Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 13, 1910, Page 4

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.lun:h Fulletin mnd Couried. 114 YEARS OLD. Telephone Callx: Otfice, 430, Rooms. 35-3, 35-6 2 surray The work of the Norwich Y. M. C. A. ©f teashing youmgsters how to swim is an endeavor in the risht direction. fll is shown by the total of twen- jve drownings in New Engiand on y and Sunday la Sehich could have been I to the art reason wt not le of th There is no xo xent of the boyvs should wwim or a large per cent Swimming is a 1 as well cleanly exercise. It is only recen Xhat & 13-year-old girl swam for three Seurs in Boston harbor, and Fapable cf doing even beicr ! &t is & musele buil welf-assurance where ‘often most needed Ne boy who maglect to take advartage o B ®ofis the Norwieh Y iving free, = . Others from ¢ welt. hat A SUBMARIN The Salme a ®y the goveramen settied by -m tency nis azd is a Thmg of what may prove dnteresting sor t seag meats. THE FIRST The city Temer of having pabllc Pargrouc 3t fe the gift of o Mzem. as it sheuld e The usofui erounds fo- £ prop Sag settees provided at public and Going Mke acts. Al ould de avoided b the of & reereation flei—a other than in th er instruotion t fmheir fon Noe. i e moticeabiy dica Fesult of eariy t tign.” These resulis cittes of the country ner leafers and inc TO STOP AERIAL MONOPOLY. ¥ might be w overamant the commanting the use of © Posas of tram past initiative = Mttle premature Wor thought He Swhich be lssves ment that hae for its Jutety free fro =t the disposa ©f the eBuatry WWrights ace t mote 2ectal nav The purpose Tight, fer it is = ests of the peenie t zmot Bedn reacke Uncle S 3 tackie tha aco " far-resching At the int ing in Frec planes mad: &pead ans cen It Bas not yet n “Do shew that the white American is usmally the esums of race conflicts in hiz esmmtry, I wishk fo say I Bappened to e in the Tisck be't’ when the wires scx wins!’ zng Beacd the vo reering of crea peosic » Ingury o QGeas anpbodr, e:pesialiy the peeple. fny wh lately safe i the Dok’ Yot inoffamsive B The - and erder and the rights = wifual comes pretty near beinz ile eupertor race. In this matter the wehites Bave dore nothing to show - periarity of mind or muscle The spirit of the sperting wo Bdeen showm to be parrow and temptible. Oniy the principals acted llke me Hsppy thought for today: Who says “Get buey end start something!” It is the orfer of the seasou 1o start a pienic. but the fellow who sterts a ®azk acceunt may feel better the dey PRI st AT M Attention, come of the WHY NOT? Company! What has be- anonymous correspondents who used to shower letters upon The Courant calling attention to the shock- ing condition of the famous old New Haven turnpike, commonly called by a later generation the Berlin road? Why stop abusing Commissioner MacDon- ald? forgotten. Campfield (except in m where the New It must worry him to be so soon The fact is that from wument in this city to }Haven streets show up passing through Meriden and Wallingford centers) there is to- day an almost perfect roadway. It is smooth, easily graded, oiled almost all the way delightful present This is w praise. to a dust-holding quality, and to t send in a few letters in praise of the condition of the Hartford Courant. ivel upon. Why not road ?—The a pertinent inquiry. The is not difficuit to find, for kicker seldom kmows how He concentrates his energy 2 the condemnation of flaws, and r weste ¢ knoeler King there I for hin Th it as s ha When a at th The The man e of the The Cu thing when good governme: ealize its man him a The youn bears ma sin's last wh s a city ng. Some be witheut rtion arprising like th etal be classed understand it of blam George $308,383.87 1- piazz fame, man gets a these va ere holding open the furmace doors. ublicans s any of it upon praise. assumes that doing things tho state highway com- paid for, and assume the ng him when things are to their liking, whether it not. Tt they should blame him, the com- wonder what had even lose his He might EDITORIAL NOTES. V. knows now that & month im it of the summer cottage popular as the hammock makes a church fortable, but it doesn’t n sneeze Is the pre- just as surely as is poy has died after eating o one can tell how it hir a sensationalist has but as a bird-man he as a joke. s to be added to the ities. It sounds citified if nces it quick. to care whether a or not. It is sel- as a misft. hat for dress « fallen off in England 60 e shiny tile must go. ho s season, he is surprised increase of his friends. going out of the refri, as if the ice barems in his shirtsleeves at this year is just as apt to be a dcer. Shirtsieceves are ans do not know a good they have it; but when ¢ gets them they will orth. who looks over his last bilis new can see where me of the surplus heat would better % bleods who reach home t davlight 0 not realize that their de a success of life by go- to work at that same hour. It is more than probable that tHe writer who called the Reno ringfest is mistaken. Sin times every day. any Reno calls attention to the fact that churches. That's' noth- cities might just as well churches If measured by influence in public affairs. A Vermont young woman who was ed ower by a horse and rum over e carriage, while on the way to a d not let the accident inter- © terpsichorean enjoyment. of South Dakota, in at Sioux Falls, deciared in favor of tariff revision. how many peeple 8o not law, and therefore must «mong those who de not it—Wail Street Journal. > “This demand for blue blood in live stock of ail kinds is being overworl ed.” said the horse doctor. “No one has a greater admiration for good stock than I have, but things have | come to such a pass that a man is afraid to own a horse or a dog un- less he has his pedigree in a frame to carry around under his arm. Time was when I refused to believe that a horse could be any good unless its lineage was beyond reproach, but I was young then. “I saved up a lot of money and in- | vestal it in a beautiful bay horse whose ancestors had distinguished themselves on the track. I spent most of my time for six months fuss- ing with that horse, and the rest of the time was ‘devoted to bragging about him. Then one day when I had him out for exercise, hitched to a light racing sulky, an old man came along in a millc wagon, driving a spike-tail- brute with a_ewe neck and one eye missing, and drove around me in | circles.. From that day to this I have | jalways insistea on something besides | ipedigree whem I am sizing dap a | horse.” “I used to be a game-chicken crank,” said the insurance agent. “Un- joss you have suffered from that spe- cies of insanity you can't realize what a grip,it gets on a man. For several years 1 devoted all my thoughts and most of my money to fighting birds. I used to send to all cormers of the country for hens and roosters to im- prove the strain, and all the satisfac- tion I ever got out of it was in bras- | Hine Sround town about my birds that | could whip anyihing of their weight | that wore featbers. 1 had ome bird at 1 wes especially proud of. Ac- | cording to his pedigiee he shuuld have | heen able to heat anything from a | bobeat to a boa constrictor. | “One day a strange rooster dropped | He had a melancholy | into my yard. air, as though he had just come fr about ate up my blue-blooded bird. 1 was so disgusted that I went out of | the chicken business.” “I had a similar experience in the dog lne,” used to ‘own a little brown dog_ that s following me downtown a big Dominion in the councils of the em- /| Eire than the appointment of his roval highness as governor-general.—Daily Star, Montreal. CONFLICTING ORDERS GAVE TWO TRAINS THE RIGHT OF WAY Coroner’s Inquest on the Wreck of July 4 at Middietown, Ohio. Hamiiton, Ohio, July 12.—That con- remarked the dentist. “I One day when he Vvellow mongrel, about the size of a < hayrick, jumped on him in a shameful | ficting orders glving two trains the manner. © The owner of the mongrel |Fight of way Over the came track at scemed to think ‘it a great joke, and t made so-mad that 1 wrote to a i fdiend reared fighting bulidogs, the same time caused the wreck of July 4 at Middletown was admitted at the coromer’s inquest by Albert | J. Smith, train despatcher for the Cin- Denver, who and asked of mine in him to ship me a killer by express. In | cinnati, Hamilton and Dayton railway a few days the dog came——" S asion: “What's the use of finishing that| After trainmen and operators had story 2" amith. e yarn as you ing dog came, and the mongrel camped on its frame and chewed its ears off until the po- lice interfered. gives me a convex pain, and so does story about the game rooster. there’s one thing sure in world it is the fact that blood will tell. The mongrel could stand up and scrap like a gen- tleman with a trained fighting dog. It be that some mouth Rock licked a game rooste some period of the world's history, you may the game bird had the rheumatism or some other disabling disease. milk wagon may around a but, if so, in_cold storage. ‘Sugh yarns remind me of the back aistrict the sporty “Go into any crossroads village at this season of the vear and you will find basceball team, and ail the village o m a sports are ready whip any professional team out'of its “Ie nay’ beots. called. off and drops into Punkville and plays oughbred as the rube ball player has zainst i ws. interrupted the sporty black- “You're making up that blam- o along. That fight- you were going to say, told Coroner Burnett of the orders they received that day and the cor- oner had declared his belief that Smith was to blame for the 21 deaths, the latter took the stand. Ve were rushed with trains that day,” Smith said. “I sent the Biz Jr passenger train on from Dayton to Cincinnati. Then, after they start- ed, T figured T could save time In get— ting the freight to Dayton; so I tried to send an order to Carlisle to have the Big Four stop at Poast Town and |let the freight pass. “When I reached Carlisle by wire T learned that the passenger train had passed there, going like wildfire. Then’ to pre vent trouble, I sent word to Middletown to ‘bust” the order allow- ing the freight to proceed to Dayton. “If the freight had been on the sid- ing at Middletown when they recejved this order, the wreck would not have occurre Such a varn as that this dog never lived that old scrub Ply- at but bet your green umbrella’ that inflammatory. A scrub horse hitched to a have trotted rings track-trained blooded nag, the latter had left its legs The. Trade of the Islands. Trade of the Phillppines improves, and It ought to. With the arrange ments which we have made to favor the islands they should gain consid- erably. After a temporary lull, they | seem tobe on the mend. A recent re- port of the bureau of insular affairs tells us that, “Last year the imports amounted to 331,084,319, as compared with $29,186,120 in 1908, and the value baseball continued blacksmith with warmth. to bet that it can Now and then this bluff s A professional team has a day her's funmeral. Several of the |ihe local orphans and runs up a score | :‘es!g;v‘;::rt hnp;{‘.naa to be present at | of about 850 to 0. And the village | Of exports was $34.924,337, as compared the time and they urged me to turn |sports can’t afford to shave for the | With $32.601,072. The United Kingdom loose my old sidewinder of a game |mnext five years, for they've all gone!s the only country showing a decrease rooster. and I did so. Well, even now | broke betting on their Willic boys. A |in trade with the Philippines. The in- it humiliates me to recall what fol- scrub animal of any kind has just | grease -“r‘n«:u":-‘lm;‘qu";:"(;“ ‘g; !;h;d lowed. That ‘maverickk _rooster just about as much chanmce against a thor- | Si8ics amounied to 1,33 490, and the $4.275,758. One part of this report is of speeial interest to American cotton manufacturess, whe are still far be- hind in respeet to trade with the a professional{’ FARMER SEEKS FOURTH WIFE. Well-to-Do Delaware Man Starts for | California—Visits 200 Women. Seaford, Del. July 12.—James H. Furbush, a wealthy farmer of Wet- piquin, Md., whe is secking a fourth wife, started yesterday for California He says he will return a married man Although he has hed many unpleasa expariences in the matrimonial line, Furbush, who is 60 years old, said he | was not’ discouraged. He has for two vears been seeking @ fourth partner in Tite. Accompanied by two daughters and a ‘son, Furbush has called on more than {we hundred women in ail parts of the country. Despits this he has not made a selection. He is worth over $50.900 and says if he can find an affinity anywhere between 18 and 4% vears old he will present her with $5,000 on the wedding day and support her in Seaford in luxury. PARENTS SMOTHER 9 BA Coroner Sesks Law Making It Crime te | Take Infant to Bed. July 12—The faet that ninety babies bave been found dead in bed during the last year in | Des Moines induced Coroner Iver G Newlen to seck a law making it a crime for parents to sleep in bed with an infant child under two years of age. Vewlen points to the fact that one baby a day has died in Des Moines during the lawt year, and it is to re- duce this mortality that he advocates 2 new law. “I am satisfled that of the babies found dead in bed with their paren a large percentage were smother: Des Monies. Ia., GIRL RIDES BEAM 12 STORIES. Cashier Wins $25 by Taking Up Doc- tor on Dare. Des Moines, Ta., July 12—On a dare, Miss Pila Jellizon, aged 15, cashier in Higgins' pharmacy, rode to the top of the Equitable building, twelve stories high, en a steel beam drawn up by a derriek. Not content with this feat, she re- turned to the ground in the chains which had hoisted the beam. Miss Jellison atteMmpted the feat as | a Tesult of a banter by Dr. Oliver E. Lynch, who offered her $25 if she ‘would attempt the flight. | Canada’s Gratification. The announcement that the Duks of Connaught will come to Canada axs With clean, warm Lenox Soap, any woman can do good work. But she can de better work—and do it easier—if she uses Lenox Soap Solution. This is the way to of Lenox Scap, cut it into small pieces, dissolve these in three quarts of boiling water. Keep water at boiling, point until a solution is formed. Wet the clathes, rub sciled parts, feld and rately, pack in a tub, water and let stand over night. Next morning, youwfllfihdflnlthruflyhrd part of the clothes up and down ot half as hard as usual. water and a cake of make it: Take a cake solution on the Qfih‘ piece sepa- cover with warm soapy governor-general is one whose interest and importance to the people of this |33 443814 was credited fo the United | country can hardly be over-estimated. | Kingdom and only $792,719 to the ¢ ¢ * A havpier or a more flatter- | United States” Here is where we ing_tribute ipaid the growing importance of the Philippines. Imports of cotton goods in 1909 amounted to $7.664.276, of which could soarcely have been | should take the trade away from every other nation, and # we work the busi- Tires Michelin was the first to manufacture pneumatic automobile tires and mow produces more than 50% of all the tires made in the world. In Stock by F.E « £ L PATTISON Norwich, Connzciicul | | | ! SCHWARTZ BROS. 9-11 Water St. ness as we ought to, we can do it.— t& impression Bridgaport Standard. German Misgivings About Persia. from the press, vhkh almost daily hat " R Englisn nl from the country of the that Russia and Great Britan are .m: waiting for? Is The Persian cake probably will soon |1t Germany’s Wfl“‘l lon? — Tagl e <ome to be divided. At least, one gains [ Rundschau, Berlin. aker. He wi WATERPROOF Makes leathers last longer. Gives quick, brilliant result. Handy and clean to use. ‘THE F. F. DALLEY CO. Limited Buffale, N. Y. Suds-Maker Free You simply turn the faucet and the S ?fl. e f ek your chance to learn about can install in your kilehen. A, J. WRBLEY, 12 fl'ry $t, Norwich, Conn. Furniture andCarpets Better Bargains now than ever before. Our store is loaded to the roof with the latest patterns and It is a good time now designs. to buy. A lot of ‘300 Rugs in odd sizes and different grades must be sold at ence. We therefore have made a reduction In price SCHWARTZ BROS., 9-11 Water St. JULY CLEARANCE SALE of these goods-of 25%. SCHWARTZ BRO! COME AND SEE Us 9-11 Don't perspire. e “~ Let This Weather “Pers-Persuade” You to Drink Persuade yourself it isn’t necessary. Just drink as much as you can of GOLDEN ORANGEADE and keep cool—all day long. It has nothing in it but the tonic properties of the pure, ripe fruit. That’s why it is so good for you—always—any time. C- At Any Socda Fountain Where They Aim to Please wp \he and ends of soup. ‘ay kiud of soap. below and ask to see the home to try. Use it ten d.y.—«h-if mmnkynunwn,mh,firmmd Golltod today. 3 IS J0jEM L1-G 'SOUE Z AUDITORIUM SUMMER SCHEDULE TODAY 4000 ft. of Independent film MR. WARREN SMITH in Illustrated Songs. s 3 Shows—2.30, 7.30, 8.46. Admission, 10¢, Pietures changed Mon., Wed., Fri, BREED THEATER, l;hax ! Iully, Lessoe. [Innlasl Spot in Town ture Picture “The Mllesty of the Law” Superb Vitagraph Feature. MR. FRANK PLOUF, Boston's Favorite Baritone in trated Songs Ladies and Children, Tius- Matine Jy4d [ mMusic. NELLIE 8. HOWIE, Temeher of Plane. Room 42, Central Bullding. _— CAROLINE H, THOMPSON Teacher of Music 46 Washington Street. N hatse 60 Lessons given at my the hom. Qupll, Same methol used at Schawenka Censervatory, Ber i, oct11d Tl'. C. GEER 122 Prospect 8., Tel. B11. Norwich, Ow A. W. JARVIS IS THE LEADING TUNMER IN EASTERN CONNECTICUT. ‘Fhone 5185, 15 Clalrmouns Ava septaza med Beers al these Special Prices India Whart Steamed Beer, 50c dox en Narragansett Steamed Beer, 16c dezen Behlitz Milwaukes Steamed Beer, 1 $1.00 dozen. | JACOB STEIN, Telephone 26-3. 93 W. M se. 17 UNDREDS of youmg men and wemen have obtalned the foundation ~— the basle principles of success by o cours: of instruction In our sshosl. Wa can help you if yeu witl to & mere sucosssful Write today — new — for nformation. All Commereial NEW. LONDON usiness (ollege RABrubeck, frmm. Mew. o ot us career. fun Branches. Summer Toys PAILS and SHOVELS, SAND BAIL and MECHANICAL BOATS. TOYS JBASEBALLS, GLOVES, MITTS, LUNCH BASKWTS, JAPANESE PARASOLS, WANS, B7C, l|lll EDWIN FAY, Fronklin Squase Individuality Is What Connts In Photography. Bringing out ihe real :hl :uinl:olflll in Bhl ra Toved down By .fim‘*‘ an artist int ot 4. Net & thing of pa astebwnrd with ® ready-made leok. If you want & pbete of your real welf, or what yeur friends see to leve admire, ¢all om LAIGHTON The Photographer, eppesite augis Norwich BSavings Seolety, BUTTER THINS Three 10c packages for 26 cents TAKHOMA BISCUHT Six 5¢c packages far 25 cents at CARDWELL'S age, Shnmpesing ned Mamlyaring. Orders 1 teken for combings.

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