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MILLIONS IN CIRCUSES. Millions hg.vv been made and mil- lions lest in circuses. P. T. Barnum was the great pioneer in this feld. Long after he entered the show busi- ness he belonged to the dinner pail brigade, but at the end of a busy life His partners, James | A. Bailey and James L. Hutchinson, each left more than a million. Forepaugh died very rich. Brothers built up a fortune of several millions and feft large estates. there is no record annals which can equal that of the Thirty years ago, five brothers had a few horses, a few dens of animais, and music themselves. Today they own the three greatest circuses, bears their name, the Barnum & Bai- ley show and the Sells-Forepaugh ci cus, and dominate the business. These three circuses repre: vestment of npproximate]y SS,U(\O.GUD. .\'e\\'hur)‘Dflrz when it says that auttzh g-u etis and fi:ntflt? 114 YEARS OLD. Yrice, 12¢ a weeks 3% & he Jert $3,000,000. Some persons are flattered by praise and some are -nmvod by it. Some pottn beating ot drum te Qul them. have seen people who could not do their duty without expeetis or do anything kind _wit pecting praise. want to do t oty 000 8 7 L‘ntgrefl =9 W—' Caiar » sunuu offl« L Pcnntflu 2t Norwich, The self-centered ego is always expecting reward for geod- ness here and hereafter, while the posite class perform kindly acts every kind just as if it was natural Some people enjoy like to talk al in modern cireus wuu—tu oOffice, ln-- 2. Murray Telephone. 210. Norwich, Saturday, June 18, 1910. The Cirenlation of The Bulletin. The Bulictin has the Iargest cir- cumlation of amy paper in Comnecticut, and from three to four times larger tham that of amy Ia it is delivered to over 3,000 of the 4053 houses im Nor- wich, and read by mimety-three per of the people. delivered to over D00 houses, im Putnam amd Daniclson to over 1,100, and in all of these places it is eomsidered the local daily. Eastern Commnecticut has forty- nine townws, ome humdred and sixty- ve postoffice district ome rural free delivery routes. The Bulletin is town and om health because the; and some people would ‘never come agitators if it were not_for s ing their names in the newspa, TS Man is queerly constituted as w fearfully and wonderfully made; I reckon there are very few excep- tions to the rule, the ene which ent a total Those who are anxious to make the world better could do so without mov- ing out of their tracks if they wouid just smile ten times where they frown gheen called to the fact that the working girl has to put up with far too much frowning; that a little smiling would do her good. The vain and senseless try to impress people whom they do not regard as be- ing in their class of their superiority by knocks and frowns; and those su- perior to them do not mind, for they are aware that there is no merit in had manners, that superiority in grace and mind does not have to assert itse.f. Ignorance never discovers this. persons who fawn upon the class 2p0ve T and who kick at the class Le- The wocid e all enjoy that we stand and gape at the lions and tigers, we are amused at the monkeys, and we try our luck in throwing peanuts at the elephants. The clowns have a perennial fascina- tion, as do also the chariot races and performances on n't necessary at all for a4 man or woman to apologize for g ing, and, to say that it is on account We all understand the situation and~smile with approval best \deacon of them all. There is nothing to take the place of the circus, and he who has missed it has missed a part of his life.” A NEW INTOXICANT. It does not seem as needed even one more declaration the importation of the African have enough villain- Attention h: the sensational of the children. even on the and forty- are what they are. them and It holds them in light esteem not because they are wise but other- The working girl would do well to smile at those who frown on them. Don’t you see, it's real funny. all of the R. ¥. in Eastern Connecticut. CIRCUI.ATIGN b -t AR kind of a drink | ‘aadl” since we compounds Some woman has said it is easy to but it is hard work to keep him flattered all the time,” and some man has remarked that “ i ijse who keeps his wife thinking she is smarter than he Is, and that he There are a good honesties which intend to lubricate the ways of life, and also quite a num- ber of deceptions. civilized life trains people in decep- tions, and then pretends to be horri- fied because men and women are not If that old maxim, “Honesty is true, what fools ourselves in conforminz that are not honest in the . form of style. How the world plays to the weakness- es of men and women if there is any- thing in it for the player. great deal of soothing dome by fa and this gave birth to is comm(‘ndnble Ihen good—just as flatter a man, ommendation is that it i The Boston June 11...cavnee s “extremely demoralizing.” commenting man-demeaning beverage, HAMILTON’'S EXPERIENCES. is queer that “harles K. Hamilton did not get to great aviator without facing This Napoleon eighs 110 pounds and in his with the gliding box the aeroplane he fell , and although a midair mishaps he has very kind of grain and a long list vegetable substances been made to yield a » drinks have Marco Polo, a surprising po- that enterprising is the Dbest policy,” experiments who had much difficulty name of good brought back was the first to tell of the Chinese sam-shee which, man of many never been seriously had a drop at Paterson, two miles in a burst balloon, and had not the torn and emptied gasbag taken ape of a parachute he would have been dashed to pieces. chrated glide by which he now startles specators was discovered by the break- ing of the motor shaft of his aeroplane one day when he N. J., of nearly There is a ¢ other wine.” has a sort unknown—that appropriate name of beer—in- idea that evil old-fashioned | new-fashioned . This is a flower which has un- der cultivation greatly varities through cross c insects and by the art and genius of The variety of of our grandmothers have been counted on the fingers one hand and now set three feet apart they would cover more than an The three countries which this work has been dowe 15 erica, France and Japan, and past half century they have been in- creased at the rate of forty mew cam- merclal varieties a year, thres years from planted seed to the first bloom. This gives the worid 2,000 varietles. and it is doubtful if it The peony has never be- come a cheap flower, and grant beauties range in price from $5 In this field man is not v but & promoter. d cannot think of the average man is not likely to. of treating chidren like men bryo, we are too apt to treat them like We do not seem to think that - have an immortal soul until- they are out of the infantile period, or that they are moved by the spirit. fact that groups of children under ten iscuss heavy subjects and som of them are more opinionated than they are likeiy to be when they become mature. ‘Phis is what I heard a boy confiding to a group of youngsters of 9 years and “I love my Jesus then something was said in so low a tone T could not understand,which was ) the exclamation all I've zot against him!"” Here is a positive conclusion by a child up- on a subject we do not think him ca- lending him is ignporance of which perm from early training. bloom and at a perilous He realized immediately that as soon as he lost momentum he must With that almost sixth sensd seemingly possessed by men who nav- gate the air, he instantly deflected his forward planes and shot toward the earth at a sharp angle, stead of losing momentum as he went. Near the earth he threw planes up again, settled to earth He had discovered the slide. He is always cool and masterful and has never failed to do the right thing in moments of peril ful man would have been killed, but e promises to live to yet perform ski ful feats In the way fertilization by peonies in conflagration The cocoanut th an odor to devastate a province and a flavor to . but which produces effects t endear it to the matives of Sara- saining in- the forward rose gracefully and without a jar. These are on things that v of the awful races have in- A less resource- hasn't more. mportations are not each to $100. EDITORIAL NOTES. 4 be an unseen faetor in erime but its victims z THE GREAT TAX INCREASE. are made in the western part of the state that the action of the state board of equali y to the injustice of our pr tem instead of making What a cl Complaints W aker person t you are not tions made after the taxes have been levied for the year not only add per- y to the towns' will force i towns a floating work of tax equalization in Bridgeport completed,” sa: creased burden would be equita- but it is not. and mercantile business are still listed 1 value, while some other c of taxable property are not. crease in the tax rate, state tax, augments the full-value assessments; payers are eompelled to than their fair share of the burden. “Tax equalization should be pushed 1o an early completion in order to end this obvious injustice. inequalitfes Yale's foot abstinence 1arantees succe less Tecentl month than ¥ nce Pinchot is out for a new party a strong suspicion a Roosevelt is In order. distributed, to meet the injustice to their ability should forgive things in othe oulder more Some men pride themselves upon he- ing eranks, and this is not a dire fault if they keep within bounds. The man wha is not running In a regular rut of i regarded as a and under the regular definition [ accomplish this world than aknost any other class. | i of a real| ys thinks it's his isn't the fellow who holds 1imself aloof, but the fellow who butts nothing of add, just to let it be known | Brought down | demarcation, the crank | is not so numerous as most people have more offensive. The so- much to be the real crank has nothing. air and gall and clean clothes make a fair sort of a crank,since grains are not up worse than It there must assessment instead of against, the owners of homes.” The Stamford reference to millions added to that city As to the effect of the increase, two be pertinently eaid. a blanket increase is n added injustice to r whose property is listed at a larger proportion than that of other the taxpayers, American veteran by pension whereve i el 3 e seven crank is that he alwi an do that. things may them is that declines to pa It does not think | > thinks he is it. to this line of majority of of $400,000 a called crank f, as an evidence of popular subjected to unfairness, point which 1§ in mind that the announcement of a revision of the grand lists of the various towns of the state comés after every one of its tax rate for . including in the budget, appropriations for n.ndceu the utterances hy of serious thought be- have in them the element An English writer says: | worry too much about diseases, and we | them—from | American w There are two | firmed 5,000 has determined caues they ter declares: we are 25 per eent. sick through more faod than grand list as returned by the assessors and boards of relief. heen made whereb: be paid to the state out of the ordi- and the selectmen will bly have to make addition to the fleating debt of the town. No provision has eating 25 per cent, v digestive apparatus can take care | x 1th is man’s inheritance, and s a much better subject for the mind contemplate than The puttying suns furnished up of blemishes in the | ethlehem steel ks to deceive the inspectors shows what greed will | nary income, health—for )d cheer in it and no fear. nce to eating, known to the world that we are a race | peptics because we eat irration- | ily and excessively. : many eminent physicians who are dietarians and who recognize that get- tmg the poison out of the human sys- tem is more helpful than putting more To think disease is to be er in more than one sense, producing it. about diseases is abuse of the nerves and a waste of energy. | there is & Massachusetts AUSTRALIA. Australia recognizes advertising as a2 means of !nr‘lcasmg its population and claimed that selves hardly realize that all of British India could be lost in South Australia The records show that commonwealth produces 24 per cent. of the world'’s yearly output of gold, and it has also been eloquently dem- onstrated that four millions of Aus- tralians, and a working population of scarcely a fourth of that total, every year to the world's stock of min- eral wealth more than do the 80,000,000 of the United States. century Australia has dug from mines in gold and sWver or put in the form of wool from the sheep wealth sufficient to pay off the debt (£800,000,000) the value of | The conduct of the Lyman s its weaith, Anstialians Abernethy kids will he a great since thought calls attention that Mayor is no real good reason why should have the blues. has been said that a busy person can- not get time te have them, but I think that'l have noticed a few busy taken the time for the: mind with blue-devils mean trick for anybedy to Some people because one of their par- were, and they cherish the fault They do not appear to inheritance poor advertisement for themselves It 1 thought 1 got home I think I should keep the fact to myself because se- crecy is more creditable than publica- If it was not possible to wear them out I weould drug them out. The blues are good things to dope. commencement not at Mr. Storrow’s lunch to be siv- en at its conclusion. the dancing masters of the country a minute is the corre There are no quicksteps That is where they 1| Filling the In less than a themselves. arden gate. backs of its | gor. . o as hereditary, realize that British national of today twice over. Australla has o foreign trade larger than that of Spain and Japan com- rich enough and big cnough under sympathetic administra- tion to offer opportunities dreds of thousands of the right class of people to carve out lives of pros- perity for themselves. The democrats claim set control of congress and in 1912 carry majority in the electoral c are not extra hopeful as to the elec- toral college majority. and their parents. the blues at A dangerous culprit, cashier, does not find it easy to sur- When the murderer, tried to surrender. the men he would have given himseif up to ran away! A plating diverce, but he recognizes the | company of militia had to be ¢slled out advantage of ynlu like a bad bank I have met my this year in He is a good worker and he doas not i nan resistant when th e stant when v begin meddle with him, and he ‘ q p Id friend, the toad, the garden. Nat Goodwin says he is not eontem- to do the work, derstand ourselves and one another have learned a little more and that if we could remember it all of us, censorjous, how glad to be helped and easily we should accept, as a matter of course, the limitations and tribula- tions of our daily life. Today is ol The sting of each vain regret; All sickness, sin and sorrow, of In the dawn of & glad tomorrow. |If we have no image in our mind of the thing we s o I d % r | Whatever it may be—the bu ing of a Ay s (poen thinking over | louse or an empire, the construction of a sauce or an airship—there would be nothing for us to work to. ing aloud, as I am doing now, it comes to me that not the few but the many have the imaging faculty jn constant use on home industries and business enterprises, and even on all forms of pleasure seeking and making.” what Lady Greatheart said to me st night. We had been tramping the woods, and came home with our arms filled with great branches of mountain laurel. These we strewed upon the empty hearth where in winter we hold our fireside talks. Then we crouched down on the . hearth-rug, resting our tired selyes on piled-up cushions, too tired to talk, glad to be still and silent. After a time, how- ever, I began to think aloud: “One to.whom I would go in trouble! To my mind, that is the sweetest thing that can be sald of anyone, man or woman. I've heard it said of you, my greatheart lady. and I've heard it said of Dr. Oliver, It sets me to think- ing of how few there are of whom one ever does hear it said.” My sister-friend smiled. “Let us hope every one has some one to g0 t0,” she said in her cheery way. “The friends whom we instinctively feel that we could go to in trouble are rare” I demurred. “Tell me. you who learn so many things, tell me why.” When asked for bread, my Lady Greatheart never gives you a ston She thought a moment, then, “So few cople seem to understand,” she said. Most of us are merely grown-up children, absorbed In one bit of piay, in our own game, our personal drama. We have not yet awakened to the truth that the race is one, conscquently, that our joys and sorrows are not ours aloné, but every man's as well.” “What awakens us?” | demanded. “Our experiences, it seems to me. We are so like children, everything is so new to us, that, at the touch of pain we cry out, Never was Sorrow like unto my Sofrow! Then, for the first_time, we begin to look About us, and begin to see that these are mourn- ers that are walking the streets, going in and out of shops, visiting at one another's houses, wearing bright-col- ored clothes, laughing and talking and smiling, and_attending to affairs. In a word, every one has something to bear, something to rise to and master. Elizabeth Barrgtt Browning put into verse her conviction that ‘Love teaches us the secret of grief.’ And this reminds,us that a dear friend said to me, T do ngt need to chump and they do, too, s0 it seems to be a sood thing all around—no- body gets hurt. They roll him over and over and he looks more like a ball of mud than a thing of life; but when he is set for insects he looks different and he has the snap of an airgun, | and takes the enemy on the wing 19 times in every 20. The toad’s tongue is red death to flles and midges and he will get away with a score in no time. Fe makes a hole in the ground and sleeps in it just as an Esquimau finds rest in a sleeping bag. He makes these holes in the cold frame, and amidst the seedings, and under the chickweed. At secretion he is a com- plete success. He can lose himself In A little conversation was being car- ried on about the regularity of na- ture, the changes of the season, the phases of the meon, etc., when one fei- low said he had noticed that June 10th was always a rainy day, The whole company looked suspiciously at him —they could not tell whether he was in earnest or just trying to be funny. “Are you joking?” asked one. ot on your life,” replied the man. *T was married on June 10th and it was a rainy day. That was forty vears and 39 of the anniversaries of wedding have been rainy. You were talking about regularity of na- ture and I think that regular enough to be mentioned, don’'t you?” v all admitted that they did, but not one of them looked as if he be- lieved the fellow to be telling the truth. Some true things sound like falsehoods. SUNDAY MORNING TALK CRISS-CROSS DAYS. We all have them, the criss-cross days. Happy are we if we do not ex- perience many of them, happier still if when they come we know how to handle them. If I were going to make any addition to the requircments of the marriage service it would be a question framed after this fashion: “Will you both endeavor to carry yoursclves as sweetly on the days when everything seems to g0 Wrong as vou do in joyous, prosperous times? For such days seem almost inevi- table. We oversieep in the morning and then have unusual difficulty in getting into our clothes. 'Dhe huttons have grown large in the night and do not fit buttonholes or else they have come off. The breakfasy is de- layed by the fire going out, and when omes on the coffee is muddy and the toast burned. We lose the car we intended to take at the corner, or | we slip on an orange peel or run up against some axle grease. Before the day is half over we are thoroush believers in the doctrine of the total depravity of inanimate things. In- deed, ‘it seems to us as if the evil spirit himself had taken possession of the tools we handle and the things that eross our path. On criss-cross _davs people are as aggravating as things. Even though those whom we have hitherto liked become all of a sudden disagreeable and sclfish. They thwart and embar- Tass us in our propects. They disap- point the expectations we had cher- ished of them. They fail to meet their enzagements and send no word of excuse, So, hetween bothering things and irritating people and un- fortunate combinations of cireum- stances we are “put to” the whole day long and when sunset comes we “I never had such a day as this in my life. I declare I couldn’t stand many more like it.” But can we not do something to reduce the friction and the mressure of the criss-cross days® The first step in the untangling 9( the knots is a frank inquiry into our responsibility S ZUTNE T INE. !meuue. every phase of sorrow to It is a queer old world—beautiful as Know WL SOF m‘“«mmn to nature, queer a sto human nature. | p\S 8 PTG A EIG )" NG cea Only last evening I was thinking what | if the sting of my own sorrow could - | not_teach me the hurt of yours.” a pity it was that we do net all un. by o le’ it does seein Impossible better. If we could grasp the idea .;’fi?mma any form of pain or joy that some of us are old souls while | that they rienced. I assented, themselves have not expe- w. ‘had scariet some of us are new; that some of us “"‘{;“”{’"b‘.’.fl" ““:{’2‘1‘. ;xuy little more thoroughly, while others | Must have tvphoid and ¥, oS | B arlet o understand what each has of us are still comni our a-b-c’s gone through. If you were married in White with a veil, and the others in Ia souls and young, are learning our | veling gown and hat, you will il Way along: Bow. Miich more LeRGerly #ho have to be married a second time, you e m fhould be, how much 1es2 | {ii'a sult and the others in satin, to : gain the last comprehension of what to be helpful; and how much more B 61t ones 1o, “You mean that al- of the prettiest days we have had this [ most no e is able to put himself in summer. It is cool, yet warm and|another’s place. sunny; it is bright and sweet and |lieve, from a lack of imagination. fresh, one of the days that makes the | is remarkable how few people possess whole world fair. the imaging faculty. course, but with most of us it lies Yet without it there would be Really, it is the spring 1l endeavor and of all achléevement. This comes, All have it, of Some day we ehall forget latent. no progress. accomplieh, paused, ”Go on thinking aloud, vou will find in a Wfetime scarce- ly more than one man or woman to whom you would carry your troubl Jaughed gen “Most of us are not fond of trouble.’ “Many think they have I believe those , shrink most about the troubles of Indeed, I am convinced that the only people who can bear other are those who have Greatheart enough of their own. who have the from hearing people fear trouble and sorrow so much that they are afraid to be sympathetic Only those who have and helpful. look sorrow suffered deeply dare magination perienced, and a ction, and I think we have “What you class as fear and and a lac lay selfishness, every for himself, and the She laughed her sweet, Bk women are grown-up children,” y Jove sweets, The child that is you would not go to another child it would go comforting: soul. Dr. Oliver helps mother, an older me more than any one else, He has had deep experi- learned from them. his quaint way. he says that the most incurable eickness Is contagious and longing to be 4t ‘And 1 suppose he thinks no one of " 1 commented, she smiled, toss- of the sprays of “he savs each one and that when we find it out, the world will he happier THE RECLUSE, us can be ‘it “On the contrary, ing the very pinkie laaurel over to me, and nobler.” things or even ple the slips and failures which real upen peo- day might have been a hard one al | way, but if we had been a little mo thoughtful, i the remissness of other peo- ple have troubled us quite as much? I have always noticed that the things I criticise others most for are which I myselt open to censure, criss-cross s tendency is to be especial everyone else after honest we find the trouble e of ourselves, let us summon up our reseryes of pa- a moment. | tience and fortitude ana refuse to he | thrown” oft our criss-cross day. the poet Henley: severe with But if by chance, self-examinat is chiefly outs| The Vaughn Foundry Co. even by a Let us try to say with Out of the night that covers me Dark as the pit from pole to pole I thank W, hatever God there be ¢ unconquerable soul. circumstance, T have not winced nor cried aloud, Under the bludgeonings of chance My head is bloody, yet unbowed, This i3 admirable paganism, but we to go one step further. Christian _religion is inspiration for criss-cross a chance to re- strain and refresh yo THE PARSON. Noi any Milk Trusl The Original and Genuine HORLICK’S MALTED MILK The Food-drink for All Ages. More healthful than Tea or Coffee. Have that old-fash plumbin; ern open plumbiug [t will repay you in the Incremse of health a ot doctor's biils, Overhaullz i fAteh thoroughly ™ d: you' s ngure For replacing all the old Plumbing with th will keep out the sewer' g work will be first-cluss and the price ressonable. Tnless you thoroughly understand the business, it is not wise for you to or dye your own garments. to maoke a_mistake and the whole thing. We have the for cleaning an?! cate fabrics with- out injury Jo'any vast of them. We undertake responsibility, the clothes, clean ’l‘;l ) up-to-date facili dyeing the most prnmp}ly to your residence. -—BERWICK & HART—- mmn-mn o COMING— SPECIAL— WED, THUB, FRI, 2400, CROSHY & Liw, comEDY RURAL nack wows. | ADMISSION—100. We have a good delivery system that not only gives you the Coal at the right time but gives you the eervices of first-class workmen of whom we are not ashamed. E. CHAPPELL C6. Central Wharf and 150 Main Street. Telephones, Lumber Junisdaw CALAMITE GOAI. “It burns up clean,” Well Seasoned Wood C. H. HASKELL. 402 — 'Phones — 489 may24d COAL and LUMBER utiful valley of Wyoming, the finest An- in the world. We have t secured & supply this Coul t in your cookin, We are the agents for Rex Flintkote Roofing, one of the best roofings known to the trade. JOHN A. MORGAN & SON. Telephone 854. aprisa GCOAL Free Burning Kinds and iebigh ALWAYS IN STOCK. A. D. LATHROP, Office—cor. Market and Shetucket Sta Telephone 168-12. oct29d PLUMEING AND GASFITTING. JOHNSON & BENSON, 20 Central Avenue. SLATE ROOFING Metal Cornices and Skylights, Gutters &nd Conductors, and all kinds of Job- bing promptly attended to. TelL 119, IRON CASTINGS ‘urnished firempfly. Large stock of patterns. 11 to 25 Ferry Street ianrid ‘T. F. BURNS, Heating and Plumbing, 92 Franklin Strest. marsd S. F. GIBSON Tin and Sheet Metal Worker Agent for Richardson and Boynton Furnaces, 65 West Main Street, Norwich, Conn. dec7d Do It Now ed, unsanitary replaced by new and mod- ving ie. Lol d that The modern J. E. TOMPKINS, sugisa 67 Wast Main Strest. Wines and Liquors Pure Orange Wine. .50c bottle 8am Clay Whiskey, ... $1.00 bottle (Bottled In Bond) Imported French Brandy, $1.50 bottle Schlitz Milwaukee Beer, $1.00 dozen JACOB STEIN, 83 W. Main St. Telephone 26 may23d Have You Noticed ths lncmud Travel? 4 sure sign of good weather and w nu- Mfl ot :ul into beat 'llutonholm “&'Vuu Amn Jfinmmn TRAININ FOR_THI RIG FIGHT JULY FOURTH. VENINGS, Reserved Seatw—zhe. Wenture Plcture “AUNTIE AT THE YALE-HARVARD RACE” THRILLING STORY OF 7 Mr. J. H. Loud, Baritone, IN PICTURED M Matinge, Ladies and Chiiaren, NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teacher of Plane, Central Bullding. CAROLINE H, THOMVMSON Teacher of Music 46 Washington Street sl BALCOM, lnn @t my r upll. Same method as & Conservatory, Heee F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect Bt Norwich, Cu A. W. JARVIS IS THE LEADING TUNER EASTERN CONNECTICUT, ‘Fhone 518-6. 45 Clairmount Ava UNDREDS of young men and women have ebtained foundatian principles of success by o ecour of instructiop In our school. We can help you if you will to & more successful career Write today — now - for Information. All Commerdial THENEW LONDON Business ©llege KADBrubeck, frm, Hew. SHEA & BURKE COMPLETE HOUSEFURNISHERS Prompt and Careful Attention FUNERAL WORK Connections NORWICH and TAFTVILLE istant when desired, WALL PAPERS—— we have made auite Al snpply of decorstive Decorating. PFi MURTAGH 92 and 94 West Main Street, Adam’s Tavern offer to the publie. the finest standard brands of Beer of Burope and America, Plllfl.f Culmbach Bavarian Burton, Mueirs ket Ale, Guinm C. & C. Imported ‘Ginger B, Ale, Frank Jon ing_Ale, Sterlin Budwelser, 82hli A. A. ADAM, Norwich Towu. Telephone 447-22.- STATIONERY Box Paper, Pads, NoteBooks, Time Books, Ipultcllon Paper, Pencils, Pen Holders, Etc. WRS. EDWIN FAY, Frankiin Squars NEW STOCK Anbeurers Aults and skivis, T orHe REMN NT sTonw, AJOHN BLOOM, Prop, Next to Firg Statien, numnz; HOTEL, 715 Bosws!l Ave. uore and C|