perjury, and under the interna- tional code he could be tried for mo other offence. Zimmerman was a mercdnary swindler of women and he was so artful about it that he is said to have married and swindled one a month during the whole of 1909. In addressing him as a bigamist, the judge took occasion to say that mar- riage with him was a disease, not @ habit. . Zimmerman did not feel grateful to escape so easily and went to Sing Sing angry with court and counsel. An exchange, referring to the affair, says: | “Leaving eriminal law out of con- | sideration, the man who has twenty- four’ women, each on his track, with a |weaaing ring showing on one hana Pand a marriage license on the other, is not to be envied by his fellow mor- tals. Sing Sing furnishes a complete | protection, Not one of his victimg Jcan invade that refuge. Taking ev- | erything into agcount Zimmerman is { mther a lucky Digamist.” | e may see it in the samte light when he has been incarcerated lonz enough to become less moody and | more rational | WHERE ECONOMY IS PRACTICED | The rural free delivery is the great- | est thing for the price known to the postofiice department. There would be no deficits if all parts of this great system were so thoroughly minimized. There is no rush for carriers’ berths when it is known that they drive a cir- | cuit of from 24 to 26 miles a day, fur- | nish their own horses and equipment {at an average price of a penny or two | over a dollar a day. What a rain or | shine price that is for an able-bodied | horse and a man who are permitted {to skip Sundays and national holi~ | days. It has’ to conceded that a | faithful public sefvant who has him- | self and family and two horses to support on $31.50 a month will find some difficulty in laying something aside against a rainy day. Where economy robs merit of its deserts it in 4ts poorest form. The free rural delivery service has come to stay, for it has found an abiding place in the g00d will of the people, and it should stay in respectability. The endeavor being made to have the carriers paid more money is worthy of general sup- port, Let’s make parcel carriers of them all, thus greatly facilitating bus- iness and laying the foundations for their ample reward. ! EDITORIAL, NOTES. Easter lilies are scarce and the de- mand is not likely to be fully met. The ability of Speaker Cannon is not qugstione but the way in which he uses it is. Mr. Carnegie says that “Money is dross.” He is rich enough to endorse the sentiment, E The first thing Roosevelt says to Taft will not be: “What is it, Bill, about Pinchot?” ‘We have not got to wear the Chan- ticler hats, so we can sympathize with those who must. It can no longer be questioned that the councils of Pittsburg were made up of cheap men! ‘The president is popular everywhere he goes so long as he is silent con- cerning Aldrich and Cannon. The automobile has now the fastest record of any running thing on earth and it is the most dangerous. Happy thought for today: If we only showed wisdom in our prayers, other faults might be overlooked. Fast day does not often occur in March. When it does, it is not the sig- nal for the baseball season to open. The little politicians who make a living in this country without visible means, could mot be counted in a day. Andrew Carnegie is going to start a newspaper. That will be a drain equal annually to a score of ordinary public libraries. Admiral Bob Evans does not look upon the Panama canal as @ specula- tive success, but as a goverrmental triumph, Talk of a general strike in Philadel- phia now is a little late. The unani- mous sentiment among the citizens is for peace, It only takes a few insurgent repub- licans to make the democrats in con- gress of great importance. They would be nil without them. An Ohio school teacher told the children that there was no hell to dis- cover one of the hinges of her salary. It has been unhinged, Ocean Travel. The Mauretania has arrived and cut the record time 28 minutes. Crossing the Atlantic has reached a condition similar to the tug of war when each Side has, pulled the last pound and the taut ropé moves almost microscopical- ly. Months were once spent in the voyage, then weeks, finally days and the reduction in time is now a matter of minutes. The romance of a voyage to Europe has gone as the time has been cut down. There is no thought now of danger. One goes to sea in a large floating hotel and remains in communication with the land at all times, The last bit of romance has been ‘squeezed out and it is now a question of cutting minntes off the speed record. Complainers may sug- gest that there is danger in the speed rate, but as a matter of fact there is no added danger in speed. There is always plenty of room at sea and all that is required to avold danger is alert, competent seamen In charge. About the only possible danglr is a derelict, and a ship might make a hun- dred vovages - without being near enough to one of these movable dan- gers to bring it in sight. - It is possi- ble that the speed limit has been about reached and it is probable that ships have reached the maximum of size. The cost of propulsion is a serious item, and the depth of harbor channels will ‘hardly permit any greater draft by the ships. The big Cunarders are therefore likely to e the standards for many years: any change will mest likely be in detail rather than in size or speed. However, it is best mot to be too sure even of that, in these marvelously progressive times.—New Haven Palladium. Fleeing From Troubls. ‘When miilionaires come a runaing to the mourners’ bench and want to mase amends it looks as if there was ~o'ac Goubt as to the way Halley's comct will behave—New York Evening Tei- ogray The best . recipe for have children to manage is self-: trol. How can children be models with a daily bad example ' before them. Some people beat their children to be t same old jag: then why son think he has become the same old temper dence. Self delusion is on monest human faults, qud 1t is foolish- ness to expect children to be mild and g00d mannered when their parents are impatient and hot tempered. We behold pleasing things on the trolley car, and sometimes a pretty ifi— cident will be the outcome of bad manners. An old man comes into a crowded car and joins the strap-hang- ers. No one - moves until 4 pretty young woman rises and urges him to take her seat. As soon as the trans- position is complete a bright young man who has been buried in a paper rises and urges the comely maiden to take his place. They quietly parley, and it becomes . apparent that the young woman will not take the seat, and the young man does not feel that he can resume it. With deferential dignity they good-naturedly hang wto the straps. “They look pretty there un- til the car stops and the young woman gets off —the young man looks after her, and a close observer wonders whether they knew each other, or whether Fate just tried to prepare something pleasant for both in that prosaic old troiley car. There are tricks in words as well as tricks in figures, There are those who declare that 45 cannot be taken from 46 and have 45 the remaimder; and there are those who will doubtless deny that it is possible to curse without dwearing. has been dene, and we are going to do it right now. “Dam the river, blast the rocks, and blow the fire to blazes!” There is mothing wicked in those words if they do sound disturbing. There is nothing wicked about words unless man puts the wick— edness into them. Words that began their career well have become degrad- ed; and words which began low have been exaited. The mind of man ex- pressod in words gives them their meaning. . Some people believe in heredity and in their minds become “resigned to it. They appear to enjoy the thought that they inherited a bad temper and poor health. This is one of the most con- temptible uses the ming can be put to, because it means no good tq the indi- vidual, If there is anything good in heredity to attribute to one's forbears it may be complimentary to them to do it, but it is wicked to be blaming upon them one’s defects. We are no more obliged to be bad, or to become chron- ic invalids, because of our parents, than we are to belleve we are heirs to the kingdom because they were. Why should we Kkill our individual power and responsibility. It is a theory in which some folks take a deal of com- fort if their predecessors do suffer by The woman who has @ husband who can cook a dinner has a prize—so has the man who_has a wife equally ac- complished. But the prize-holder in either case should have a care. Put- ting too much work on the other fel- low is what maies the drudge: and discord and dissatisfaction follows. The woman who tries to make a domestic servant of her easy and accomplished husband is not wise. “Let George do it” is mot a guod domestic motto. George can balk and George can find e more congenial mate; and so can Georgianna. The matrimonial balance needs to be given strict attention—to lose the domestic equilibrium Is dis- astrous. This is what's the matter with t00 many families—this is what makes the court rooms attractive to those who have ears to hear. I often feel glad to think that I nev- er think any less of a person for wkat he does believe, or what he doesn’t. I discovered that was not the way to measure folks a long while agu.” He is the better gotten at by observing what he does and what he doesn’t do. Too many people can talk like saints and act like brutes. It is pleasant to find that a person’s principles and con- duct comport. That's old fashioned, but it is a mighty good word and fits. These I-am-holier-than-thou sort of people usually believe all there 1s in the scriptures without knowing they are condemned by them. Queer peo- ple, to know so much and sense so lit- tle; but, then, they are becoming few- er ‘all the time. Old age has its compensations. Tt is ripe with experience and knows most of the fool turns. It does not look at things with the eyes of youth. Ex- perience teaches a fellow that the things prayed for when achieved are often a curse; and that conditions op- posed with- ‘consternation sometimes turn out to be a blessing; that seif- denial which seemed to be painful was really a benefit; that wrath nurs- ed is an asp in the bosom. Age knows that what youth thinks is wisdom oft- en turns out to be foolishness, for it has seen its own judgment made shori- sighted folly. Age doesn’t indulge in sharp criticism, for it has learned to be tolerant and gentle in its Judgments. After its everlastingly “rights” have turned out wrong, it is apprehensive of what may be and not so sure of what will be. William wishes to know: “Which is the winner, the woman who dies and leaves five noble sons as her contri- bution to_the world’s forces, or the woman who dies and leaves a _fat French poodle and seven cats and $10, 000 to provide sultable care for them? This is put in such a sporty way that it confuses me, for I have no sporting blood: but if I was a betting man I should bet on the woman who so splendidly increased the manhood of the race. I have nothing against the woman who ends her mortal line with such a pronounced, love for arimals; but the mother.of five sons has mag- nified her usefulness to the world many fold and her sons and son’s sons may run on forevér. It is an awful thing, Bill, to find at last you've completely slipped your trolley. Since science has proclaimed to the world that ether is the finest and most wonderful fluid in the universe, that it is in reality the all-in-all of material things, I have always felt that I should like to become possessed of a short and comprehensive definition of ether and the other day I found it and possessed myself of it—for ether is “the low-sentient residuum of cos- mos.” Now is not that a darling, It is_the left-over raw material out of which all life came, and within which rests the possibilitv of all kinds of life and all kinds of mental and spirit ual progress. In other words it is th. get-there of nature and it never fails. You and I couldn’t make such a con- cise definition as that! It was not made for us to understand but just to smile at. Have you ever thought what true reflectors we are to the discerning? It matter little what we say. our words betray us. The uncharitabie criticism is the product of an uncharitable mind and in our condemnation of others we interpret by what we sense and what we keenly sense is what we are likely under similar circumstances to do our- selves. If we find meanness the easi est natural explanation of a fauit it is because it is interpreted from our nat- ural view of it. It is mot only true that charity covers.a muititade of sins, but it is alse true that unecharmtable- should die, if would not be wouid be missed, but only the things so do” nnsn::nth «tension, 1 = e -ten: “You make me think of what a said to me when her son first Went away from home. I felt 50 80 for her in her loneliness that I w 10 see her to tell her so. This is the way she answered me: ‘Miss him? I ‘Why, he took care | Oh, sweet and blessed country by the reading-lamp of evenings, missed siving him his goodnight kiss, I missed him out of my life.” We were both nt for a moment, then I saig lightly, “So you, my dear foolish little lady, you really think you would be missed only for what you do, not for what you are?’ . “Yes,” she said. “I am like that boy. T'm convenient. ‘There is always something to be done for somebody, that nobody can do but me. Fm willing to do all these things, you understand. I love my dear ones so dearly that I am glad to do everything I can for them. But often I catch myself wish- ing I eould feel sure that they loye me for myself, just because I am L” “They do, really,” I said. “That mother idolized her boy, and was proud of him. I knew it, even while she was speaking. “If they do, I wish they would show i#t,”, she answered. “You know my younLhruthu-, ‘what @ dear boy he is, and how well he s dolng in his studjes? I love him dearly, and I'm proud of him, but 53 “There is always e ‘But'” I com- mented. ‘“More's the pity!” Now please do not ask me if he drinks; fl.lal’epln other things bestdes the drink_habit. No fault can be found with him whatever, you coul@ mot put your finger on a flaw, and yet my—my friend is not happy. In fact, she never knows a happy day. What do you suppose is the trouble?” o l; ‘bear, the brunt of it is to do or her. If there i a bit of self-denying, it ig naturally and it. On the mm ?{o or an outing of any kind, it is his. He never sees when she is tired, or discouraged, or troubled. He too comes home at night absorbed in his own_ affairs, and talks about them for an hour or two, eager for a listener, and never asks her what ehe has been doing, nor how her day has gone, nor what he can do for her or they can do together to make their evening ‘bright after her monotonous dey. Con- sider her? Cherish her? Never! She stopped to push the burning logs closer together. “You'll think I take my—my friend’s troubles too much to heart” she faltered. “As I tell them over, they do seem like tmlll things to keep a woman unhappy. “Pure unadulterateq selfishness is contemptibly smell tiring,” I answered, “So small as to be beneath contempt. Your friend s evidently one of the unselfish_sort whom nobody ever con- stders. Tell her from me to fill her life with large interests and learn to look through a bigger lens. As for that thoughtless busband of hers, let fim miss a few little attentions. Tt would doghim good to surprise him, and to le him would not do any harm. Tell her to take a leaf out of the ‘new women’s’ book, and pleasant- ly decline to play the old game of wifely self-immolation. There is a world of wisdom in the child’s protest, “Tll not play ever any more. THE RECLUSE. ' “But,” she went on with emphasis, “I often feel that he 1s so far up in the clouds as to be utterly oblivious to anything on earth—incidentally his sister. He comes home at night so full of his own doings and interests that he will talk about them for an hour or moré. I'm glad he does, and T listen with the deepest interest to everything he has to say. Only I do wish he would ask me about myself, what I am doing and what I am_ in- terested in, It is too one-sided. Ilong for some one who takes an interest in me. Besides, it is pleasant to be the talker, and mot always the eternal listenér, It makes me think of my mother,” she sald more gently. “She was a listener all her life.” “And a counifort to everybody,” I add- “My* mother was a darling—but let me téll you something. Oncs she con- fessed me that often she longed for a friend who would listen to her as she listened to others. Not that she was a weaklng, to burden people with her troubles. My mother was one of the smiling ones. “Patient and_courageous, cheerful and kind,” said I. “No one ever called her a saint, probably because she was healthy and cheery and full of fun; had preceded Jesus into the other world as well as of the glory that awalted their companions even thongh some should be burned at the stake because they belleved in and preached Jesus and the resurrection. The immediate and most maried ef- fect upon these diaciples was a great accession of joy and power. The same belief can work thie same results for us living nearly two thousand years later. We too are often oppressed by the ap- parently insuperable poundaries of hu- man life. The night threatens to shut down before our work is half donme. ‘There is far too littie time in whieh to love and serve our own. We are in a fever because we capnot read more of the new hooks and the old omes too. Some alluring fleld of research beck- ons us but before we hawe begun to exhaust it the clock st 8. More painful still 18 the »eflection that to discipdne and complete our characters, to smooth off the eges and round off the corners, to recover the ground lost through sloth or neligence, to atone for our moral lapses, 18 a work that re- quires for its doing more years than we can reasonably expeect. The gospel of the lifted horizon changes all this. It tells us that we have time enough, not indeed for idle- ness or dissipation, bwt for all the work God gives us to time %o learn all the things essential fer our peace and rogress, time enough to serve our fel- ow-men day Dy day, time to commune with our God and ascsrtain more per- fectly his wilkipr us. And this gospel's sweetest message deals with that country the outlines of Which mre at least faintly revealed Not .ny Milk Trust The Original and Genuine ORLICK’S LTED MILK Food-drink for All Ages. ness inevitably uncovers a multitude of sins in the bosom of the unchari- table man which he would have pre- ferred, doubtless to keep hidden. We are nene of us more than half as good as ‘we think we are. SUNDAY MORNING TALK THE LIFTED HORIZON. The horizon line marks for us the limit of physical sight. By ascending a hill we may see a little further than we could in the valley, but even then our visions are mrrested.at the point where sky and earth seem to meet. Beyond that diwiding line may be smiling fields, lovely cathedrals, happy homes, palaces, castles, forums and busy marts of trade, but so far as our physical sight is concerned they are to us as if they were not. Our human years are apparenily bounded by a fluetuating but real hori- zon line. On the hither side of it are all our pleasant activities, our joy- ous human companionships, the splen- dors of the world about us, the rich, variegated life of our fellow men. On the farther side is the great enigma, the great perhgps, the to us undis- covered and unexplored country. From time to time some ome of our fellow- travelers crosses this horizon line and disappears entirely from our view., ‘Where he is and how he is faring is to us a matter of conjecture. We hope, we yearn, but the horizon line.never lifts. Never? Can we say never on Haster Sunday when the whole world is singing praises to one who crossed and recrossed the line, who passes, as he wills today, from one realm to the other? No, indeed. The heart of our Faster faith is the assurance that the wonderful being who lived in Pales- tine for 30 vears 19 centuries ago did cross the line into the world of spirit and returned to manifest himseilf for a time to their outward senses of his disciples. Then when he had fully co; vinced them of his continued existence, of his complete triumph over death, he withdrew from their physfeal ken only to establish forever a spiritual relation between them and himself. How the horizon proadened and lift- ed for them during those memorable 40 days and for all the remaining days of stheir lives! Instead of an existence bounded by the duration of thelr physi- cal powers they saw a limitless life stretehing on and on into the countless ages of eternity. By that same lifting of the horizon they were made aware of the continued existence of those who PROMPTLY ENDS KIDNEY - BACKACHE Just a Few Doses of Pape’s Diuretic Will Clean and Regulate Your Qut-of-Order Kidneys Ending the Most Severe Backache and Bladder Misery. No man or woman here whose kid- neys are out-of-order, or who suffers from backache or bladder misery, can afford to leave Pape’s Diuretic untried After taking several doses, all pains in the back, sides or loins, rheumatic twinges, nervousness, headache, sleep- lessness, inflamed of swollen eyelids, dizziness, tired or .worn-out feeling and other symptoms of clogged, -slug- gish kidneys simply vanish. Uncontrollable urination (especially at night), smarting, discolored water and all bladder misery ends. The moment you suspect the sMght- est kidney or bladder , or feel rheumatism pains, don's inue 4o be miserable or worried, but get a cent uem;w Pape’s Diurefic from your & and start as directed, with the M there is no ather medicing, _at price, made anywhere else iIn the world, which is 50 harmiess or will effect so thorough and prompt a cure, This unusual preparation direct to the cause of trouble, distributing its cleansing, healing and vitalizing influence directly upon the organs and lands affected and completes the cure ‘ore you realize It. A few days treatment of Pape's Diuretic means clean, heaithy, active kidneys, bladder and urinary organs— and yeu feel fine. Your physician, pharmacist, banker or any mercantile agency will tell you that Pape, Thompson & Pape, of Cin- cinnati, is a large and r sidle medicine concern, thoroughly worthy of your confldence. Accept only Pape's Diuretic—afty- cent treatment—f{rom any -dras wi of allelulas “that fills a1l the earth und “Not Guiity,” Say Chappell Co., years ago. has advanced but we are selling bet- ter Coal than ever at no higher price. Central — THE HORSESHOE TRIO VAUDEVILLES BIGGEST LAUGHING ACT. RICHARDS & STEELE Comedy Wire Artists VICTOR SHAKER The Boy Ventriloquist f— ADMISSION 10c—EVENINGS, him who crossed and recrossed through the line that had hitherto shut off earth from heaven. It tells of the knitting of friendships severed here, of the ing away of every team, of the rush Oh, sweet and blessed country, The home of God's elect! Which eager hearts expect, Jesus, in mercy bring us To that dear land of rest Who art with God the father And spirit ever blest. THE PARSON. LUMBER AND COAL. GOAL HIGH COST OF LIVING ? The Coalmen. Coal is no higher than it was several Bverything else under the heavens E. CHAPPELL CO0. Wharf and 150 Main Street Telephones. Lumbenr mar2sd J. A. MORGAN & SON Coal and Lumber Central Wharf. Telephone 834, dec24d LUMBER The best to be had and at the right prices too. Remember we always earry a big line of Shingles. Call us up and let us tell you about our stock H. F. & A. J. DAWLEY, novigd GCOAL Free Burning Kinds and Lehigh ALWAYS IN STOCK. A. D. LATHROP, Office—cor. Market and Shetucket Sta Telephone 168-13. octs9a Home Comfort DEMANDS THE Ruud S adad O’'ROURKE & O'ROURKE Comedians AUDITORIUM DUO, RESERVED SEATS, 20c. JACKSON AMUSEMENT G0 . Thursday Evening, March 31st With Peary In the Arctic Lecture by Prof. D, B, MoMillan, Commander ~Peary's assistant, Th, Dash to the Pole filustrated by over 208 views, and descr! anc Howxm ibed by a fascinating Tickets. . .81, 76e, 5o On sale Tuesday at th mar2ed and 2506, Box Office. Grand Easter Affraction! 13 MILE MARATHON SACHEM PARK Saturday, March 26th, at 3P. M. ~— CONTESTANTS — Hilton, Wicks and Tuckey. Admission .... 350 Boys under 16 . 25a mar24d REED THE PRESIDENT’S SPECIAL] THRILLING RAILROAD PIOTURE., Mr. Chas. J, Ray, Baritone, IN ILLUSTRATED SONGS. New Stage, New Mackiney and Ime creased Seating Capmcity. New Singem, Wateh for the Great Features. Matines, Ladies and Children, Be jan3a THEATRE Music, NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teacher of Plano, Central Bullding. Room 48, CAROLINE H. THOMPSON Teacher of Muslc Instantaneous Automatic Gas Water Heater It furnishes an inexhaustible sup- ply of hot water to all parts of the house at any hour of the day or night. Turn the Faucet, The Ruud Does the Rest. Call and see one in operation. Gas & Electrical Dep't., 321 Main Street, Alice Building. teb23d trying to clean your own clothes, for you cannot do it, and unless done right you might as well leave it alone. You can employ vour valuable time more | Cleaning and Pressing 13 | our business, and we have facilities for | profitably. doing the work thoroughly. We do it quickly, too, and deliver the order at your home, charging but little for the work. Lang’s Dye Works, Telephone. 157 Franklin SI. mar16d FRESH FISH. All kinds in their seasap. Clean. Prices Right. E. T. LADD, Agent. 32 Water St Good and Tel. 523. teb21d Have You Noticed ths Increased Travel? . It's & sure sign Olu we:t,hn: l.lll;: ne roads. People oul the open air. We n--f.' the best method. and If you'll take one of our "fl'o‘:fl‘ say the same, -BROS. Ealia A marlid . . it st was e | Special Price 46 Washington Strest. L. F. BALOOM, - ’il‘.i of Flano. Thames -él e s O he wupl] Same mechol oo used at Schawenka Comservatory, Ber~ in. oot11d - F. C. GEER " 122 Prospect St Tel. 511, Norwich, Gt A. W. JARVIS is the Leading Tuner in Eastern Connecticut. 'Phone 518-5. 15 Clairmount Ave sepiz2d FOR 10 DAYS ONLY On Tailor-made Suits i * S. LEON, Ladies’ Tailor, 278 Main St, "Phone 712-6. janzid Spring Styles including the best in design and fabrics ready for inspection. Tha prices are reasonable and we produce garments with style and correct fit: Order Early. Easter comes on March 37th. THE JOHNSON CO., Merchant Tailors, 65 Broadway, Chapman’s Bullding. Building ARE YOU THINKING OF DOING THIS 7 t 80 you should consult with mag end gt prices for same, Excellont werk at reasonable prices. C. M. WILLIAMS, General Contracter and Bulildes, 218 MAIN STREET. "Phone 370.

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