Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 21, 1910, Page 4

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erwich Fulletiz und Gonfied Circulation of Bulletin. Bulletin has the largest cir- of any paper Im Eastern and from three to four larger tham that of mmy im It Sa delivered to over of the 4,053 houses inm Nor- =nd read by mimcty-three per THE PERSISTENT INTERVIEWERS Colonel Roosevelt is resolute and he gives netice that the campaign of the mewapaper imterviewers must cease as Be Bas Dothing to say, @ad their pur- euit is vain. An interested public will 100k on to ®ee whether the schomes to make Sag- wmore Hill a news center will abandoned, or whether the newspaper men will continue to flock tuere and insist wpon just a word. Newspapermen are as persistent Rossevelt is resolute, and there or the ex The eountry is greatly interested in the Beoseveits and it will be dificult Yor them to emjoy the retiracy which | ivllege of a less distinguished | —president will talk or not. the penalties for being re- after the Rooseveits, and to give to the people “verything of interest about them that can be learned or perhays imagined. Roosevelts erders for them to quit | will mot of ftselt be enougi. but it he Sas a couple of bulldogs and a squad ith shotguns to guard tho premises it is barely possibls that he will be permitted to emjoy the retiracy and Quistness which he craves and which be really is entiled to. TAKING THE LEAD. The state department Army of the Republic of Vermont taking the lead here in New England in'the campaign for the changing of Memorial day to a more fitting date than May 30. Concerning their action the St AMbans (Vt) Messenger says *The Vermont G. A. R. has taken a eise step in advocating the substitu- tion of some Sunday in June for the My 30th Memorial dey. Whatever sentiment may dictate to be the better way, eommon sense appreciates the Ampessibility of crowding wupon a people a holdiay devoted to a purpose they witl not ceremonially observe. The people of America feel the spirit of Memorial day, and, if occasion demands, their soms and Gaushters will live and die all over again the moble sacrifices it commands. But it is oo evident that the present men- eration will not make the day sacred %o the memory of the dead, and ob- serve it only as such a period of relix- jous remembran he next best thing s to strive to hold the minds and imeginations of such as may yet be held to the sentimental philo: ophy of our refation to the nation and %0 each other by appoimting a day that custom has not yet wholy wrenched from its boly significanca” There is no reason why this cere- mony should mnot bs observed on Sunday. In fact, the memorial davs of the civic bodies have been made upon the first day of the week. It wouid ‘be well if they were all kel on the same day. Just at pres- ent whether the Jeffries-Johnson prize fight is to be pulled off in San Fran- ciseo or not. Governor Gillett de- clares it will not; but the mayor of San Francisco enlightens the public in the following terms: “We run San Franeisco and we run it to suft ourselves. We have police- men to do what we tell them to de. The best bet of the day is that some- body will be badly licked in San Prancisco on July 4 By the’ I mean either Jeffries or Johnson. “Bunk, bunk, bunk. Cold fest for somebody. Just watch me. WiN there be = fght? Bet your life” “This is not a classic; but it shows something of the character of the first of the city by the Golden Gate. will bs interesting to note the operation of the forces upon the gov- ernor. He may be resolute, or he may e vested inter- nanclally benefit- ed. A western exchange say “It there are any safe bets in fsti- cuffs it is the one the mavor of San Francisoo tipped off. There will be a Aght The investment will de pro- tected—dut a largs bite will this week Be taken out of the interest upon it 3t looks as if Reno, Nevada, had given the knockout blow. he supreme court of Kansas has deci@ea that it is the duty of citizens on foot to dodge automobiles. They had to do ft without an order St. Louls millionaire has given all to promote education, re- nimself only sufficient to him while he lives. £ the Grand | — NATURAL ADVANTAGES. ‘The hill city has the advantage of the city on the plain in the matter of health every time, becauss a slovenly street department cannot prevent the cleaning of the streets by the rains as water makes its way down th hdlls to find a level. Norwich after the heavy June rains looks as tidy as it she had been through a regularly planned and skil- fully conducted housecleaning. The filth in the streets which accumulates and breeds disease cannot stay when the heavens open and the rain pours forth in torrent: But the self-cleaning streets are something of a trial when they have not been made equalto the wear and tear of a downpour and they are gul- lied out and put temporarily out of condition because the force of the wa- ter removes the earth as well as the fiith. The work on our hill streets has been done so well that we have little damage done at present, while we en- joy the advantage of cleanliness which the topography of the city guarantees; and to this, as much as to any one cause, we are indebted for our im- munity from epidemics or an increas- ing death rate. Norwich is one of tjge healthiest eit- fes in the state and ifS death rate sel- dom rises above the normal average per 1,000 of the population. LEARN TO INTERPRET THE cLouDs, It is better to look up than down— better to look up for a purpose than merely for fun—so a little cloud-study might make a pleasant fad for a sharp observer. Dr. A. de Quervain of Zurich has made a study of the cloud formations and what they indicate. He says: “When reaching heights of six or seven miles it becomes a trundle cloud. The high floating top assumes the shape of a fleecy ice needle cloud and extends sideways in anvil shape. The ordinary cumulus cloud undergoes similar transformation at a level of | three or four miles, and =0 does not lead to the formation of thunder clouds, but merely to the production of fleccy clouds. “This sort of cloud can be regarded as a presage of good weather. The veil shaped hooded clouds have not been suffciently explained. Often they encompass the top of a quickly rising cloud and until recently were thought be instrumental in the production of hail. They are always found to be intimately connected with existing fleecy clouds, and on the other hand presage bad weather, occurring previ- cus to thunderstorms. “Even such reliable presages of anderstorms are the remarkabdly del” ate varieties of fleecy clouds which are mostly found floating about four miles high. On a darker layer they are superposed, delicate white heads. These lofty curly heads_generally in the morning, safeiy predict a thunderstorm within twenty-four hours. By balloon ascents it was found that the occur- rence of these clouds coincides ith a violent drop in the temperature. Cloud-study is both interesting and entertaining, and there i& no doubt that carefully kept data would proyve to be a great help in forecasting the)] approach of storms, EDITORIAL NOTES. Some of the automobile horns have the real Fourth of July sound. The latest suggestion is a mumiei- pal church. Who will write its creed? When politics get hot in Ohio, the Ananias clubs are called into the fleld. The man who is willing to do favors for others !s in no danger of being long idle. The glad summer garments are now. really coming to the front. Better late than never. It a dead man's crossing known to aeropla discovered. is ever ng it has vet to be Nevada has offered such a big price for the prizefight that it looks as if she The professors who are advised to weigh their words do not take them to the hay scales. Man cannot prevent the earth from quaking, but he can makez it register every time it does. The boys who are taught to respect the flag and to abhor graft are likely to make good citizens. required two He was ittsburg Juror to sit comfortably. broad enough to sit on the bench. ‘When it comes to a man’s buying an aeroplane for his wife, he doubtles: would prefer to buy her a pair of wings, Happy thought for today: Do mnot lie about your naighbors. and it might sometimes be charitable to withhold the truth. A great many politicians are polite enough to apologize to the man they have removed from office, and say they couldn’t help it. The health officers advise people to avoid exertion in hot weather, but the employers of men will have te say it to make it effective. CRUEL MAN! “T just dropped in to return the lard 1 borrowed the other day,” remarked Mrs. Bigler, taking a seat. “I was over to see Mrs. Wilkers ldst evening. re. turning some ralsins she loaned me, and 1 really was sorry for her; she feels o bad over her sister's love af- f‘nr I suppose you have head about bys “I have heard no particulars” re- plied Mrs. Jones. “I know that Prof. Hatchett, the music teacher, has been going with Miss Stringer for a long time." Well, it’s the awfulest story you ever heard. Mrs. Wilkers told me all about it. and T promised faithfully I wouldn’t tell, but I feel sure you won’t repeat ft. That professor is the most cold- hlooded man in this sountry. He ought to marry a crocodile or an anaconda if he wants a wife. He just treated Sarah Jane Stringer scandalous. He proposed to her about a month ago and sbe refused him. She really didn't mean it in dead earnest, you know. She expected him to beg her to change her mind, and give him one ray of hope to feed his hungry heart on. She is fond of English novels, you know, where the heroine turns her lover down half a dozen times before she accepts him.” “That's the right way, too, novels or no novels,” said Mrs. Jones. “The girl whi proposes is sure to regret it. I don't blame Sarah Jane Stringer one bit. Mr. Jones proposed to me five thmes before I consented to marry him, and all the time I loved the ground e walked on.’ “Most men have some perserverance.” Y\ “The truth is,” sald the retired mer- chant, wearily, “that ennui is killing me. I've simply got to find some em- ployment that will occupy my mind. I'm thinking of buying a tract of land | a few, miles from town and raising rhuba'd for export.” “Don't you do it,” cried the hotel- keeper, earnestly. “If you must have some employment buy a dollar watch and spend you time winding it and watching the wheels go around. Buy | a fountain pen and try to write| poetry with it, and you won't have time to worry about anything else. | But don't you be a blamed fool and | try to run a farm. “People who have lived in town all their lives always want to end their | days in the country and they have the | idea that there’s no trick In raising | garden sass or live stock, and when they have accumulated a lot of money | they buy a few rolling acres and move | onto them and break their hearts. I| did it myself. “T had been running a hotel so long | that T imagined I was tired of it and my wife felt the same way. She want- ed to be out in the country, where she could hear the biuejays sing and watch the wasps gathering honey and the dandelions defending their young. ‘We subscribed for a lot of farm pa- pers and sat up late at night reading | about the blad free life of the tiller | ang toiler. Now, these farm papers | ‘ere edited by @ lot of pikers who | knew more about grand opera than they knew about being near to na- | ture's heart. “Well, we read all those pipe-dream | farm papers and concluded to go into | the chicken business on a large scale. The papers were full of stories of big | fortunes that had been made by chick en fans. One poor widow invested th savings she had made at the washtub THE BULLETIN'S DAILY STORY COUNTRY LIFE in a couple of hens and a muley roost- er and in a few weeks she was riding around in her automobile, running over people and breaking their legs. A confirmed cripple bousht a setting of eggs for a dollar and a year or two later was touring Europe end buying 0ld masters in the art galleries. If you want to know the road to Fasy street just read the chicken departments of those farm papers. You'll never see i word indicating that there's any grief connected with the business. Every- thing is sunshine and roses and ice cream and velvet. “So we bought a little farm a few miles from town and spent good dol- Jars for henhouses and incubators and brooders and patent nests and china eggs and all sorts of things recom- mended Dy those farm papers. And we blew in @ lot more for fancy hens, with pedigrees reaching from here to Kalamazoo, and_for roosters whose names were in Burke's Peerage. We were going to start right, you see. There wasn't going to be a serub on the place. “After we bhad made all these pre- parations we sat down on the front porch and walted for the hens to make us rich. But calamity came to that hen farm and brooded over it, shaking from out its condor wings invisible woe. The hens got some silly sort of a disease called the gaps, or the yaps, or something like that. They were always vawning, as though they were bored to death, and they always died. The farm papers sald the disease was ecasily cured and told how to cure it and I lived outin the henhouse for sev- eral days doctoring those hens, pour- ing castor oil down their fool throats anad putting poultices on them. After I haq doped ‘em they'd just wink the other eye and croak. O, friend, don't talk to me about the delights of a country life!"—Chicago News. in the week, with matinee performances | on Wednesdays and Saturdavs. But this Prof. Hatchett seems to be a piti- ful creatur hen Sarah Jane told | him she couldn’t be any more than a sister to him he just picked up his hat, as cool as vou please, and said | that it was a fine evening, and went | oway. | ‘The next day she met him and he | merely bowed distantly. Then she real- jzeds that it was all off, 10 use one Mr. Biglers expressions. was perfectly infatus and whon she saw that she had let get away she locked herself into a room and refused to eat any she is going into a decline. a shadow of herself. Her sister, Mrs Wilkers, s almost distracted over the affair. ‘What do you think Mr. V kers aia?” | “I don’t know, but if he didn’t thrash | that professor he's no friend of mine.” “That's what he should have done, but_he doesn't seem to have any more pride than his sister-in-law, and he| actually went to that music teacher and | told him that Sarah Jane was dying of a broken heart. He laid the wh case before him and the professor never | batted an eye. He said that if Wil- | ker's story was true he had reason to | be thankful that Sarah Jane didn’t ac- | cept him. ‘If she refused me when she was | willing to marry me,’ said he, ‘it wc decelve me In such an important mat- ter her entire life would be a long de- ceit. I asked her to marry me in good faith, and was wiling to put up a cash forfeit, said he, ‘and she passed me a photograph of the north pole. The matter ended there. The incident is closed. T am now paying court to Miss Sapphira Tolliver and I reason to be- Sapphira Tolliver and I have reason to deal’ Now, what do you think of that “I think Sarah Jane was perfectly right when she refused him the first time he proposed. If a woman is de- nled that privilege you might as well deny her everything. But that's all T can say for Sarah Jane Stinger. A wo- man who will go back on her victuals | and lock herself in her room and weep | till the carpet 1s wringing wet, merely | because a music teacher with a bald | head is acting indepentdent, hasn't any | of my sympathy,"—Cnicago News. RULES FOR MOTORISTS. A Suspicion That They Might Pleasd | the Agriculturi Norwalk motonists have discovered some touring rules which they think win_the approbation of the Farmars’ Anti-Auto Protective Soclety. They are as follows: 1. On discovering an approaching team the automobilist must stop off- side and cover his machine with a tarpaulin_painted to correspond with the scenery. 2. The speed limit on country roads this yvear will be kept secret, and the penaity of violation will be $10 for every mile an offender is caught go- ing in excess of it. 3. In case an automobile makes a team run away, the penalty will be $50 for the first mile, $100 for the 2nd 0 for the 3rd, etc. that the team runs; in addition to the usual dam- ages! 4. On approaching a corner where he cannot command e view of the road ahead, the automobilst must stop not less than 100 yards from the turn, toot his horn, ring a bell, fire a revoiver, hallco, and send up three bombs at intervals of five minutes. 5. Automobilists must again be sea- sonably painted—that is, so they will merge with the pastoral ensemble, and not be startling. They must be green In spring, golden - in summer, red in autumn and white in winter. 6. Automobiles running on the country roads at might must send up @ red rocket every mile and wait ten minutes for the road to clear, blow- | the gulding inspiration | The “ederal Agricultural department's fig- ring, near to 270,000,000 bushels. That the “entire crop should have been (and could have been, If properly handled) marketed at some profit to the producers and to the great relief of consumers all over the country, is an apparemt fact. That this was not done indicates blundering in the specific instance and a considerable fallure of the country's economic ma- chinery to work as it should in prac- tical matters. In this connection the Financier sees a “crying need for men skilled in the solution of economic problems. That paper points out that: The Agricultural department at Washington knew early last fall that there was an excess crop of potatoes the railroads knew it, or if they did not, they should have known it, and vet' during all the winter and this spring no effort seems to have been made either by the government or by the railroads, which would have profited on account of extra freights, to open new channels for the distribu- tion of this food supply. In this case as in most matters of statistical and academic concern re- zarding economic problems as they are officially treated, the rights or desires ¢ the consumer has no influence. It would be well for this country if the consumer’s interest were to become in handling | such problems of production and dis- tion of commodities which are for se. The idea that the consumer exists by the sufferance of the pro- ducer or distributor is fallacious, but common. It is uphill work to reverse the point of view and compel recogni- tion” of the fact that production and distribution are alike dependent upon the support of the consumer. When that point of view becomes establish- ed, and is acted upon, there will be fewer instances such as this illuminat- ing case of potato waste in the West.— Boston Advertiser. tribuf K Mr. Roosevelt's Pedigres. Last year we had to part with an | Ulusion.” The two rivals for the honor the attainment of the North Pole agreed upon one point: Naither Cook the imaginative nor Peary the genuin article reported the presence aof a Scotchman at the pole. But to make amends, Scotchman has been found where the world least suspectsd his existence. It seems that Mr. Roose- clt_is Scotch. The Scottish Histori- al Review says it. and as soon as it is said one sees that it must be so. presidency of the United States i one of the three largest and most glorious posts in the world; the others being the headship of the British and German empires. The Emperor Will- everybody knows, 18 a Scotch- man; he has an unusually Jarge share of the Stuart blood which runs in the | yetns of every royal personage in u- rope, with the exception of the sultan and the prince of Montenegro. When, as a small boy, he came to England, to “Just Say’’ HORLICK’S It Means Original and Genuine MALTED MILK The Food-drink for All Ages. More heakbhul than Tea or Coffée DAEI‘H‘ i }"“""'md digestion. RET otk el e bl o | A quick lunch prepared in a minute. | Take no substitute. Ask for HORLICK’S. 8@ Others are imitations. candies. 7. In case an automobile comes up behind and wants to pass, the far- mer will affect deafness, until the | automobilist calls him & hard name All members of the Society will give up Sunday to chesing automo {biles, shoutine and shooting at then making aerrests, and otherwise dis. | couraging country touring on tha | day. 9. In case a horse will not pass an automobile, notwithstanding the tarpaulin, the automobilist will take { the machine apart as rapidly as pos- sible and conceal the parts in the | grass. |7 10. In case an automobile ap- protches & farmer's house when the | roads are dusty, he will slow down to one mile an hour, and the chauffeur will lay the dust in front of the | house with a hand sprinkler worked ! over the dashboard—Norwalk Hour. | A Waste of Potatoes. The story that many thousand car- loads of potatoes were left to rot dur- ing 1909, because the price at the points of excess of supply, was about P6 cents per bushel taken in conjunc- tion with the fact that in that same year some 5,000,000 bushels of pota- toes were imporfed, on which a heavy duty was imposed, points to something radically wrong in the method of dis- tributio | oLy of this important food sup- at a time, tov, when the cost of | living was recelving serious discus- sion. The fact that the potato crop of 1909 was abnormally large does not excuse this tremendous waste —a plece of business folly and an eco- nomic crime. The potato crop of 1809 was from sid Mrs. Bigler. “Take the avera man and if he wants a girl bad to marry her he’ll propose ewery day £7,000.000 to 70,000.000 bushels in excess of the normal—the total production for that year was, according to the ing their horns, and shooting Roman | attend the marriage of the late king. ho “Wore” the Highiand dreas, and Thackeray ‘himself wrote in Punch of “the dear little chieftain of the Clan of Brandenburg.” As for our own royal family, Queen Victoria’s phrase, “we Stuarts” will be remembered by all who have read her published diaries. Hitherto Mr_ Roosevelt has thrown forward the Flemish flank of his ancestry but now it is made clear gewest perfect and efficient individuals to maturity.—Minneapolis Star. —BE RWICK & HART— Presenting “THE THUNDERSTORM.” CLARA CROSBY & LEW, COMING— that he is much more extensively con- nected with Scottish families. Through s mother, Margaret Bulloch, he related to the houses of Stobo, Bul- loch of Baldernoch, Irvine of Cults, Douglas of Eilquhillie and—Stuart! In he is one of the “family of One feels that ome ought divined long ago what blood it was that was responsible for the most striking personal success of mod- ern times.—London Dally News. Large and I Families. ‘Where the Dt tion is largely ag- riculturual and isolated, and where la- bor is scarce, the husbandman is proud tc raise . large family, for the boys in time will help to lift the labor from his shoulders, and also there is always plenty of work for ke girls to do about the farm. Moreover, food is plentiful and other desizes are faw. But no such stimulus for a large family exists urban life, where it is often necessary to Mve in a flat, the very limitations | of which point to the inadvisability of a numerous progeny. Moreover, as the individual rises in the social scale former desires become present needs. The coming of numerous children would mean the sacrifice of these nceds by the parents, the descent to a lower standard of living, end the parents will not consent. Fimally science bas shown that a small family well taken care of makes a better showin in future generations than a large family poorly lookea after. The fewer ohildren of the well- pro- | vided-for family will actually show a more numerous progency in the third Wigway—Why don't you give up whiskey and drink cider? Guzzler— Great Scott, man! Cider is made from apples, and if your mind can hark back to the Gargen of Eden you must realize that the apple has done more to demoralize the world than all the whiskey ever distilled.—Philadelphia Reocrd. FOR BABY’S -SAKE USE E. S. SYKES omfort Powder ‘Then his skin will be free from itching, chafing, scalding, rashes, and all sore- ness. The original and best baby pow- der. For twenty years Powder has been considered the andard of perfection by thousands of New England physicians. nurses, and mothers who use no other. Look for the name E. S. SYKES on B~ 005 Vox: Nane genuine without 3. unless you try it. And you’ll never get there is in it, used. is more sconomical. TO MAKE LENOX SOAP Lenox Scap, shave i quarts of boiling water. solution is formed: ey soiled parts, fold and ing, vou will find that unless you use it as it should be The right way to use Lenox Soap, for wash- ing clothes, is in the form of a solution. Lenox Soap Solution does better work than soap; and into_small piece: Keep water at boiling point until a Wet the clothes, rub the solution ately, pack in a tub, cover with warm soapy waicr and let stand over night. Next morn- washing—rubbing the clothes up and down the wash-board—is not half as hard as usual. Lenox Soap-5J out of it all the good SOLUTION: —Take & cake of and dissolve in three on the roll each piece separ- the really hard part of i fits wi u m, fo: pe Thomas Jefferson King, D. D. S. KING DENTAL PARLO =pp! wonderful sible to detect artific absolutely SAF] dental sclence. up, Crowns and Bridge Work $i Fillings $1. up. HOURS—9 a. m. to 8 p. m.; Sundays 10 to 2. DON’T BUY LD STYLE TEETH If you are proud of your personal rance, buy a set or partial set th Dr. King's latest invention, that improvement, the “NAT- RAL GUMS,” which makes impos- | teeth in your outh. PAINLESS EXTRACTICON Teeth exiracted and filled patnicesly r the most nervous and delicate Dr. King's method Is the only treatment known to Full set teeth 38. and Natural Gums; Gold Goid ople. with th RS, Franklin Square, Norwi Telephone. MOGERS, DAINTY, REFINED JCELLIST. RrU ADMISSION—10c. coMEDY sKrr, BACK HOME. SPECIAL— WED., THUR 23d, 23, 241 JOMNSON TRAINING FOR THE BIG FIGHT JULY FOURTH. RAL EVENINGS, Rewerved Seats—20c. LUMBER AND COAL. COAL #Handsome Is As Handsome Does.” Chappell’s Coal GIVES YOU GOOD RESULTS. It's not only a bright, square frac- tured, shiny Coal, but it's economical because it's good. JUNE is the month to buy COAL. E. CHAPPELL C6. Central Wharf and 150 Main Street. Telephones. Lumber jun21daw CALAMITE COAL “It burns up clean.” Well Seasoned Wood G. H. HASKELL. 402 — 'Phones — 489 may24d COAL and LUMBER In the beautitul valiey of Wyoming. in Penn., lies the beds of the finest An- thracite Coal in the world. We have secured & _supply of this Coml for thi Season. Try it In your cooking stov and heater. We are the agents for Rex Flintkote Roofing, one of the best roofings known to the trade. JOHN A. MORGAN & SON. Telephone 854. aprisd COAL Free Burning Kinds and Lehigh ALWAYS IN STOCK. A. D. LATHROP, Office—cor. Market and Shetucket Sta Telephome 168-12. ITTING. B EEATR: CHARLES MSNULTY LESSEE Feature Plotare: “A VEIN OF GOLD.” WHSTERN STORY. MISS KADA CLARK, DRAMATIC SOPRANO, IN SELECTED SONG PROGRAMME. Matinee, Ladies and Chiiaren, HAILE CLUB Rose Fele and Lawn Party at Ghlanbousr (the William Camp Lan- Bo in the Gardens residence of Mri man), Friday and Saturday, Thousands of Roses in bloom, Rosebud Garden of Girls! Continuous Vaudeville on stage in north garden. Dances, Songs, Choruses, Sketches, all by Haile Club Girls Girls’ Orchestra. Costume Folk Songe by Choral Class. Every kind of Outdoor Game, amuse- ment for all, Gymkana Races, Japan- ese Tea Gardens, Supper, Miller's Or- chestra, Dancing. Admission 25cls. On sale at Cranston's, George A Davis’ and by Halle Club girls. Jun20d MUSIC. | NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teacher of Piane, Central Bullding. Room 48, CAROLINE H. THOMPSON Teacher of Musle hington Strest: H. BALCOM, hod Bor- ti1d ool PLUMBING AND GASFI JOHNSON & BENSON, 20 Central Avenus. SLATE ROOFING Metal Cornices and Skylights, Gutters and Conductors, and ail kinds of Job- bing promptly attended to. Tel 119. . The Vaughn Foundry Co. IRON CASTINGS surnished promptly. Large patterns. No. 11 to 25 ¥y sanzzd T. F. BURNS, Heating and Plumbing, 92 Franklin Streer. marsd S. F. GIBSON Tin and Sheet Metal Worker Agent for Richardson and Boynton Furnaces. 3 65 West Main Street, Norwich, Conn. decid Do It Now Have that old-fashioned, unsanitary ;“" i T D HAIRREVIVER Has a tendency to give gloss, brill- iancy, besuty and life to dry, harsh, brittle, unsightly hatr. It cleanses the scalp, does away With dandruff, imparts healthy action of the biood to the roots and stimu- lates growth of the hair. Men who want to protect their hair, and women who would add to their aftractiveness, should try this preparation, which is absolute- 1y safe and harmless, aod one of the best made by the great Amer. dcan Druggists Syndicate of 12,000 reputable drugrists. Get it at any A. D. S. drug store, where you see this sign in the window. ] v | | 1 K Pitcher & Service, 253 Central h, the Drugman, 206 Main st Ave. Lerou’s Pharmacy, 276 West Main St. TABLE TA Bread please, I creamy taste.” : ,*Cut some more Ceresota LK: like its pilumbing replaced by new nd raod- ern open plumbiug. it will repay you in the increase of health and saving of doctor's biis. Overhaullag and ri fitting thoro you a figure for replacing plumbing with the modern kind that will keep out the sewer The be first-class an J. E. TOMPKINS, 67 West Main Str o Building ARE YOU THINKING OF DOING THIS 7 1t 50 you should consult with me and get prices for same. Excellent work at reasonable prices. in. vhite and soft bruised or broken. effective. S0t oniy yelow. packases by druogiscy SULPHO-NAPTHOL COMPA! THERE 13 no acvertising medium in [Eastern Connecticut equal to The tin for pusiness resuit” fect health for the little ones than a daily bath to which has been added a few drops of Gabot’s Sulpho-Napthol About a teaspoonful to a pail of water, This wi in perfect condition. nd will cure any Above all it will prevent infection where the cuticle is Cabot’s Sulpho-Na uable for the bath, being healing, hea taining a sufficient amount of Sulpho-Napthol to make it most ana 5. 10 250 S0c. @ g groee 256 S0c., 756. and $1.00. by’s Health For strength and freedom from ill- ness start from the outside and work Nothing will better insure per- | keep an infant’s skin i It will make it cin affections that muy alread: is also inval- pihol Soa t soothing, con- hful an; rrey Bullding, 14 Medford St. AWYER CRYSTAL BLUE CO., Selling Agts., 85 Broad St., Boston, Mass. C. M. WILLIAMS, General Contractor and Buildar, 218 MAIN STREET. "Phone 370. FUNERAL ORDERS Artistically Arranged by HUNT .. * * The Florist, san17a C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect £t, Tel. 511. Norwioly, Gu A. W. JARVIS IS THE LEADING TUNER IN EASTERN CONNECTICUT. 'Fhone 518-5, 15 Clairmount Ava pt22a UNDREDS of and women have obtained the foundation the basle principles of success by o course young men of Instruction In our school. We can help you if you will to & more successtul Write today — now — for information. All Commercial lot us career. fun Branches. HENEW LONDON Business (ollege RABrubeck, frm, NewrLondon. Conn SHEA & BURKE COMPLETE HOUSEFURNISHERS Attention Prompt and Cereful Given To FUNERAL WORK Telephons Connections. NORWICH and TAFTVILLE Lady Assistant when desired. may2zsd WALL PAPERS The late Spring leaves a larges stock on hand of the above, and to move it we have made quite 8 reduc— tion in the prices. to buy now. Also Paints, 1t is a good time Muresco, Moldings, and a general supply of decorative mate rials. Painting, Paper Hanging and Decorating. P. F. MURTAGH, 92 and 94 West Main Stseet. oph Junid Teol. 130. Lafayeits Stresh J— it e o NEW STOC 2 of Remnants, Sliks, Dress Goods, Lin- Have You Noticed ths Gns, all &t lowest Drlces. Good Tengths Inirbbud Truakd for’ Wl and akirts, Coll and " ses Its & sure sign of good weathe THE REMNANT STOWES, fine roads. Pedple like to get out |‘n“l: 370 " Weng: Main -8t the open air. We furnish the beat JOUN BLOOM, Prop. method. and if youwll taka one of our | Next to Fire Station war2ed toams you'll say the sazue. S - — MAHONEY “8ROB."Fils Avenua NEWMARKET HOTEL, Eastern Gonnest! T Tor Cininess resuite. *° THERE 15 no advertising L ¢ Bul- 715 Boswell Ava, First-class Wines, Lisuors andsCigara. Mealz and % Rarebit ge to order. John Prop. Tel 43-8

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