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orwich Bulletin nnd @oufied. SR 114 YEARS OLD. W a year. sered af the Pestoffiee at Nerwich, Ceomn., as d-class matter. Telephone Calls: Builetin Business oo, 450, Builetin orial 38-3. in Job Office, 25-6. mm- ©ffice, Roem 2 BMurray Peuilemg. Telephene 210. = w The Circalation of The BuHetin. The Bulictin hos the Jargest eir culation of amy paper In Bastera Cenmectiout, and frem three to four times larger thsa that of msy Ia Naorwich. It is delivered o over 5,800 of the 4,853 heuses in Nor- wich, and read by nimcty-ihree per cent. of the people. In Windham it is delivéred to over 900 houses, in Putasm and Daniéleon to over 1,108, tm all of these places It - a the local daity. Hestorn Commeesient has forty- mime 1 ome headred ave @imtrices, ome free delivers routes. The Buwiletin is sold M every town amd onm all of the R. F. . routes In Easterm Cennecticut. CIRCULATION average 1901, 1905, average Whaek ending July 23, A GREAT ASSET. The summer atiractiveness of New H: ifrom its stwrt coast line and Asiand greup of Sheals to the 1o s ped the White moun- téins, is ome of its great assets—Its most pi e es, and Gevernor Qutmby ostimates E;bnt the summer tourists jeft fn fhat state last year $14,000,609. I+ is mere than likely that Maine and Massachusetts realize as much eack or more than thi while Verment, Rhode Island and Connecti- cut doubtjess realize less. Tt weuld e safe to assume upen this estimate fhat the summer toursts drop in New England more than $59,000,000 2 season. and there is no reason why the bnsiness should not be {ncreased. Vermont thimks there is no place on earth ere summer toufists get as £00d retughs in the way of pure wa- ter beautif:l scemery, salubrious cli- mate and gwed food as they do in the Green mountain resorts. Cennecticut had a long coast line and fameus resorts by the Sound and also in the Interier, and its summer business should grow because it can furnish pure air, pure feod, beautiful scemery, and agreeaBle entertainers. THE MEN BEHIND THE GUNS. 1t eannot be conceeled that the creat guns are machihes which are perilous to those who eperate them. The re- cent aceldont at Fortress Monroe when ten or more men were blown out of stemce, calls to mind that there have been elght of these acqidents in eight successive years, by wMich eighty of those manning the high powered zuns were killed and all ip a similar man- ner. By the explosfon on board the battleship Missouri in April, 1904, thir- ty-three mem met death in the same instant. In considering this series of fatali- tiss the Toledo Blade is prompted to say that “there must be a fundamental defect either in the weapon or the practices in vogue if an explosion oc- curs or is egpected to oceur, once in every twelvemonth. The navy par- ticularly has been striving for speed records, attempting to place so man: shots In as few minutes as possible. Whatever else the autherities declare, the accidemts point absolutely to the fact that chances are taken against back-fire, ignition from burning can- vas er sparks of explasives in the guns, parte fadltfly adjusted, and the excite- ment of gun crews spurred on by T valry and promises of reward. Ident cal conditions prevail in the coast de- fences, though they have not so long 2 death list upon their records.” WHAT IS THE PRINCIPLE? The letters of committal to the in- quiry made of prospeettve candidates if they would support the public utili- ties bill of the Connecticut Business Men's asseciation have been evasive upon the specific measure while per- fectly satisfactory as to a committs to the principle which is invelved. Norwich Bulletin But what is the principle Bulletin understands it? The commission originally ap- poirfed to investigate and report pre- sented am able and careful considera- tion of the problem, including much valuable evidence. It added a carefuljy drawn bill. The commission bill and that recently presented by the State Business Men's association, and to a large degres the Whiton-Chandler bill, all agree in principle that there should be a commission clothed with power t> prevent the issue of charters ex- cept for value invested, to examine fully into the financial cendition of blic corporations, and to compel the @adequate performanee of the public service for which the corporations re- ceive thelr large privileges. There was also during the last ses- sion the so-called Barnum bill. The principle of that was to give the com- mission very little power. It was fairly deseribed when it appeared as a Bill to protect the corporations against the public. There has been a great deal of idle and futile talk about approving the principle of a public utilities bill. It means nothing unless the principle is described and it can lead to nothing but confusion. Power to compel the corporations to de what the law con- templates is the vital thing In any public utilities bill worth having. That is the test question to which all the rest comes back. Is that the kind The Bulletin means? Is it the kind the caydidates mean? Is it the kind he average loeal politician means? - Iy is the kind of hill that nber of Connecticut cit- + mean when they ask for a public utilities act.—Hartford Times as The The Times appears to set forth the principles of a public utility bill very well indeed—they include stricter sur- velllancs of corporate methods, re- striotiens which will protect the cit- izens from being fleeced and provis- ions which wili give assurasce of mere mands frop the public. The press of Connecticut believes in a practical measure and its enforcement, but what will the next legislature stand for?! Vested interests will try to have the bill framed to suit them and a compro- mise measure is very likely to result. A PERPENDICULAR ISSUE. The regular republicans in the west do not shrink from having joint de- hates with the insurgents for the en- lightenment of their constituents and the better defense of themselves and their party. The republican slogan is: “Taft, the tariff and regular repub- licanisgn!” and the claim is truly made that President Taft needs no defense or apology any more than any con- gressman's record does who is squarely in line with the administration. To be a Taft man means to be an adherent and supporter of the head of the party in the nation in all the meas- ures and policies which make for the fulfiliment of the party pledges, for the best interests of the people and for the preservation of the best tra- citions of the party in'line with its past history. To be a tariff man does individual schedule that may inci- dentally benefit some persons at the expense of others, but it does mean indorsement of a tariff measure which comes as mear reconciling un- avoidable differences of interest and minimizing inequalities and injus- tices as any tariff measure that has been enacted in many yvears or which will ever be enacted unmtil scientific tariff-making takes the place of present methods. The men who stand for Taft, protec- tion of American industries and straight republicanism have no expla- nations to make, for they acted with the majority governed by the princi- ples of the party. It is for those who are in the weak minority to tell why the tail of a dog should be of more aceount than the dog itself. THE COST OF TAN. Tan is fashionable. The pretty sun- burned maid is the popular girl of the period. The cost of the tan is all that makes it stylish or enviable. It is admitted that people without means can have a beautiful sunburned com- plexion; but the tan of the backyard is not the tan of the White moun- tains, although the two are not distin- guishable by any sign of degeneracy in the one, or of superiority in the | other. It is not polite to inquire, | “Where did you get vour wealth?” but it is eminently proper that one should ask, “Where did you get that beauti- ful complexfon?" And if it was got upon a ranch in the west, or at New- port, or Lenox, or Saratoga, or upon a yachting trip it is the real thing, but if it was just obtained upon an open- air walk at home or on a trolley car or an everyday picnic in nearby woods it is just ordinary, old-fashioned, home made tan not worth speaking aoout. There are tans that cost mere than a sealskin sacque and this shows that tans really range from velvets to cal- icoes and are valued accordingl, automobile tan is one of the most povular just now and the question is not asked “Who owned the automobiie? {for all automobile tan is on a par al- though it varies mueh in cost. All the out-of-door workers have a beau ul sun-browned complexion, but it is only calico. To be right in style one should be particular how they were brgwned and where and it rather adds to the | value of the tan if the wearer was | just “blistered a little in getting it. EDITORIAL NOTES. The man-bird has not ventured to compare himself to the eagle yet, | Saamtiirire o s T Foraker is popular in Ohio, but the Ination at large has almost forgotten ;him, the ta When Taft is on one ever thinks of mollycoddle! golf links no ing him for a ppen and his did not realize that th way to prison. tenographer were on the The Ohio delegates ters and now allwill be we were standpa if the voters stand pat A million immigrants do not look so tremendous upon paper, but in a pa- rade it is different The :ummer vacation that has to be paid for after it is over can never be a pleasant memor: The bride who cov n-law's mouth with paper was a li z ered her mother- a strip of fly- herself, July cannot come b and ‘anyone That's to alt diat. savings bank. ice the system that city. man who the st t and the man who invented hammock may be memorial monuments, is he avented The necticut annu this state. The box a tip how every m Mrs. Herbert Wa rtk of Wash- ington rode miles on horseback ir 24 hours. She c for commissioned offic tq Casco ba; edach other Tue land regards th A Massac ige rules that ice men ate oblised to sell five-cent pieces at the cart, the buyer to take the ice from place of purchase to his home. This is what was added. to a recipe for an invalid: “The addition of fried prunes will make a mixture fit to con- crete a chicken coop with—the hens will not eat The Williamsport. F board of trade bunches up the compliments of the press and prints them in tive form.” Mhey ognize tha is @ splendid w boom the The Better Way. I Mr. Pinchot is going to devote his energies to factional politics his us. fulness as a protagoni of the con- servation pplicy is sure to suffer. He would be better engaged in helping a cause for which his sepcial qualific tions desigeate him as a leader.—N. X.. Worle to speedy responses to reasonable de- not mean a slavish espousal of every | The ! ¢. can see that it is a wise provision of nature to giv ol one chance. Happy thought for toda: the excuse se adeqt tain lecture is temperec The man who has to his own | zenerally declines to Fletc He doesn’t care to chew - them shington is to have the first pos- a | There are men and women who can alk without ceasing and they get the iredit of being fluent in the use Of language, aithough they never make a peoint and do not seem to say anything. ‘A musical flow of high sounding werds seldomn has any sense in it, and al- though agreeable enough for a while it will finally bore one. The art of talk- ing long “withdut saying snything in particular is in_society called being agreeable. Thi: is on2 of the few dis- agreeable performances in life which usually wears a fake label with the approval of a select few. Some people really become authors of some repute by writing in the same empty) style. The thinking man is really afraid to say what he thinks, and in the use of sentiments he doesn’t think, and sweet little nothings he keeps the good Will of those he acdresses or associates with. The werld doesn’t care much about what you think—in important things just wants man torconform and he does—it saves friction. (Written for The Bulletin.) ur mistake is,” continued Lady Greatheart, “that too often we seek truth because we greatly desire some- thing else. We hunger for loaves and fishes. We rebel against untoward conditions. Perhaps everything seems to have gone wrong. The high hopes of youth have faded to nothing. We have tried and failed. Now, at last, we are sick, heartsick, and dishearten- At this moment, a friend tells w of little helps that have helped others; gleams of truth, which, in following, have lifted them higher, and made all life brighter. ‘Ah’ we say to our- selves, ‘what helps others ought to help me. I, too. will follow the gleam.’ We forget that he who seeks truth must seek it for truth’s own sake; that he must keep the single eve: that truth, the peerless is a distant star that opens its heart only to him who loves it.” 3 “For my own part,” she went on, “I think it matters nothing from what motive one turns to truth. The point is that one should turn and should seek—even though it be at first merely for the loaves and fishe: \ “How can we help it?” I objected. ‘Here we are in this workaday world, witp the strugsle for existence cruelly keen, and the margin of happiness los- ingly narrow. How can we help de- siring what are called the good things of this life? Are they not what all the world is seeking ?” No,” answered Lady Greatheart. The human face is an interesting study to many well informed and thoughtful people, and it never ceases excit> their wonder for it is only ionally that a face is seen that reminds on: of a relative, friend, or neighbor. It may, perhaps, be truth- i fail 16 two faces in this worl ike. Faces have stories to tell, the stéries are not always pleasant to the person who has the power to interpret them. But the e B N YRR 1 | 1 FEOM THE WING orr “And forget,” she Interrupted. | W‘fimr I asked. 2 ink ni;;'tku‘:le." she mr:mlndad r&e,. gently.. “The hungry, naked. stranger, the sick and e I_demurred. “There you go in,” “You will never let it alone. It was the hottest day of July. All nature was breathless. The song birds had hidden themselves within the thickest clusters of leayes. Even the meadow grasses were silent; even the meadow brook was wasting away. As for us, we were taking a vacation from work, not by seashore nor mountaif, but ‘in our own .home, clad in the lightest of linen, curled into the coolest corner of the vine-hung piazza, lux- uriously indolent and idle. “All preaching places are closed in summer,” T suggested, wickedly. Then. as Lady Greatheart smiled, “Go on,” T begged as she knew I would. “Truth is approached,” she began, “only by paradox. What we reach out for ~seems unattainable. What we seize and hug te our hearts, eludes us. That which we love and clutch at, is never really ours. You see this rule of inversion running through every- thing. What we strive and struggle for we miss of mostly or else it turns to dust and ashes In our hands. The friends we cling to, tire of us and turn away. On the other hand, what we value least is always at our service. All that we are indifferent to. | heaped about us in plenty. The com- ‘These are only what they think they are seeking. The world feels a great need, and tries to satisfy it in all sorts of ways. The world is famished, and naked, and ashamed. Yet to seek truth that we may be housed and fed ana clothed, is not seeking truth. These things are not ends in themsel- ves; they are added as we learn to live in obedience to the laws of right thinking, right doing, and right liv- ing.” “You preachers make life a terribly high thing to live up to” I sighed. “Why cannot we all ‘take things easy, and just live along prosperously, with- ; face te 1 St whatever it n'l‘ay be, is a b 2 the one that | is’ mute. Pethaps yow have never { | i i | thought of dividing faces into those tal those that smile and ther. Bacon wrote: ompany, and faces of pictures.” He had a gallery of lifelike be company and reveai to men of the twentieth The faces which are inex- P , which look like a blank book io be written upon, and there are a few such, are never interesting. that those A crow are but not conce pict ™ character century he if the day might come It looks as ~vhen man in jail will be envied |out 50 much serious thinkin because of his security. With auto- Tost people do ‘take things easy, n_obile: ne along the roads at|smiled Lady Greatheart. “For one who thinks out his problems. there is the, multitude who ‘just live along,’ as you say. prosperously—or wretchedly. You are picturing the world as it i “While you and your sort” I cried, “are preaching about what it ought to be, and forever giving it what it does want. fere preaching does “The less we have of it, miles an hour and aero- planes rushing across the sky at the rate of a mile a minute—with perils multiplying above and below, it seems & if the era hac dawned when the man of greatest security in life will be the man who is iocked up. It seems as it the peace of the world being disturbed in a new way might have its peace in little good.” | this new era less disturbed by war. |she assented. | Man’s ambition leads him to desire | the better. It is the doing right and the power of flight and speed of a bird | the being kind, that is helpful. = There and he may get The conder can|was One who had compassion on the seize upon and carry up a horse to a | multitude. Perhaps this s what the secluded place ed upon and he|world most needs—compassion. Tt is can soar ove ghest mountains, | safe to be sorry for everybody. Every but the aeropl 1l has less lfting | heart conceals its own burden. You power than the conder and scientists say that it is doubtful if it can ever in the upper rarified air carry itself over the highest mountains of earth, { to sav nothing of taking freight or pas- | sengers. know, if we were sorry for evervbody, we should love and shield them; never censure or condemn.” “If we were never to gossip about our neighbors” I put in, flippantly, “nor slander them a bit, Crampton would have to o out of commission.” My lady laughed. “Evidently you not in a serious mood today,” she Those who hold in esteem beauty and 1d it of late in the mov- of the sunsets. There |g Shail we talk about something sets of more brilliancy and | cige? i efl s somewhere on “Oh,” T exc is such a one can not imagine how. but beautiful world is it not good they can excel the silver and golden ienough as it is? Why must you and and mauve, the vellow and gray and!] pe always trying to think out a way purple combinations of our western |[to make t s better? Why can we horizon. How se colors shift from |not be comfy and happy—.” lightest pink to the most brilliant crim- panionship we are sure we could enjoy is not for us; yet ours is for those who desire and can enjoy it. Even the deepest and truest and tenderest love finds its reward, net so much in the love it wins in return, as in its own increased capacity for loving. 1 have heard it said that we are attracted by those that can help us, and attract those whom we can help. When we g0 to others, it is because we feel the need of a heart-lift: when others come to us, it is because they need some- thing that we have to give. In the degree that we voluntarily visit our friends, or they visii us, is the meas- ure of our giving and receiving. Only the rare few are they who can stay at home in thefr own hearts, and be at rest.” Yet we are here to give and take,” I offered. “The eternal paradox holids true,” she went on. “What we seek, we losé: what we surrender, for truth's sake, we find again. If men and women could learn this, ours would be a hap- pler world. All about us, we see our fellow men losing what they care for most, merely because of clutching at it and holding it too fast. We do not know how to give up. We are too eager, too importunate. We are jeal- ously self-seeking, where we need to be selflessly indifferent. We devour the loaves and fishes, and struggle to obtain more that we may continue to devour, when, all the while we might be kneeling to kiss the hem of truth’s zm"‘menz in gratitude for wisdom and light. ‘From the personal to the universal,” I intervened. “From the self to the supreme. Is this a. law of life?” “This is a gleam from the sunlit wing of truth,” answered Lady Great- heart. “You and I have set out to follow the gleam. As we seek truth for truth’'s sake only, we shall find the life that was in the lost dreams of vouth; the life, and the love. and the joy. THE RECLUSE. son, from softest yellow to the most radiant, from fleecy gray to the densest as the clouds in the magic wind cur rents change their forms in their voy- ge from somewhere to nowhere in the sky above us, or fade from sight like lot of wraiths. The beauty of the sunsets seems to foreshadow the glory the homeland where human souls find peace and abide in love. and I die!” and they do. I have hoed around them and humored them until |1 have had my reward. I am pulling | them up and throwing them away now | to stop their final seed-throwing act. | Their sculptured seed pods on | stems are drying and getting ready to | co-operate with the wind in perpetuat- { ing themselves. They will turn brown {and get more and more rigid and then I hardly ever see a new hird in the | right beneath the sculptured cover of rden from Jan to January, but|the cup will be found a half-dozen lit- they all seem like old friends visiting | tle windows and the late July and 'd relatives. The fly catchers on the | August winds will shake up the tiny iahlia stakes have come and gone for seeds in the box—little wind draughts s now, but they know the rush through the windows and ne | ne: | hour and the place to intercept the | seeds will be swept 50 or 100 feet | small insects coursing through the air|away to take the fortunes of life un- | in search of food and rest and happi- p April's rains and sun, 1911, when it rsels to them, and in plagues to men—express— in the drama of life as will put its tiny feet in the sofl and proceed to climb to the point where it gaily waves its flowers, sweet al v heir part Ay ing | | faithrully we demonstrate our part, | and governed by the law of their be- | A 20th century definition of ah ego- | ing, which, like the law of our being, | tist is: “The man who has an Impar- is divine. pon life from the | tial opinion of himself.” In other | least to the greates 1life of which | words, the person who thinks he has man is the most intelligent expression | no conceit is very likely to have most of it. The fact is, conceit is not a glaring fault unless it is made so. I- am-ness appears to be necessary for success in-life; but the character of the I-am-ness tells for or against a person. It has been well said that romises to be to hi > goldfinch visits the centaurt | amily when the seeds are ripe and the | sunflower later, when its seeds are | and sweét, just as if it remem- 1'the hour, and it ap- nd alwa t, \ 15 much pleasure in seed | the person who feels stuck up has as- i the boys do in nutting; | sumed an attitude to be pulled down. |4 one after another, the birds | Conceit without sense increases bump- | come for a purg ind to time as | tiousndss and bumptiousness is not an regularly as if they carried a time- | attractive personal quality. Tempered | piece. with good judgment, conceit tells for succes: nd self-respect. I-can is born of conceit and it is a healthy and help- ful adopted child for any of us to I have always thought of the mullein as a solitary plant because I have sel- : . coddle, for he cannot be spoiled. Keep | Gom Scen It srowing together in com- | qonceit upder strict discipline and it munit where the soil is right, | Ly e a good child—it will not mis- N epPpears to like a coarse. gravelly, | popave or say discreditable things in weli-dr soil. it grows in patches | PEDAYE that its main flower stalk 32 up lateral Tlower Stalks | @ — S et ons” wivmg s ) SUNDAY MORNING TALK | candelabra e Tect looking like the picturés of some of the desert cac- |'ti which il rated in scienti- | e L | fic works re or two in one NOT NEEDED. | patch give majestic appear- Ssiven ance which 1 imagined they | «1fe doesn't scem to need me.” This ! e mullein, like the lias the rather pathetic way in which | 1e wild geranium be man_ referred to another person ng flowers and nods | whom he admired and with whom he i goes down. The | wag closely associated, but to whose | prettiest in little | yappiness he knew that he was not | f-dozen or more |yjnself essential. *Moreover,” he con- ound swaying 3o} “he is onme of those men who seen, it does not ap- sehs oF Ahe lone meid em '.9 really need any of the eye of the day.” !l know the type. Certain per- sons seem to move through life as if _ The other day a ought me 2 | they lived in a different realm from hinx ation—an old | common. mortals. They * are refined, ron of Cra- |courteous, good tempered, high minded. which he | Often they are persons of large ca- ansy. and ties and of tested character. They on's | to subsist on books or music or ep and s, or business, or travel, or matehing | possibly’ on one or two persons to "hich are con- | whom. and to whom alone the gates plant; and two | of their hearts are unbarred. und Myron in i —_— 8 q jyron has 2| without assuming the judicial func- And e recognizes | 4oy we may say that as a rule some- bis plumage. | thing is not quite right with the man he may lose him- | wpo does not need other persons and € in assuranc hid from Aabide in assurance, h ' |a considerable number of them, who Bather nectas from the paiTON MAY | s willing to receive the admiration of | may be instrumental in Bybadidng | the crowd, but who will never take a BMee and SivE R S T | single man among them even into the | stripes and blotehes of beate: Moy |ante-chambers of his heart. “Such a | Myron lays her egks orf the grapevine | {hiNg as a_one-sided friendship is al- | teaves, ana h Lonf the Erapevine | most impossible. Your friend may be [on Gie cAndaj extrex e way have ten & fts to your one, but and they are ugly lobine Bohaedds: | unless there Is some little need of his g 2 g 5 ", Birhabs Lo life which you and you alone can sup- you are at best only a fawning site on him, tolerated rather than 1y tued. nths in the y a fasters - hea v v ENA 1 pEtinos gt o prove this we have only to' cite mon fiv makes their live bodjes | one of the classic examples of friend- bode of itx young. who feed upon | Hib, that between Jesus of Nazareth them and enmerg by the hundred jnd his followers. If anyone could { while they stiil live | have ‘Qispensed with the ordinary val- | ues of triendship. If anyone could have | regard the popoies my humored ; completed his life apart from men, through the rare communion which h petls—among the dahlias I have grown between 800 and 960 this season, | had with his Father in Heaven, it was { measuring iches in diameter, and | He. But he invited his -disciples into { the plants starting from a micrescapic | the sacred places of his own experi- ence, not simply because of what he could do for them, but because of what they could do ror,:fl-mi And there were oceasions when his longing for what they had to ofier became intensely seed become three and four feet high and bear from seven to fourteen flow- ers each. Everg plant. is really a pret- ty boutuet. Th¥se beaugiful pldnts say to those who know them, “Touch me Stiff | acute, as when in the Garden of Geth- semnare he sorrowfully asked the sleeping three, “what, could ye not watch one hour with me?” A one-sided friendship, then .is a contradiction in terms, for a mutual need is the cornerstone in the temple of friendship, and all through life we get our deepest satisfaction through | being able to supply some need in the social order. Is there anything harder than not to be needed in the home? When you have ministered so gladly month “after month, year after year to a beloved one racked by disease, or | prostrated by the infirmities of age, and death comes at last, do you look upon as unfeeling ousiders may, who say, “what a happy release from con- fining toil?” Ah, no, you sorrow be- cause your own hands are now idle and nobody seems to be left who needs vou, now grandmother or mother is zone. Is there anything harder than not to be wanted in the business world, to have the foreman or employer come along at the end of the week and say, OTHING quite so good as Clicquot Club with your lunch or dinner. Qeopss, Qo (Pronounced Kleek'O Cilub) Ginger Ale It wins favor because it is inimitable. That biting, burning sensation, common to ordinary ginger ales, never comes after drinking Clic- quot Club. The pure, fresh Jamaica ginger is satisfying and grateful to the taste, and this with fine confectioner’s sugar and a touch of fruit oil flavoring combined with pure carbonated Clicquot Spring water is all Clicquot Club contains. It is as good as it’s refreshing and as re- freshing as it’s good. Other CLICQUOT beverages ch Beer Root Beer o Lemon Soda R we er lives, big or lit— to the commnnity. ey boay, “or any any! or create a need for " the kind of people rich has too many. THE PARSON. be ourselves of which » ® i ! | 1 STRONG INDIAN DRAMA. Matinee, Ladies and Children, yolest Spot in Town Feature Picture, “THE LONG TRAIL,” MISS HEBEN HAMPTON, Soprane, im Selected Songw. Be Jvad SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE GENUTNE must bear signature “ and women have obtalned the foundation — the basle principles of success by o course of instruction In our school. We can help you if you will let us to a more successful career. Write today — now — for full information. All Commercial Branches. THENEW LONDON Business (olle, e RABrubeck, fmm. New Londor. SPEGIAL ! For the next seven days we will sell our stock of Refrigerators Go-Carts Porch Rockers at prices regardless of cost. UNDREDS of young men . 62-66 Main Street. dy2a Note the Difference L between a “tired out” euit that is shapeless and badraggled, same suit after it has our hands and received the new look which we impart to it. Shapeliness and neatness take the place of the ‘musssd” looking clothes they were when they came to us, and the change and the ed through Blood Orange Sold by the Best Grocers The Clicquot Club Co. J. C. WORTH & CO., WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS, is not only effected quickly but eco- nomically. Lang’s Dye Works, Telephone. 157 Franktin SI. sy19d Neidlinger Voice School Singers, Pablic Speakers or Children with Delayed Speech S There will be Thr s welghts, made kn or in Unlon Suits, The Haiter, popular. The 20th Annual Meeling OF THE Gentlemen’s Driving Club A WILL BE HELD SATURDAY AFTERNOON, July 30, 1910 at 2 p. m. Sharp. Classes, viz.: 2.20, "frot or Pace. .Purse $104 2.25, "frot or Pace ..Purse § 75 3.00, Phace or Trot. .Purse § 50 Firsti Horse Racing of the season An affernoon of good, clean spert Admission 25c. Rapes start at 2 p, m. sharp National Rules to govern. Jy27d ) Music. NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teacher of Plane, Central Bullding. % Roomd e, CAROLINE H. THOMPSON Teacher of Musiec 46 Washington Strest & 5. BALCOM, tTeacher of Fiame 29 mes Bt Lessons: given at my resldence or at home_of ti pil. Same method as [ U hed at Behawenka Coneervatory, Ber- oot1ld F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect 8t . 611, Norwisl, Ce 4 . A. W. JARVIS (18 THE LEADING TUNER IN EASTERN CONNECTICUT. hone 518-5, sept22a 15 Clairmount Ava OUR Negligee Shirt IS NOW COMPLETE. The Hgndsomest showing of new fabrics and colorings we have ever at. tempted. Cool, perfect fitting and comfortable. SUMMER UNDERWEAR in all lengtk, full length McPHERSON’S, 101 Main St., City may28d At This Particular Time we are offering some special bargains which aredeservedly Such MONEY- AVING VALUE in House- Mystic, Conn., May, October. New | furnishings never was offered York and Orange, October, May. Special Summer courses. Write or 'phene for particulars, Address BEATRICE BARNUM, Sec'y, Neldlinger Voice School, (Phone 102) Mystic, Conn. I¥26TThS w th EXCELSIOR AUTO CYCLES New and Second-hand Machines can be seen at the Imperial Garag V. PENDLETON, JR. it Lamps, Gas Tanks, Speedometers ana supplies for sale, y20d th C. H. PERKINS, M. D., Oculist Room 26 Shannon Building. Office hours—10 to 12 a. m., 2 to 4 p. m, beforz to the people of Nor- ich and vicinity. % Price an all of our Refrigerators, Hammocks, Couches, Porch Chairs, Go-Carts, Etc., Etc., and now is the time to buy ese goods. Space does not pzrmit us to quote prices, but will pay you to come here, especially if you want to get ¢ bestvaluefor your money, SCHWARTZ BROS. 9-11 Water Street I¥21ThTus Jv2sd Telephone 968 b et it ———, FURS STORED FOR SUMMER Face and Scaly Mas- 1 Sk builal ange, Shampooing and Fl’lr:lkol'l’n str:ll'z,’yw.l’l!r!‘s l‘:n u’Lfi .Ilnn!fl! Manicuring. Orders ities for storing Furs have been in- d. Bring vours t& me and ha i them repaired. dyed and stored for the summer. M. BRUCKNER. Telephone 264-3. #priéTThS i Tel. 653 Have ;’;l Noticed the Increased Travel? taken for combings. . 8. UNDERWOOD, ns. T. 8. s ELMER R, PIERSON | audtoad oS5l 076 Rorout fid H D 1 metho ,"qull it JoU take-one ot our rlorse ealer ‘.::'2.'% .N "8R08. "File Avenue. Telephone 177-12. Iy2a : e ]