Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, April 5, 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)

. @erwich Bulletin ; and Goufict. 114 YEARS OLD. ° month: 3600 Bntered a: the Postoffice at Norwich, Coun. as wecond-class matier. Telephome Calls: Bulletin Business Office. 480, Bulietin Editorial Rooms, 35-% Bulletin Job Office, 35-6. Willimantic Offiee, Room 3. Murray Bufldiag. Telephone. 210. wrice. 12¢ a week; 50¢ a s year: Norwich, Tuesday, April 5, 1910. THE BACKYARD HAS CHARACTER ants recognize the char- ard, which may be £ the character of the the premises. The backyard h old boxes and gerbege cans, crooked clothesline posts and rank weeds, stands for nothing but shiftles . unless it may be disease and dea othing respecta- bie ad why the ma- Jority of the people clean up at differ- ent seasons of nd have bon- ce a clean if not because it is zation. ittle time and a lit- tle money to make a garden of the park and border it with then it stands for econo- d good taste. are liable to get very angry ar themselves sized up by apAearance of How few t but a measuring peo; receive com e invit- heaithy place and the other ust the opposite. Wise peopls move out of a place. The b d place for ciuic pride for that gives a good fou praise, and for progress to r endeavor. INCREASE OF WAGES. threatened raflr averted and the increase made wages to employes amouats to ten mi ms a vear. It is mot to be expecte: that this ten milllons 1S to come out of the railroads instead of the patrons for that would be an impossibility. The raliroad men earn th and ne It will be 3 good tMng for all con- cerned when poltical interference with these great corporations becomes 2 thing of the past, 2nd © rational THEY ARE CONFIDENT. White the 300000 soft-coal miners fes! confident that cause in thirty day laims that thr rere is am > months o the other side ple coml far two Band, and @t @ mise is m prc than = The sourc th the pe- rio@ical renewa grece ment between d the op~ erators, accom a % . t a . r s u o, nas- o6 s 0 fhe expense of running ies each year. The operators, of course, mattain that a w: Bape to co t of This pinches. These increases oter fncreases and when the mets estad tien of coe eometimes b The moves checkerboard pietety checkmate lab: BEGIN THE CRUSADE Begin your crusad Giousefly today. Here ar gestions for the campaign from scien- tific aushorit; garbage cans wWith e and keep them con- ecayed vegetables-or accumulate. Keep al doors - and “Be careful t @ows are screened. “Sereen all food, at it is not posgi- Sle to keep t purchas=a “Another is one part formaldek orr and four yarts of his preparation is placed saucepans about the house very effective, as 1t attracts s them in- stanty Messenger. Is suck a warni s needea? The America as we know her, is ants een cam- paigning against for the last Baif-century, and every fly with any domestic experience kuows that she & a fiy-figh-er from dewy morn to the gloaminz of the day, and then she proceeds to amoke out ihe mosqui- toss. She has sticky tapes hansing, fiy polsen in saucers or on adhesive paper, wire cages to trap them and the paddle for knocking them out at one feH swoop. The clean woman abominates a dirty fly and the war is on the moment the first one appea: without special signals or orders from headquarters. An InMana woman has made 2 na- tional reputation by erying for three days. What she was <rving about did Zot appear to be important enough to emention. It Bas become a matter of record, ghat a janitor.may become an obedient SECRETARY WILSON. Eastern Connecticut has than ordinary interest in Secretary Wilson of the agricultural department, be- cause he began his life here as a quiet citizen and has developed into the most efficient and practical cabinet of- ficer the country has ever known. “Secretary Wilson,” said an employe of the départment of agriculture, re- cemtly, “is & man who seems to Zrow ‘bigaer the better one knows him. This is mot the case, I may say, with many men who hold positions of great im- portance. On the contrary, one is tempted sometimes, on getting close to @ man in office, to wonder how he came to get there and how he manages 1o stay. I am sure that the employes of the department who succeed in get- ting at all close to the secretary hold the opimion that he is really a great man, and & man who is accomplishing a great work with little of the fuss and ostentation that usually accompa- they're scaret. The Boy that was Scaret o’ Dyin’.* Once there was a boy dreadful scaret o that way, never done it to know how it feels, and way. He wa'n't very rugged, his health was sort o' slim, and mebbe that made him think about sech things more. any rate, he was terr'ble searet o' dyin'. T was a long time ago, this wa time when posies and creatures could talk so’s folks could know was sayin’, And one’ day, was Reuben—I forget his —as Reuben was settin’ under a tree, an elium tree, cryin’, he heera a. little, little bit of a voice—not squeaky, know, but small and thin and so —and he sce twas a posy talkin’. was one o' them posies they call Ben- that was,tle volce. ‘Twa'm't like the posy's dyin. Some folks | voice, but ‘twas alittle woolly, soft, you know; they ain't|fuzzy voice, and he see ’twas a cater- THE EULLETIN'S DAILY- STORY TOGET Y |75 BENEFICIAL EFFECTS . pillar a-talkin’ to him. And the cater- piliar says, in his fuzzy little voice, he says, “What you cryin’ for, Reuben?” Ana’ the boy, he says, “I'm powerful scaret o' dyjn’, thats’ why,” he says. And that fuzzy caterpillar he laughed, “Dyin’!” he says. “I'm-lottin’ on dyin’ myself. All m- famly,” he says, “die every once in a while, and when they wake up they're Jjest splendid—got Wings, and fly about, and live on honey and things. Why, I wouldn't miss it for anything!” he says. “I'm fottin’ on it _But somehow that didn’t chirk up Reuben much. “L aint a-caterpil- lar,” e says, “and mebbe I wouldn't wake up at all” Well, there was lots o' other things Ang this boy was that =] the §rrop-fies AND LIXIR=SENNA MANUFACTURED BY THE what they as this boy, his name ther name you like T T o e AN jamins, with three-cornered whitey |talked to that boy, and tried to help Y A correspondént writing of him from [blowths with a mite o' pink on ’cm, | him—trees and posies and grass and Washington says: and it talked in a kind o pinky-white | crawlin’ things, that was allers a-dyin’ ! It has been said f the secretary,|voice, and it says, “What you cryin’|and livin', and livin' and dyin’. Reu- sometimes, that a little clique in his |1OT, Reuben?” And he says, “'Cause | ben thought it didn't help him any, but 4 Gepartment runs him. This may seem | LM searet’ o' ayiu, = hoi “Fm|T guess it did a little mite, for ho| X % - < e ? | dreadful scaret o' dyin." Weli, what | copidn’t help thinkin' o what they - (o be true but the men who think | G0 Vou think? That posy jost liughed | svery one on ‘em said. But be was | SOLD-BY ALL LEADING they are running the secretary gen- | the most cuf'us little pinky-white | scaret all the same. DRUBGISTS, erally find out their error sooner or |laugh 't —and_ it s the Ben-| And one summer he begun to fail up ¢4 BOTTLE later. The habit of the secretary of |jamin says: ~Dyin it o dyin'? | faster and faster, and he sot so tired | ONE S(ZE ONLY, S0%A choosing men who seem to have ex- T die myself every eingle year o | he couldn’t hardly hold his head up! ecutive ability, and turning them loose fe.” “Die yours Reuben, | but he was scaret all the same. And with the infunction to get results, may foolin':” youre alive this min- [one day be was layin’ on the bed, and Ve bon Dhrily et T o Course T be,” says the Ben. |1ookin’ out o’ the east winder, and the fa6a, but e : “but that's neither here nor |sun kept a-shinin’ in his eyes till he ea, but the secretary’s judgment in "ve died every yve nce I can |shet ’em up, and he fell asieep, He the main has been justified, No one “Don’t says the |had a Teal good nap, and when he can say that his department has failed 1t don't, s the posy: | woke up he went out to take a walk. to get results. Of all the departments You see, you get kind | And he begun to think o what the | it is the one which is accomplishing |©' tired a-holdin’ up your head straight | posies and trees and creaturs had said great things in constructive work for {and lookin’ t'and wide awake, and | about dyin’, and how they laughed at 1 good of, the. natle tired o' the hinin® so hot, and the | his bein’ scaret at it, and he says to P winds blowin' you to pleces, and the | himself, “Why, someways I don't feel bees a-takin® your honey. So it's nice |s0 scaret today, but I s'pose I be. EDPYGRUN R to feel sleepy and kind o' hang your | And jest then what do you think he We @ not mind if Nebraska has & |head down, and get sleepler and sieep- | done? Why, he met a Angel. He'd blizzard so long as we are excused. |ier. and then find you're droppin’ off. | never seed one afore, but he knowed it Then you wake up jest ’t right oft. And the Angel says, “Ain't Out west they say that Speaker Can- | time o’ year, and come up vou happy, little boy?” An sben non cam smoke right o left nandeq . | Tound, and—why, I like to die, I do.” |says, “Well, I would be, only I'm so - | But someways that didn't help Reuben | dreadful scaret o’ dyin'. It must be ’ 3 much as you'd think. “I ain’t a posy,” | terrble cur'us,” he says, “to be dead.” Spring is putting on a balmy front, |JUSR a8 you'd think. | ; £ : - ¥ - | he thin s an Ana the Angel says, “Why, you be . but sBe is still subject to snow SquAlls. | oo re comn e, 9% B 7 v ey e > Welcome ihe New Arrival , v o TR g7 Well, another time he was *From “Story-Tell Lib” by Annle|of another ous season — the glaad The president seems to enjoy Aunt|a stone in the lower pastu Trumbull__ Slosson. Published | DY | Springtime. Sue arrivals new o ol Delia just as much as she enjoys his again, and he heerd another cur'us lit- | Charles Scribner’s Sons. we're always on hand with satisfac- visits. | |tory Wines and Liquors and quick o oo o T | service. Look east, look west—ours Mce Canada and America claim a | him breathing out threatenings of war | from the flelds of the south are being [ is the spot to sefve vou best. No tariff victory, It is evident both sides |and bloodshed.—N. Y. Globe shipped to the cities further north and | poet’s song, but genuine fact. Our iro satisfied, — e being sold for good prices. Truck | prices prove it. rez TRV NN e Giswing Tross for Profit sardening has already reached larse | Also Importsd and Domestic Beers. @alley’s comet must feel that its owing trees for profit is becoming | FOROrtions in the south, furnishing| o every purchaser of $1.00 and over Wiy to disturb the nations grows{more and more of an accepted Indus- | brofitable employment to a large num- | we give away good bettle of wine. 38 and less. in ev part of the country. It | ek A TS indiatre s ] = — e has alread?’ been demonsira = I e L, G = 3 1o better man than President Taft, | YPether the fore | equipped themselves for the rapid €0. treenberger, Md there isn o by nat = | transportation of the products of the | Tel 812. 47 Franklin St. 2 s T E IR G piauis “’gr:: o | southern fruit and truck farms. The Cubin” stirred the blood, but in these | Engineering News ::1‘.‘,‘(1]"';"‘;'"!:‘.(” 'iiryw[xmmri A e @ays it oftener stirs our disgust. can be expecied to pla Torme | s MBIERts e fime wi el Huxum:-:,s of young men o e 3 there Is no competition with other | ok, o o uts it out instead of letting it shut o8 oipat would hot|Jeurnal and Tribune. ghe foundation — the basic im out. We all like Theodore! even in tha but e many e srinciples o e o No ome will helieve that we have |in very much less time leave | While the Abyssinians are nominally of instructicn in our sohool. We tyrants in this country so long as [out of consideration the fruit trees— | Christians, their Christianity is of a |l .. neip you it you t > - e thtat b Now 1 the | debased form, corrupted with African g TN wiE e the baseball umpire is above ground. So long as the hatpin knew its limit President Castro is sald to be home- sick, but the curs of returning to as we infer T growing of tre iefly the latte; of trees that will yield anyone that expects to reap the har- vest to plant slow-growing oaks; s for fuel or for ews has in mi timber, —there ate many kinds | eir gro successtul — now — fer full superstitions, 'and though the Al - more career. ans ere regarded as Caucasians, it ould be difficult for ordinary observ to a Write tod there was Do trouble. This is the |’ ,d profit within a reasonabie life- | €rs to distinguish them from the Galla information. point at which ignorance breeds dis- | F000 Piven the codars will give a fair | tribes (pure negroes) who are their i turbance account of themselves in something | near neighbors. The country of the AL Cotpmetcialc Nranehes, B O e e I iece fog | Abyssinians is mountanious, rocky and | rile, and in the essentials of civiliz- | ation they are at a stage little above thet of the wild North Asnerican In- THE NEW LONDON, usiness (ollege but Venézucla might be fatal sooner than |the catalpa,: for instance, will ield e disease handsome, returns in a_comparatively | dian A 3 o T s few vears.—Columbia (S. C.) State. the military prowess of the | BAABrubeck,lam, Newlondon: Conn. e reBigel which _compels respect. ne mayor of Elkhart, Ind., has en- They practically annnihilated Italy’s forced all the city ordinances and is Money for the South. irmies and ended Italy’s colonial enw now in danger of being regarded as| ~An advertisement appeared in The| terprises on the Red Sea coast, and > . = the meanest man New Orleans Picayune last Sunday | these victories, with which he had little Should Be Pleased. that would not have n seen any | to do DI nally, mnale Menelik em- ocongress csn do what it pleases by Thotiehis Tor o - | southern paper a third of a tury | peror of Ethiopli—at least. they en- e - ss is s oty Happl- | oo, It was from Independence, Lou- | couraged him to revive the ancient | It Shats du. S dpciynen Dy Xlon: ¥ said to be the shadow of con- |38c. It was from Independen | e st ropacton Jeey| Chawp Clark, t it please to ent. Get your contentment bulky | \vanted to help in picking, cratl quite frequently during the past vear; | §o =omgthing Aln peopiel— h to cast a ghadow shipping _ strawberries. In a but this time the news of his demise | "21'4S T part of the same state the d for | is so circumstantial that it appea Talk | son writes his auto- | hn equal number of pe for a Ilke | be true. If he is not dead we shall | ls Cheap as Ever. b suggested that “The | purpose are wanted. And it Is so in|have to apologize to Menelik for being| There is thing that has not ad- Police Judges I Have Met” ought to | other places in that state and other | premature, and promise to say nothing | vanced fn price. Talk is as cheap as Biane an intebebiih jons The strawberry crop is not one | when he really does die—Philadelphia | ever.—Chicago Record-Herald, 5 2 IntSerinE/chavter. » leading ones of the south, but | Record. — E is will bring hundreds of thousands of | — e pork chop has entirely lost its erage health board gets after 1se-fly if it were a terror; dollars to this In addition, tation repast. as the headliner in a frugal section this y ashington Star. carloads of vegetables The 12 principal crops of this coun-| try show a valuation of $5,000,000,000. when it is summoned to meet a rror it usually forgets its duty. It is now said that Dr. Cook is eligible to become a .citizen of Win- sted. This shows what a repute a single audacious liar can give a town. It is said one hundred and fifty seats he Johnson-Jeffries fight have been red from China. It doesn’t look as if China was as far behind as we »pose. Limited TaBts for Cranberry Sauce. A4 to relate, it does mot pay Cape ers to raise their best possible )f cranberries. At least, this is nelusion that is being forced up- contemporary bog-owners. The past season was an exceptionally good e for cranberry production. Every- v had a big crop. Consequently the cet was gluited and prices went so low that profil: were disappointingly smal en holding the berries for the mid-winter rise in prices did not bring the desired reward, and it would scem as though cranberry raising is an ndustry in’ which profits are largely dtpendent on circumstances. Given a favora ble season, with no early frosts ind no worm ravages or. other calami- ties and consequent abundant crops, nobodv makes any money; while on hand, if the growers suffer nvasions of the cranberry worm 5 SRR e E¥~ Used the World over g@ No otherarticle of human food has ever received such em- . phatic commendation for purity, usefulness and whole= someness from the mosg eminent authorities, * BAKING POWDER Royal has always received the highest award when exhibited or tested in competition or the fire worm, or if frosts swoop down unawares in the early autumn and damage the crops, those who are lucky enough to escape reap golden profits with their berries. But al- though it is a comparatively small number who benefit in this way, in the 20-called off seasons the profits are o alluring that more and more bogs are being made, with the result of over preduction. The conclusion which this indicates is that this country has a limitel appetite for cranberry sauce, and_the srowers are now wondering f Europe could mnot be educated in that line suciently to build up an ex- port trade—Boston Transcript. The Pinchot Mission. It is not strange that the busyhodies and gossip mongers are delighted over flord Pinchot’s departure for Europe, Whet an opportunity is offered - for surmiise and speculation, and fnven- tiom! And what safety will there be in giving the most particuiar informa- tion of what is going on! Mr. Pinchot can be relied on 1o say nothing—to contradict nothing. The traveler, who is pursuing a leisurely journey down the Nile, will not be in Europe for two weeks and even then is net likely to discuss American poli- tics. Tt wili be June before he arrives in America to receive a_non-partizan and_mon-factional reception. With the troublemakers thus having neadly three months in which to work wAibout great apprehension of Inter reption there would seem no good re: son_why they should mot be able to work up a_considerable meas jealousy and suspicion. How Wl they be in the task! Alreadysone cam see one set of ivhisperers calling men aside and pouring into their pri- Vate ears “inside information” con- cerning how greatly the president is slarmed and as to what he proposes to: &0 We can.imazine how other whisp- erers will tell of confidential letters raceived frem bim or these close to ALWAYS BUV THEGENUNE | .. GE0. A. DAVS| REMEMBER «.Ohe... Elks Grand Bazaar OPENS Thursday Evening, April 7th, AT i Olympic Hall, Water Street. HAVE YOU SEEN THE PONY? Well, the Goats Are Here! Call Your Attention e To An Entirely New Line of - Ladies’ Shopping Bags Splendid Styles and Medium Popular Prices. IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR A STYLISH BAG AT A PRICE FROM $2.00 UP TO $450 YOU NEED GO NO FARTHER THAN RIGHT HERE, FOR WE HAVE THE GOODS. POCKET BOOKS, BILL ROLLS and LETTER CASES. TRAVELING CLOCKS in LEATH- BER CASES. POCKET DRINKING CUPS. LEATHER BACK CLOTH BRUSHES AND GARMBNT HANG- ERS IN LEATHER CASES. A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF POCKET FLASKS, ALL SIZES AND PRICES. Beginning Monday, April 4th, and thereafter, this Store will close at 6 p. m., EXCEPT Wednesday and Sat- urday evenings. GEO. A. DAVIS, 25-29 Broadway apridaw “Dur [lu@y_ Excels” Lee’s Beet, Not a patent medicine, but a HOME REMEDY, MANUFACTURED IN OUR OWN LABORATORY, and con- taining the strengthening properties of prime lean beef, a soluble salt of iren and the best wine. If you are run | down and feel bad, need a tonic, you will find in this excellent remedy a never failing rejuvenator—it will give strength, stamina and vitality. NO BETTER SPRING TONIC. Pint Bottles 50 cents, The Lee & Osgood Co. 131-133 Main Street, NORWICH, CONN. When In need of an unexcelled Tooth Wash use OXYFOAM—the Per- oxide Tooth Wash. 25 cemts a bettle. mar26daw Satisfactory Results always follow the giving of your Clean- ing and Pressing to us. We are ex- perienced in the business and use the most careful, vet up-to-date methods. .| We employ only expert help and send back your orders in @ thoroughly sat- isfactory condition. There is no sense in permanently discarding wrinkled or sofled garments. Send them hero to get a new lease of life. Eang’s Dye Works, Telephone. 157 Franklin Si. mar29d FRESH FISH. ANl kinds in their season. Good ana Clean, Pricee Right. E. T. LADD, Agent. Tel, 522. 82 Water St febzld FUNERAL ORDERS Artistically Arranged by HUNT .. * * The Florist, Tel. 130, s+ Lafaystte Street. o e PROCTOR'S VAUBE uiL, AMBERS & (0. Clever Company of Singers and Musicians. Feature-- CLARA COOK SONORA CO. Novelty Act In the American Girl in Italy MYERS & ROSA| TOM GILLEN |waudevill ‘-'w' Western Finneganfs |G 000 iotures Friend Twice Weekly ADMISSION—10c. EVENINGS, Reserved Se LUMBER AND COAL. COAL Only 409 of the Hard Coal Mined Sells for a Profi! Al sizes oxcept Bgg, rining. 6 per cent. of all hard Coal mined is used in pumping the water {rom :lie mines, E. CHAPPELL CO. Central Wharf and 150 Maln Strest Iron and Ly Telephones. aprid Stove and Chestnut are soid by the Companies as fy-products at less than the cost of mber J. A. MORGAN & SON Coal and Lumber Telephone 8234, Central Wharf. dec24d LUMBER t0o. Remember H. F. & A. J. DAWLEY, novisd The best to be had and at the right always Call us up and let us tell you about our stock. CHARLES MeNULTY,LESSEE Feature Plature: *ACROSS THE PLAINS. SENSATIONAL INDIAN PIOTURE Miss Lillian Shuwny, Soprano, Wateh for t Matinse. La Music. NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teackes of Plano, Room 48, Central Bufiding. CAROLINE H. THOMPSON Teacher of Muslc 46 Washington Street. L. H. BALGOM, Temcher ol Plane. 29 Thames St ons glven at my resldence or me of the pupil 122 Prospect St Tel. 511, Norwich, Of% A. W. JARVIS GOAL Free Burning Kinds and Lehigh ALWAYS IN STOCK. A. D. LATHROP, Telephone 168-12. octzea RELIABLE TIRES $1.50 up Alling FOR 10 PAYS ONLY On Tailor-made Suits S. LEON, Ladies’ Tallor, *Phone 712- CONANT. Cigers are the best Try thes THERE 15 a0 advertising stin for Office—cor. Market and Shetucket Sts Bicycles $17,$19 and $24 Rubber Co. Special Price 278 Main St. Janz1a 11 Fraskiia Street. ‘Whitesione Sc and the J. ¥. C. 10¢ m the market marssa edium in ern Conaseticut Saual ‘to The Bul- is the Leading Tuner in Eastern Connecticut. "Phone 518-5. 15 Clairmount Ave septazd Wall Papers Yerrington's 49 Main Sfreet marl6d RELIABILITY one of the searets of the success of the Excelsior Auto Cycle he One Man Bunabout that atways makes good—sindle and twin—d and 7 H P | C. V. PENDLETON, JR, Yantig, Conn, Agent for New Lendon County. Write ar telephone for catalogus or demonstration and let the machine show for itsolf rather than take an- other dealer’s word. Prest-O-Lite Tanks. Standard Speedwinectesa, mar30d Delivered to Any Part of Norwich the Ale that 1s acknowledged to be the best on the market — HANLEY'S PEERLESS. A telephone order wiil recelve prompt attention, D. J, McCORMICK, 30 Frankin St may29d MONEY LOANED on Diamonds, Watohes Jeweiry 4 Securities ef any kind at ¢ weat Fatas of Interoat. Ai astablished frm to deal with. (Establivhed 1872.) TAD COLLATERAL LOAN ©O. WHMIEN you want 1o put your by ness before the pu there is no me gium better than thraueh the sdveriiss & columas ef The Bulletin.

Other pages from this issue: