Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 9, 1910, Page 14

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Drotect Yorrself! l_fl ho Original and Genuine HORLICK’S MALTED MILK The Food-drink for All Ages. ForlInfants, Invalids,and Growing children. Pure Nutrition, up building the whole body. Invigoratesthe nursing motherandthe aged. Rich milk, malted grain, in powder form. A quick lunch prepared in a minute. Take no substitute. Ask for HORLICK’S. in No Combine or Trust The Horse's Eyes and Ears. Never buy a horse that shies with- out first having a veterinarian examine his eyes for cataract, as the tendency to shy is more often than not the re- sult of defective vision. It may be only a smali, bluish white speck to be- gin with, but even at that stage it im- pairs the sight, and it is incureble, =ays & writer in Country Life in Amer- fca. Any ome versed in equine char- acter reading can learn much from the way a horse carries his ears. If they are always “pricked up” or carried for- ward, he may be partiy blind or deaf, or both. If the ears are always laid | Back he iz nervous or vicious, and in either case will give you trouble, Bee Marmalade. The analvsis of a remarkable Jap- anese comfection is reported in a re- cent bulletin of the College of Agri- culture in Tokyo. This is no less than a “bee marmalade,” said to be made @f young wild bees and seasoned with soy. The results of the anaiysis show that the reputed composition of the aweetmeat i3 quite correct. The mar- malade is said to be exported in air- tight tin cans. A French commentator | remarks sarcastically that it doubtless be welcomed at tables | ‘where thay serve grilled locusts, as in | Africa, or the Chinese dainty made of silkworm cocoons. $100—Reward—S$100 the onl; the medical a. const SiE T iy tarr re is directly upon ices of stroving t and miving building up the sistin nature in proprietors have curative powers Hundred Doll s to montals Address F. J. CHENE Sold by Druggists, Hall's Family positive fr offar case that cure, & “Foley Kidney Pills Have Cured Ma" The above is a quotation f “p a tre written by H. M. Win wille, Ind. I contracted a of kidney trouble. M) and palned me. T seemec all strength end ambidon; ered with dizzy ell swim and specks T took Foley's Kidney and am now perfectly well like a new man. Foley Kidnes Lee & Osgood Co. before Pills Pills NOTICE ! Read careful this space. | Every purchasar of Wines ubrs should visit my store and see the stock 1 have. Special prices for the month of July. Laubenheimer R} e Wine domes. 50¢ Laugenheimer Rhine Wine, imn., 75c h 25¢, 35¢, 50c c mport $1.00 Adamado P $1.00 India Wharf St 75¢ Da s known Geo. Greenberger, Telephone 812. 47 Franklin Street svea Why Not - Do It Now? et leaky roof of vours will c youw no end of trouble if not attended | te at omes. The same holds true of the gutters and leaders on your house And RIGHT NOW is the time to have ft @one, Let us tefl vou the cost. il agreeably swrprise you, Andrew J. Wholey, 12 Ferry Street. Telephone 208. The price i I apr2s will | ¢ | For the next seven days w NORWICH BULLETIN, SATURDAY, JULY 9, 1910 LETTERS FROM TWO STATES. WASl"NfiTON CGUNTY R l Mrs. Nancy James of Wood River | s B Lo | Junction, R. 1 H USQUEPAUGH ~ ROCKVILLE e i Friday Eviig Maalic ol Be tvantl o = "‘,:.m?""d'y onte Up—End of Berry Season. s i | o e Mrs. Whitney Horton and three | chisch here Sundas merning, No more | Children of Wickford are . guests o | Friday evening meetings will be held ' Mrs. Erlo Barber at Woodcrest. | D i s Arthur Barber of Providence was | i 1 a amily of rov- ¥ " s - - idence have come to spend the summer | t1¢ 8uest of his sister Mrs. Emory | Lt Mre Curoline Polners Kenyon on the Fourth. Isaac Prosser and family came Sat- Professor Oscar l. Burdick and | urday to their home here for the sum. | family of Stamford, Conn., are here | Dice for their summer vacation. | Mrs. M. D. Palmer has returned from | . Mr. and Mrs. Charles Irish and little | and his Dr. Keny sister spent n and fam- Ha ay and th friends “village and the clam- bake at Dr. Kenvon e 4th. 1 a Handell spant Sunday and | er home here. H Sullivan has been sters here has returned Berry Seasop Ended. | C. D. Kenyon has finishad picking | berries. He has had a large crop this re- | at | WP Fred | rty being present, Tucker and fam- Atwell ington k Tefft who has been visit- | ne Palmer's has returned | | Home From Silver Bay. | Miss Annie E. Kenyon has returned | Silver Bay and reports vary in- | ‘meetings e went as a| of Y. W. C. U. from Rhode | Island Em Fo Attleboro spent the pare | Miss Hnwv mond is visieing her aunt Arctic a S. Lamond spend 16 with Mrs. La- mond's sister red Clarke on | Boston. Barber bound for HOPKINTON. School Committes M s for Organ- ization—Town Council Reappoints Officers. Meets Council ARCADIA | Begins—Hay Cros Geod M. HOURIGAN SPECIAL ! ‘ will sell our stozk of Refrigerators Go-Carts Porch Rockers at prices regardless of cos'. 62-66 Main Street jv2a mernl Aet. Ill Agt. dium 1n “The Bul- MISS M. C. ADLES, Hair, Scalp and Face Specialis! A POISONED SCALP is often the result of experimenting with the dyes and nostrums of quacks, a® many Norwich women know If your ecelp and hair need atten- tion, have the aid of a specialist. Miss Adles will be in Norwich all the week of July 1ith. Make an early appoint- ment. Wauregan House, NORWICH. 210 West 111th St.—NEW YORK. ‘Telephone 704. Jyead daughter of Providence have been the Trish’s parents, Mr. and Paul . | P. Greene who is working near Kingston was at his home here over | the Fou Mrs. Saunders, Miss Lena | Saunde Lotti nd Maida ! Burdick visited Mr Ashabel Larkin | below i i on Sunday. Mr. George Sherman and two_c sre guests | of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Greene, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Burdick and | children of Westerly were guests of tives over the Fourth. | Publiz Schools Clossd-—Psrsonal In- | terests. | Dr. K. G. Barber of Washington, D. | e = spending vacation with her parents Mr. and . H. L. Barber. | The pablic s in Beaver River alley closed Saturday for the sum- mer vacation. The graduates were Andrew W. Moore and Henry D.| Hoxle Mrs Moore and Miss Nettie re the guests of Mrs. Wm. ia Moore and s . "N Moore spent Saturds in Westerly Mr. and Mrs. W Dawley spent he Fourth with Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Matunuck Susan D. Hope is seriously G. W. Barber and daug Greenwish have been visiting tives in town ttie Perkins is the guest of her cousin Westerl John Phillips is emploved in Wake- field Mrs. Everett Moore is spending a few weeks at Hills grov END OF PET DETESTATION. New Yorker Finally Rid of the Dis- pised High Hat. There is a certain man in New Yeork whose pet detestation is a high hat. In his journey through life he has ac- quired many dislik some prejudices, and a hatreds—but his toward a high hat goes faw ilmits implied by the mild word “hatred.” However, family influences were ought to bear on him when he had reached the proper milestone in his life, and these influences were so strong and insistent that eventually the man in question purchased a high hat; what i more, he actually donned it But his hatred abated not a jot. In fact, it grew He used to open his katbox and eye the hat viciously, mur- derously. But thoughts of what the tamily would if he should adopt violent measures always deterred him, and every time he shut the box again, leaving the thing unharmed, and vented his rage in profanity. Once he and his family went to live at a hotel in the country. And one night, with appailing suddenness, that hotel caught fire. Fortunately, evervbody in it was able to get out in safety. The young man of the hat, after counting heads, and seeing that his people were out of st danger, decided to dash into the burn- ing building once more—there was still a bit of time—in order to see whether he might rescue a few more gs from room. In the excite- nt attendant on the discovery of fire the hotel guests had been obliged to look to their personal safe- . without thinking overmuch of that of their belongings Well, the young man, plunging gal- lant through flame and smoke, reached his room There, the first thing which caught his eye was the high hat With a look of diabolical glee he re- it for a few seconds. Then— 1 an exclamaticn of delight—he kicked it into the inmost part H room, into crackling flame and eddy smoke, far from all means of escape | Then, diabolical glee sti i | his features, he emerged a happyi | man 1 No Appeal This Term. Judge Kennesaw intains Landis decided a case in of the beef packers Thursda: At last he seems to have found a way to make his trust s stick Galvestor WS, | like Wilfred add humor | ever he takes a bath, he stops up all | draughts.” | Trouble Is They Are Liable to Carry ! extraordinary WHEN PA GIVES INFORMATION. Just the Chance for Display of His Sense of Humor. “Pa, what is a hypochondriac?” “A hypochondriac, Wilfred—" But just a moment. “Pa” in this an- ecdote is not a good and kind father, yearning to impart useful information to his son, but one of those smart an- | swer-givers whose main object In life is to get into the back pages of the | magazines. Such fathers look upon | thelr little sons, greping for knowl- | edge, as providers of cpenings for | senseless domestic epigrams. Hence —but we’ll go back. “Pa"” takes off his glasses and looks benignly at his son. “What did you say, my boy?” “Pa, what is a nypochondriac?” That gives “Pa” his chance. “A hypochondriac, Wilfred"—names to this sort of thing. John, for instance, would fall flat and James would be indefinit ly worse; but to resume—"a hypochon- driac, Wilfred, is a man who has such a dread of catching cold that, when- the holes in the sponge for fear of And Wilfred not quite old! Isn’t it a shame? OBSERVANT PEOPLE ARE JAPS. even years It to Extremes. The Japanese are a most imitative and observant people and copy every- thing they see with minute fidelity. A Newport man recently engaged a Japanese valet, who was very atten- tive and satisfacto His duties rarely kitchen, but when he had a chance of watching the cook he did so with interest The cook caught a severe chill and left somewhat suddeniy The lady of the hot was in despair, as she couid not replace her. At last the valet announced diffi- dently that he thought he could cook a little and the mist gladly agreed to give him a tr The first thing he the potatoes. He took and socks and put his feet of hot mustard and water The lady wanted know what on earth he was doing. He replied that he saw the cook do that when she was peeling the potatoes, and nothing wonld persuade him that this was not a necessary part of the process. ess started on was off his shoes to The Thundering Legion. In the year A. D. 174 a Roman gion, made up wholly or in part Christians, fought under Marcus tonius against the Marcomanni le of An- The Roman army was shut up in a defile | and ready to perish with thirst, when | a severe thunder storm, with heavy rain, relieved them of their distres: and at the same time so terrified their enemies that a great victory was gained. The Christians attributed their deliverance to the prayers they had just presented, and considered it mi- raculous, and the term “Thundering Legion” was applied to the soldiers.— New York American. Moroccan Proverbs. In an article on the people of Mo- rocco a writer in Figaro says “They have some queer adages and some that closely resemble ours. Thus, they say “The camel cannot see its hump, but plainly sees one on its neighbor;” ‘He who depends on his neighbor will go to bed hungry A wise enemy is better than a friend;’ Cross the rushing but beware of the quiet, noisel one;’ ‘In this world there are three things not to be trusted—Iluck, women and hors ‘Mounting a horse, loos- ing the hunnng dogs and hearing ea rings rattle drives dull care away stu stream Love and the Law. Now love makes the mind clean and clear, so that it stops liking things ifke bad food and ugly squeezed hodies and cigars. And love makes the mind kindly. so that it does vearn for more than it people’s money in the gaining or the mainfaining health, too, love is the fulfilling of ihe law And how about heauty? Why, beauty is merely health—p love There: fore, if vou have love you have a things. for all things are ruled . b: law: love is the fuifilling of the law —Nautilus One Sure Thing. I railroads can't get popular sym pathy and higher rates they w sfied to take higher rates.— ngton Post Woman’s Relief Dr. Krugers Viburn-O-Gm Cempound, the woman's remedy, has been know ft Ras posttively proven its great value in the treatment woemanly diseases. for years aeas “Woman's Relief,” stnes of It will help you, i{f you am a sufferer frem any of the ilis peculiar te women, which can darugs. It has helped thousands of other sick women, wetters from them clearly describe. It contains no be reached by medicine. as grateful poisonous d} unclean | | not | s share of other | took him into the | in a bath ! New Light on Kleptomania, The detective, closely regarding the women at the lace counter, talked about shopping. “It's undenlable,” he said, “that it's a kind of craze. The majority of wom- en I catch are women of means; thers 18 no earthly reason why they should He Hits Back. There had been a domestic spat at breakfast. “You monster!” snapped the matron, who was always scolding, “you are not like my two former husbands. They were tender men “I never doubted that they were ten- der, Maria,” ventured the meek man, | steal. And they are of a nervous, hys- “when you kept them' in hot water all | terical type, the type you can hyno- the time.” And he just cleared the | tize. front poreh two yards ahead of the rolling pin. “That makes me ready to believe what some of the doctors now claim namely, that kleptomaniacs are the unsneccessfully hypnotized subjects of Cruel Candor. “Was that glass Mrs. Shoddy gave | Salesmen. The salesmen desirs them the bride for a wedding present the | '0 buy and often hynotize them into real thing? She declared it was.' buying—don’t you knmow what trash “She told the truth. She got it at | shoppers bring home?—but often, too, a marked-down bargain sale, so what- | {hey only partially hypnotize them, and then the women steal, ever the material, it was really cut glass.” + | “This new idea strikes me as plaus! e il icaR s S | ble because kleptomaniacs are nearly I hy young Woman—I eallc o see | BlWays of the impressionable type that 1 didn’t require a beautiful mod- | yYields the readiest to the hynotist's Artist Wh have - you got ul will.” friend on Transeript Why Have an Overheated Kitchen in Summer? When the sultry days come and the coal range makes the kitchen almost unbearable and cooking a dreaded task, put out the range fire and try the newest method of cooking in hot weather—use a New Perféction Oil Cook-stove : 'What a contrast! The kitchen no longer Is stifling hot, the work is now done with comfort, and the housewife is not worn out with the heat. She saves her strength, keeps her health and is better able to enjoy the summer. The New Perfection does everything that any other stove can do—all the fam- ily cooking, baking, washing and iron- ing. No smoke, no dust, no odor, Heat is applied directly and not wasted. A turn, and the flame is out. The New Perfection stove has Cabinet Top with shelf for keeping plates and food hot, drop shelves for the coffee pot or saucepans, and nickeled towel racks. It has long turqueise-blue enamel chimneys. The nickel finish, with the bright blue of the chimneys, makes the stove very attractive &nd invites clean liness. Mede with 1, 2 and 3 burners; the 2 and 3-burner stoves can be bad with or without Cabinet. Every d everywhere if not at yoars, Descriptive Ciroular 1o the Bearest Agacy o Cantionary Note:—Be sure you get this stove—see that the name-plate reads “New Perfection.” te tox e Ceresota. Bread makes growing children strong. TALCUM POWDER. USE WE ARE REFERRING TO VIOLET TALCUM POWDER TALCUM POWDER Talcum Powder a pound can € A > me HUDNUT'S TOILET ARTICLES. A ple re t 1 b nd the ¥For nervousness, Iirritability, headache, backache, pressing- @own palns, and other symptoms of general female weakness, this compound has deen found quick zna safe. 5 =% It does me more good than &ny medicine I bave ever talken J think Viburn-O-Gin Is the best remedy for weak women, cannot pratmse It stroug enough. I think it is the best woman's medicine on earth.” b‘! = Touw'll feel llke writing a similar letter if you try 1t }:‘ 5 $1.25 a bottle with directions. Franco-German Drug Co., 106 West 129th Street, New York AND ALL DRUGGISTS. Dr. Krugers Viburn-0O-Uin

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