Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 8, 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)

THE FALL CAMPAIGN. Tt is likely that the fall campaign will open next month in Maife and that a hard fight is to be made there for republican supremacy. There is no doubt that New England politics is seriously affected by the fighting and factionism of the dominant party at ‘Washington, and it is being alleged thet Maine has become & doubtful state. The Providence Journal, an inde- pendent republigan paper, has this to say of the Pine Tree state t seems strange to Thear that Maine is a doubtful state, for iy‘habit- ually casts a heavy plurality for the republican ticket. But at the election in 1908 the republican candidate for governor was successful by less than eight thousand votes, and dissatisfac- tion with the republican party has everywhere grown since that time. Years ago Maine manifested a strong greenback leaning; perhaps some of | this sentiment remains today and will contribute to the anti-republican vote. Certainly the democratic candidate for governor will have a fighting chance, provided he can command general re- ect and is a good campaigner into | the vargain. Maine will hold its elec- tion in Septemer, so that its influ- ence on the November contests will be mportant. It is safe to say that both | parties will pour their orators into | the field, amd that nothing will be left undone by eithe de to win.” The Bulletin will believe that the ampaign gun of the fall is to be the administration when it Paitgrial oo, S e, 35-6. ‘-—- Offee, Room 2. Murray Bafldtag. Telephone. 210. cemt. of the people. In i is delivered te over 900 houmses, || ia Putaam and Danicls 1,300, amd in all of these places It red the local daily. Comnecticut has forty- sixty- forty- i sold in every en all of the R. F. D. Eastern Commecticut. MAY'S BIG FIRE LOSSES. The fire losses in May in the United Sta nd Canada reached an aggre- zate of $18,523.200, according to the New Yo Journal of Commerce, which is over three million greater than the loss May. 1908: and the Jourral of € says that “with on war and of security values, tha ers are feeling ‘quite dis- | the snrink fAre underwr couraged or The dest montl's 239 large fires, 37 the “$100.000 and over” class. 0.000 fire at Ford City, Pa. local plate glass works. ts's $1.500,000 fire started in factory, and Minneapolis® fire in an Implement ware- e $300,000 fire at Bluft Point, IT 18 NEW LONDON'S DUE. It is generally recognized that the "Tn8 congressional district mever had = more loval, enterprising and indus- |2 = trious representative at Washington | $1.000.000 than Congressman Higgins. The Wa- | house T terbury American, commenting on| N. Y. burned the piggest summer ho- Congressman Higgime bill to make|te’ on Lake Champlain; the $500,000 ‘New London e port of entry under| fire at Elkhart, ’Lna. demolished a ®oth sections 1 and 7 of the act of | b -instrument ctory. Cleveland iad & $350.000 furniture store fire, Oak Grove, Ala, a $300,000 lumber-plant fire, and Sheiter Island, N. Y., at $250,- 000 summer-notel fire. thing almost uncanny | in New London's failure to develop as = center of marine commerce. It Bas = magnificent harbor, with an average| Connecticut's two'May fires were & depth of 36 feet, Is much nearer to|furniture store at New Haven, loss Burepean ports than New York, it is | $90,000, and a bookstore fire in Mid- “in the center of an extensive manufac- | dietown with a loss of $10,060. turing territory which makes large use | Three colleges reported fira losses of imported raw material and exports | of $160,000 at the west. manufactured productse, it has abund- | This is a great drain upon the coun- mnt land for Gockage and it is one of | try and it is not strange that insur- the few coast towns in New England | ance premiums are held high. where the water front is not controlied | SR “by the railroad and which stifl has the | advantage of railroad competition | MACDONALD'S WINNING WAY. Norwalk citizens who have had the “For all this New ILondon's splen- | gpinion thet Stree: Commi: [ BiMiew acsintiio- | omee 3. Bacomai o o Ter dations for omly the dingy coastwise | were highly elated when they learned trafic and the pleasure crait of the | that he had taken a hand in peanut sachtsmen. politics in the town of Norwalk and “The buiMing of the great Pacific | the city of South Norwalk and given steamships on the Groton side of the | out the contract for a new teiford siver seemed indicative of great|road from the Norwalk city line un things, but the shipvard which pro- | Armory hill and all the way to the wivced them !s closed. The New York | Darlen line. The coinmissioner said freighters are the bizge vessels to| that the road was a disgrace to the make use of the splen ay. Won- | town and city of South Norwalk and derful advantages bestowed by nature | that the state would rebuild the high- are contributing little to New | ane e the dviingsfnts to set- London's material prosy Tt is due to New Lox should be sziven this would certainly be of Norwich: and to a large country which extends ern New England in exportation and impo and thefr prompt distrivution. is done under the new state rich makes the state high- mmissioner supreme in repairs this kind. FHats off to Highway k | Commissioner Macdonald. The Hour has had the pleasure of eriticising Mr. Macdonald for allow- ing the disgraceful condition of the road to exist and we are just as prone to congratulate him when he remedies nditions and proves to us that he is his job.—Norwalk Hour. cal jugeling towns are the BiG EXPENSE_NO RETURNS. The government has r v abansd- oned the denatured a enterprise | whieh was entered & h such | hope several vears aso 25 believed | makers of poor roads and thg assa that fres alcohol for motive power|ers of the state’s highway commin- @nd general use would be of great ad- | Sioner, who declines to accept them. vantage to the people: but the cheap- | Politics plays the same kind of havoc ness of kerosene and gasoline mus(| With good road building that crows do have deen the sta; interest In !ts production cause of its becoming a flat faily A correspondent writing from Wash- ington, savs “Four years ago the cry of free de. natured alcohol was very loud. an indeed, was a *high brow’ discus- sion and agitatic: Congress was loth to make it free of all internal revenue taxation, but It was said that the farmer would be able to manage his farm to greater advantage and with farger profit and that others would be similarly benefited, and the industry ought thus to be humored. “So congress made denatured alco- “h has killed | With corn raising or woodchucks twith and been the | truck gardening. Commissioner Mac- . |donald has always had the courags to put his foot on it, and he is not fright- ened by the political venom which is sure to follow. He was never to blame of the condition of this road. He has doubtless been nettled by it, has wait- ed patiently for the towns to make It up to standard and to relieve a suffer- ing public he now steps in with the power of the state of Connecticut be- hind him to do the business in its name. He does not like to do th! but when patience ceases to be a vir- tue he has the nerve and the ability to make politics stand aside and make Bol free of internal tgxes, and the | WAy for what the state not only speci- Sreat expectations sald ‘Well done’ |fied but demand; and the treasury deparfment made = Teady to facilitate the use of dena- EDITORIAL NOTES. tured alcokol in so far &s government | Mr, Patten has money first, matters went on fairly well. De- EL = natured alcoho! was given its trial on| Things will not look gloomy if vou the farm end clsewhere as a fuel und | ook toward the sunshine. the like. dut it appears to have 1 Ee e abamdoned for these purposes, and| It 100ks as if Vermont might take its the treasury department in its inter- | Mead straight this season. nal revenue division has recently = found so little ‘o do that it has de-| TAaft's smile is ®broad enough to cided to abolish in effect the de.|cOver the whole state of Michigan. natured slcohol division of the bu- A Lorimer not only has heaps of gold reau of internal revenue, and has ar- Tamged on July 1 next to dismiss or | Put an inestimable amount of brass. transfer to other departments of tha| .. TP ~ 12| The June frost that kills does not B oy cierks gnz © but once In a quarter centur: field agents in the division e - m:"r:.-"a.:,vm sas :D::mm:r:r':-:: The men who add jokera o the laws e o R o pe saved mmat | of the country ought ¢o be in prison Sas been intended to abolleh the ai-| o0 °f in office. wision has been known for some tims for the secretary of the treasury. in this estimate for treasury expenss for the next flscal year left out any rec- omnd‘(lnn: for the division.” The Goctors of Rhode Isiand not| only appéar to be promoting race sui- cide by high fees, dut to be makiug Emperor William is suffering with a calls prohbitive to the working cl swollen wrist, but that is less danger- es. ous than a swollen head. The reason Japan will not seek to war with this country is because its nterests all forbid it ew York man has failed for $25,- i ets of $25. He Wid not fall until he was forced to. The New York legislature dodged| When Roosevelt talks in Wisconsin the primaey election bill and Hughes | the factions may sce that their inter- calls them together again llke a pri- | °S!S run in one channel. mary school teacher. What next? 3 The American farmers who settled in SIS Sl adt Bave 1o imagine what]Canads in April numbered 25,000, Reosevelt will say when he gets Tome Y, 36 B¢ Suly oo T much longer. He will say it and the| ypp50 thought for today: When whele world will know. {le unexpected happens we must make it produce hoped for results. The hot wave that was annouliced as on #s way from the west would | When the raflroad magnates had a have been a welcome guest, but it did | talk with Taft they calmed down and not materiaMse. took @ new grip upon the situation. Qienn Curtiss deserves to be ban: | The Rev. Dr. Hillis is of the opinion (queted, but he should remember that | (hat Toosevelt i< the only man on some banquets ‘more perilous u:u:l"ar”- who can threw double sixes ev- = toug bt ery tume. “I went around to the photograph joint to have my picture taken this morning,” said the retired merchant. ‘My wife has been insisting for a long time that I should have a life-like pic- ture made, so that if I go off the hooks unexpectedly the family will have something to hang crape on. The | only photograph I have was taken long ago, when I was young and fool- | hardy, and wore side whiskers. | “Now, I am usually grave and dig- nified, not to say solemn; but when I faced that blamed camera this morn- ing I_couldn’t keep from grinning like a gorilla to save my lfe. There w: nothing amusing in sight. The pho- tograph gallery was as gloomy as a|a mortuary chapel, and the artist himself iooked as though he had gout in his | face, and T had plenty of things to worry over, but there I sat, wearing | a smile that you could have fitted a . stovepipe into. 1 just had to give up irying to look like a human being. The | photographer told to come around some cay when I had the toothach “I understand just how 3 felt,” remarked the shoe salesman. spend every second Sunday at home, and my wife always wants me to go to church with her, and it's a great delight to | me to please my wife. But I have had 10 quit going to church because I can't | keep awake there. When 1 arrive at that the pastor would say that who- quit “Once my wife tried to wake me jabbing me with a pin, but she t more force into it than she intend- | ind 1 woke with a vell, and before where T was I had punched | the head of a worshipér in the next pew. Talk about being ashamed! I THE BULLETIN'S “STORY WEAKNESSES Pated myself so bad that I offered to | therefore raffie myself off, for the benefit of a | Times. private lunatic would buy tickets at five ecnts each.” “Have you ever heard me cough or | expert can glean from the face of the returns. It was the irregular voting that secured to Mayor Thayer his. fifth In Norwich the irregularity in voting is the noteworthy feature of the sneeze 50 as 20 attract attention?’ asked the hotelkeeper, with deep feel- ing in his voice. But when I go to the barber shop, and lean back in the chair, with a lot of towels | around my neck, I always begin wheez- ing and sneezing and though my lungs were full of cockle- burs. should be motionless. The barber has |less he has béen trained to shave peo- ple while they are enjoving eplieptic | 815, he is pat to slice up your coun- tenhnce if you dom’t be still barber who shaves me says that he | feeis circus actor. |and make passes » | spasms, pared fo jump a few yards in case I cough up a short rib. Such exercise necessarily makes a man feel like an | acrobat in time. ed the man who was selling patent rights. Ben Davis apples——" giant,” returned the other man. ever was sawing wood would have to | mereiy saving that I dearly love Ben | Davis apples and can’t eat them be- cause they set my teeth on edge. The s annoying thing is that I can eat apples that don't taste zood to me and they Gon't affect my teeth.” the Goctor. been mostly regular. ach seratehing and while M. e won by a plimall vote of less ,000, the —— worth asylum, but nobody (The above illustrates how little “No, you never have. | term. day’s work~Ed.) and counterpanes fastened Journalism’s Golden Age. President Taft's Httle disquisition I's most exasperating. “At such a time, if ever, a man deadly weapon in his hand, and, un. | Men, Was rather better than The qualified_for a situation as a He has to dance around at me between 1 the time he is pre- president repeated, for instance, and paper of today differs from those twenty or thirty or filty years ago that while now the news receives m attention, then it “We all have our troubles,” observ- | tation. That is right enough, as a mere m: ‘I am passionately fond of basis for the conclusion drawn by the sametuary T may be as fiercely wide | “In that case you should see an |president and so often reached by awake as a prize fighter. But just as | alicnist, and take treatment for men- | other people—that the editors of today Sure as ever I sat down in the pew |tal infirmity,” interrupted the hotel- | are different from, inferior to and less T'd get as drowsy as though I had | keeper. nan who is fond of Ben |influential than their predecessors in been doped, and pretty soon my head | Davis apples shouldn't be allowed at | the golden age of journalism—is with- is nodding around like a cork on |large” out any foundation in fact. Newspa- water, and I'd begin snoring so loud | *I don’t claim to be an intellectual | pers always printed all the news their resource them to got. »eperous because they there is to the “I was The better and m can, and tha much-lamen rial articles is a_pure h no foundation in fact, noné except the one fact that the news supply was scanty the cc That shows that your teeth have ore sense than you have” remarked Chicago News. “Tuff’ on Doctors. The report of the Carnegie Founda- tion, just issued, leans rather hard on New Tngland doctors and likewise on ughly wretched, institutions,” and that the mere fact that some of ‘them “are all old schools is a poor reason for continuing them if they fail to do ice to the student” The gonclu- schools are poor, their gradumtes must likewise be poorlv equipped. The | general summing up. is to the effect that New Eng is already over-peopled with physicians anyway and therefore will need no more for a long time to come. The report says in part: “Massachu- the nominess of that party for alder- men and covncilmen. sion is also reached that because the | It tions which were far more vigorously | ment on it attained a compar: portance which it now lack: Norwich Democratic. York Time Charles F. Thayer ran agalm for 3 mayor in Norwich this yea The 3 2 Siootion wh wn Aoniay ol Eiteiwa Marriage as Crime Preventive. some of the colleges which produce | and, as usual in such circumstance Science is merely “organized them. . It states that some of the | Mr. Thayer was eclected. So was the | mon sense” in Huxley's word4 a medical colleges of New England are | whole demoeratic ticket, including all | therefore. what the experience of teaches the to be average man s pretey formulated as a scient According to The Norwich Bulletin, | by nt. Tt has been a truism : v anti-Thayer. much | for to marry is to “settle | surprise was expressed at the result. come steady and “respon- did not _seem =0 astonishing to Dr. Bertillon. on the sthers, partly be-ause there huve been ry elaborate French sta- so many precedents for it. Mr. and studies, has promulgated Thayer has a strong hold on the re- |certain “theories” concerning the re- spect and confidence of his party and [lation between marriage, family life the whole community, and this also |amd ecriminality. There is nothing has been demonstrated In former elec- | atrange or new in these theories, but they are interesting simply b Thay- of 154 in a total average democratic plurality was about 140, a pretty fair evidence of regularity, and noting.—Hartford Journalism, with its incidental refer- ences to newspapers and newspaper such things commonly are; but, as usual, it revealed in several particulars the in- ability of the outsider to understand the combination of business, trade and profession which to those inside of it seems to have no mysteries at all. The the long familiar statement that the news- was the editorial utterances that made value and repu- ter of uninterpreted observation, but as and their facilities enabled ones get more of it now uperiority of the old- illu- when a; they are now demonstrable by facts and figures, and an an'| fenders ionship. vert to the criminality bachelors — including Childless widowers are the the criminality lists. value of woman's control or compan- Crime, Dr. Bertillon shows, is ut as “rite” among married among bachelors; the bringing u; a family Imposes “beneficent urdens’ and creates a desire for res tability honored name. Widowers re- records of wild “Apaches.” worst of- of all; they stand highest on This shows the The presence of children is wholesome and deterrent, but the. best moral condition of all is complete fam- ily life, with a wife and mother to guide the household and inspire—or curb—*"the old man.—Chicago Record Herald. on annex Plenty sor, of in ost it. W the ul city of at_ |around the veneer. neck o'woods. Hartford will sast Hartford, West Hartford, Wind- Wethersfield There is no need to be in & hurry about necticut. The growing scarcity of woods has led o an annual production of over 1,100,000,000 A Cheerful Loser. There may soon be a movement to Hartford \to New Britain.— Springfield Republican. Yes, brethren, und we wish you equal good fortune. luck to be Any place would be in nexed to New Britain. of the elixed of life in that But first, we suppose, have to be annexed to and Newington. are all growing together, and mate result is going to be, a: we have often vointed out, a capital half a million people in Con- 1f you don't believe it drop (in your aeropiane) a hundred vears from now and take a look.— Hartford Times. finishing square feet of ore ted pains, cles, or m- Rheumatism Is A Constitutional Disease. It manifests itself in local aches and inflamed joints and stiff mus- but it cannot be cured by local applications. It requires constitutional treatment, and the best is a course of the great blood purifying and tonic medicine which the setts, for examiple, remalins one of three states which obstructs the im provement of medical education by permitting non-graduates to be exam- ined for license. The law should not only require graduation from a repu- table medical school, but should, in the interest of the public. fix with a warning a minimum basis for sdm! sion thereto, as Connecticut has wise- Iy done, and should empower and re- quire the state boards to refuse exam- ination to graduates of schools whose facilities are inadequate.” Criticiem of this sort should bring the old-school and new-school doctors forward with their proofs of efficienc: as indicated by the small percentage of death certificates sikned by them, compared with the number of cases attended, and compared, too, with the mortality rate of physicians graduated in other states. Data of this kind is not difffcul: to obtain, and it should now be forthcoming if it is of the kind that will help hold up the reputations of New England doctors and assist them in retaining the confidence of their patients. Confidence, when it | comes to doctoring, is the elixir of life. It is the secret of success in the bread pill and the power behind a jacked-up schedule of prices. What could Christian Science, for instance, do_without it? It never would do for New Eng- landers to lose confidence either in their physicians or in the colleges from which they graduate. It would be fatal. Why couldn’t the Carnegie Foundation have whitewashed this thing over, for a while, until the con- dition is corrected? Run quick with the props—for Dartmouth, Bowdein, the University of Vermont and Bos ton's Coliege of Physiclans and Sur- geons _According to the report. th all limping badly.—Ansonia Sentin Back from Canada. Census enumerators have made the discovery that many American farm- ers who sobd out and went to Canada are coming back to the United States and are resuming business in the west where they left off when the Canadian boom captured them. After actual trial they found conditions less allur- | ing in the Dominion than they had ex- pected and decided that they could not for mary years to come, if ever, offer real improvement over things as they exist teday south of the line This is not surprising, and, as the enumerators indicate, the return of the Americans who went north will continue. The fact is, without dis- paraging the Canada soil, its resourc- es and opportunities. there never was a time or a country that offered great- er inducement for working the land than the present in the United States. Land of every description is available here—semi-arid. requiring irrigation, nd the deep, biack soil that is neither susceptible to nor dependent on ar- tificlal watering; and, more than that, the system of irrigation, backed by the government, is being pushed with ample capital and energy so as to ce the reciaimed area within easy reach of men in most moderate cir- cumstances.—Omaha Bee e (aged seven)—Ma, T want a nickel. Mother—What for, dear? | Elsie—1 asked Willie Jones to play we're getting married, and he says h won't do it unless I have a dowry.— Boston Transeript. Cures The OLD SORES That Other Remedies Won’t Cure The worst cases, no matter of how long standing, are absolutely cured by | Dr.Porter’s | Antiseptic . | Healing Oi1l Discovered by an Old Railroad Surgeon. All Druggists positively refund money if it fails to cure. _25c, 50c & $1.! 00 sisne 5, o3 aad your DR O1 caved nim: He'ks prepared o ra i (Sigaed) Made by * Maker of | Laxative Bromo Quil‘nine SAMPLE SHOES — AT Brockion Sample Shoe Store. These are Big Bargains, as they are all new, snappy, up-to-date styles, in all leathers, Shoes or Oxfords, “THE SEASON’S BEST” for Men and Women. You can save money by buying now. Our prices are $2.00 and $2.7 S for the $3.00 ard $3.50 grade. Cusiom-made to retail at $4.00 and $5.00, our price $3.00 per pair. BROCKTON SAMPLE SHOE STORE, 138 Main Streef, Norwich, Conn. you new day E-M-F “30” AUTOMOBILES ARE IN THE LEAD throughout this territory, and are constantly in use. One of these cars has been run 4500 miles to date, and not one adjustment has been made. Stop and inquire as to the simplicity of the construction of this car. Should any minor ad- justment be necessary it could be quickly reme- died on account of the simplicity shown in the construction of this wonderful Automobile that can be purchased for $1250, and the many higher priced cars on the market tdday cannot eclipse the mechanical ingenuity shown in the make up of this Automobile. All moving parts is provided with an oiler, and should it be necessary to remove either the transmission or the clutch, it can be done in 20 minutes’ time without any trouble whatever. For Demonstrations, Etc., call at The Imperial Garage, 21 Chestnut Street, Norwich, Conn. flfl@flflflflfl@@fl%flflfl Hood’s Sarsaparilla want. method, soon the world, WRITE TODAY. bring full THE PLAUT-CADDEN CO. Plaut-Cadden Bidg., MWF @@fififi corrects the acid condition of blood and builds up the system. set it today in usual liquid form or chocolated tablets called Sarsatabs. saved on almost any make PIANO This is possible by our and a few cents every pays for the best piano in Coupon below will information. Send me at once catalogues, prices, terms and full description of your mew method of easy pay- Norwich, Conn. Do not miss th splendid service we are waiting to render you. What's the use of having every member of your household feel that they are in your way on Monday, when we will do the work for you better than you can do it yourself and at a price that you can afford to pay. S. & J. GREGSON 193 Fraaklin Street, Norwich, Conn. Telephone $98. flflflfiflfiflflflflflflfl @EEEEE For | | | requisi THE | Tourists A large, variety es for the traveling man. Suit | Cases and Bage | Telephone 865-4. jundd iVho Is Looking the Following Vehicles? Democrats, Top and Open Busine: Wagons, Top and Open If _alues received is considered, get our price THE L. L. CHAPMAN CO., marisdaw Concord 18 to 20 Bath Street. TRUNKS %kes Indestructo to choose from. All ete. SHETUCKET HARNESS CO0. WM. C. BODE. Prop. 282 Main Street. A jun3d LARGE BOTTLE OF Olives for 2bc This Is & Largain. We have also other Olives, plain and stufted, in other sizes at other prices. PEOPLE’S MARKET, € Franklin St. JUSTIN HOLDEN, Prop, SHows b 23T ey WILLIAM H. STEVENS & CO. Presenting UNCLE'S IN WIONG. MUSICAL DALE VAUDEVILLIYS CLEVEREST MUSICAL ARTIST. GALLAWAY, KUINTG & LEWiS, Gomedy Novelty Cuitseniat, dy Much of his meemdn Puck LUMBER AND COAL. COAL A Coal for Every Occasion The Coals we are selling are adapt- ed to every need. They are good for the range, Xoller and the grate, E. CHAPPEL\L CO. Central Wharf and 150 Main Strest. Telephones. Lumber Junsdaw : 3 Feature Ploture: The Bravest Southern Girl STIRRING WAR DRAMA Mr. J. H. Loud, Baritone, IN P Matinee, the PURED MELODIES, Ladies and Chiiaren, . Music. NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teacher of Pia; Central Bullding. Room 4, CAROLINE H, THOMPSON Teacher of Music cALAMITE GOAL 48 Washington Strest. = watoom. “It burns up clean.” 24 1:-&’:_':%:\';";-: Well Seasoned Wood |geersa st iy = o C. H. HASKELL. 402 — "Phones — 489 may24d COAL and LUMBER In the beautitul valley of Wyoming, in Penn., liea the beds of the finest An- thracite’Coal I the world = We nave secured & supply of this Coal for this Season. “Try ft in your cooking wto and heate) We are the a Roofing, one of to the trade. JOHN A. MORGAN & SON. Telephone 854. aprisa COAL Free Burning Kinds and Lebigh ALWAYS IN STOCK. A. D. LATHROP, Office—cor. Market and Shetucket Sts Telephone 168-13. oct2sa Y PLUMEING AND GASFITTING. F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect St Tel. B11. Norwish, Os A. W. JARVIS IS THE LEADING TUNER IN EASTERN CONNECTICUT. 'FPhone 518-5. 15 Clairmeunt Ava. sept22a ents for Rex Flintkote o best roofipgs known UNDREDS of young men and women have ebtained the foundation the principles of success by o course We basio of instruetion in our/school. can help you it you will let us to & more successtul Write today — new — for information All THE NEW LONDON' ’ Business (©llege RADBrabeck, frm, Newlondon. Cormn career full Commereial Branches. Mlss M. C. ADLES, Hair, Scalp and Face Specialist QUICKLY ADJUSTED ls the new summer style of hair dre. shown by Miss Adles. P {ih this, & women 18 slwayw read wtart shopping, motoring, ssiling, t eling, yot aiways presents smart appearance. Consult Miss about this new style tire week of June 13th Wauregan House—NOIWICH, JOHNSON & BENSON, 20 Central Avenue. SLATE ROOFING Metal Cornices and Skylights, Gutters and Conductors, and all kinds of Job- bing promptly attended to. Tel. 119, The Vaughn Foundry Co. IRON CASTINGS furnished promptly. Large stock ef len In Norwioh en px::r;;: No 11 to 3 Ferry strest | l""“”\‘\' ut 110 S—NEW Yomi, T. F. BURNS, iy Heating and Plumbing,| A92™ fso‘Taver" offer to the public the finest standard brands of Beer of Burope and America, Bohemian, Pilsner, Culmbach Bavarian 92 Franklin Street. marbd Beer, Bass' Pale and Burton, Mueirs Scotch Ale, Guinness’ Dublin Stout, S. F. GIBSON o mported Ginger Ale, Bunkes ol 4 HiN P. B, Ale, Frank Jones' Nourish- ing Ale, Sterling Bitter Alo, Anheuser Budweiser, Schiits and Pabst A. A. ADAM. Norwicn Town. Telephone 447-12. a4 STATIONERY Box Paper, Pads, Note Books, Time Books, Invitation Paper, Glue, Pens, Pencils, Pen Holders, Etc. MRS, EDWIN FY, Franklin Squars junid Tin and Sheet Metal Worker Agent for Richardson and Boynton Furnaces, 65 West Main Street, Norwich, Conn. decta Do It Now Have that old-fashioned, unsanitary plumbing replaced by new and mod- ern open plumbing. It will repay you in the Increase of health and saving of doctor's blils. Overhaull fitting thoroughly done. Let you a figure for replacing all the old plumbing with the modern kind that Will keep out the sewer gas. The work will be first-class and the price ressonable. J. E. TOMPKINS, 67 West Main Street. Ink, augita If it is Wedding Invitations Have You Nohccd tlu Increased Travel? ure sign of good weather ana | Come to b > alr. Vo furnish the best the ‘open_air. method, ¢ younl 1aka-one of our | (Branston & GCo. teams you'll say t sarae, Falls Avenus MAHONEY BRO! marl7d For Quality, Style and Cost Now Is Your Opportunity to finish your house cleaning by installing new furniture. We have all your needs at the lowest possible prices, may3ldaw Cauliflower Plants Pepper Plants Salvia Plants at CARDWELL’S ma A full line of Wedding am/ Engagement Rings Come into our store and inspect the goods, M. HOURIGAN, 62-66 Main Street, apr2sd —at VIH FRISWELL'S, 26-21 hauklmlee! Sl NEWMARKET HQT[L, 715 Boswell Ave. i i e . ek 3 t-clasa Wines, Liguors and Clgs Bariern Connelulely el I8 | Meuls and Walch, Rarshit served o To: business Feaulia. order. Jobn Tuckie, Prop. Tel 43-& p—

Other pages from this issue: