Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 6, 1910, Page 4

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=, ) t ! } Borwich Bulletin and Goufies. Mavor Gaynor, in his recent address to the police force uttered truths worthy of nation-wide approval when he spia 7 “A man is presumed to be innocent until proven gullty. Therefore his photograph must not go into the 114 YEARS OLD. PR R AR e e S e e Entered at Postoffice at Norwich, Conn., as second-class matter. Telephone Calls: Bulletin )b Office, 35-6. R, Tumacos 11D Nerwich, Saturday, Aug. 6 1910 The Circulation of The Bulletin. The Bulletin has the Iargest cir- eulation of any paper in Eastern Commecticut, and from three to four times larger tham that of asy ® 1a aclivered the 4,053 houses @ by minety-three per people. In Windham hese places it comsidered the local duily. Easters Commecticut bas forty- me towas, ome humdred and The Bulletin 1s =old in every and om all of the R. F. D. routes in Eastern Comnecticot. CIRCULATION ceee. 4z 5.920 NOT A SWELL. Theodore Roosevelt, Jr, is a young man of horse sense, and he would like 10 be immune from the attention which s his on account of his distmguished father He wants to be let alone and 1o attend to business quietl other Americans do. He said to a reporter on Tuesday of this week, first day of work in Sen Francisco: “I want to become a good citizen of California. I am working here the same as the rest of the men. I report for work at 530 in the morning and quit work at 5.30 p. m. The work is net mew to me, as I put in two years in the company’s factory in the east. I want to be known mereiy as a San Fransscan in the carpet business for @ uving.” That is good democracy and the very best kind of business talk; for. of course, everybody will want to buy a rug of young Rooseveit, who will not always be selling rugs. If there is anything in blood, he is an acquis tion in San Francisco and he is very likely to be heard of later in public tfe. He has taken a little cottage house and has gone to living like a truly modest, if aspiring, American citizen. A SQUARE DEAL. The government is opening a lot of frrigated farms to actual farmers on easy terms There is £0ing to be no competition. Five hundred farmers have been advertised for and they must have credentials to show that they are the real thing, when they will be alletted a farm. Any man who wants to take up practical farming and answers the advertisement may have the land free. The government now has about 5 farms awaiting settlement under the varlous irrigation projects In the northwest. These farms vary in size from 20 to S0 acres of irrigable land, depending upon lecation. In many sectfons a tract of grazing land has been Mmcluded in the farm unit, bring- ing the total up to 160 acres. There is no drawing or any element of chance in applying for one of these farms. It is only necessary to make a homestead entry at the land omce. “The farms are for bona fide home- seekers, who are cntitled tq make a homestead entry, the only charges be- ing the actwel cost of getting water to the land. Payment may be made in ten ammual instalments without inter- est. This is certainly a good opening for ambitious sons of the so! 2 =Ny Sncar Y WELCOME IF THEY BEHAVE. The Victoria Colonist, Canadian paper, savs: ‘‘Canadians have & right 1o expect that all persons who come within her borders to enjoy her boun- 1y in regard to land, her protection to life and property, her educational fa- <ilities and all the other advantages which lead so many to seek to make their homes here, will conform to'her traditions and ber policies. If they camnot do this they would be wise to Temain at home.” This is excellent advice for Ameri- can newspapers to give the Canadians and others who come to this land of the free and the home of the brave. Too many of those who come into this country do not want to obey our laws and respect our rights—Rutland (Vt.) a That is the talk. Men who ask all the blessings of a country and get them, and still continue to curse it, may safely be classed as undesirable citizens, or unwelcome guests. There s Do character much worse than that of the ingrate. Canada is ail right. Every country properly requires that Buests shall honor the rules of the house, or just tosses them out of the door. ' The man who seeks an asylum in any country should be ashamed to be other than true to it The irgents say that a down- ward lon of the tariff that pro- duces $140,000,000 more revenue than the old ome is not what they =tond for. They can bet the people would not stand for a revision that resuited in $140.000,000 less. Happy thought for today: It would e a good sign of advancement if the man who occasionally meets us on Franklin square and inquires, “Where can I zet a drlnk?" expected us to Jead the way 10 the oid caken Lucket. A colored Pittsburg minister tells his congregation that too much John- son has made the colored race go mad! 13 teo much Johnson on and in their hearts! trust sees business in put'inz a | on every cigar, lots of cif- aee the ‘& band ia the rogues’ gallery until he is convicted as a rogue. A man’s house is his cas- tle, therefore policemen have no more right to break into it than burglars have.” The ardent policeman not infre- quently exceeds the bounds of his au- thority and is really guilty of invad- ing the rights of peaceful citizens. Complaints of such license in many cities is of little, if any, avall, ahd it is refreshing to find a man in power who is not only inclined to curb police “freshness” but to so clearly define the duties of the one and the rights of the other that there is no mistak- ing the line of demarcation. This is a line which ought to be drawn often- | er. Seif-sufficient cops too often break |into privata life without authority. SHOWING DIFFERENCES = OF OPINION. The challense of the State Business Men's association to the prospective candidates in the state is calling out differences of opinion which seem to well founded and to prove what Dulletin first contended, that to pledge one’s support to a special pub- lic utilities bill at this stage of the game was far from being wise. Judge Baldwin, in-his criticism of the measure, called attention as a jurist to real defects; and Jnow Mr. George M. Gunn, a recognized demo- cratic leader of ability, says on one point: “I have some question in my mind, whether a kommission, appointed, as you st . will in the long run ac lish what is intended. It is us only a question of time before the nominating power is controlled by the parties most interested to the ex- tent_ at least of providing that the men named shall at least not be unfriendly to them. It is not necessary to throw stones at the honorable gentlemen now serving in various capacities on commissions in this state, but I think an examination of their mental atti- tude will show that they are without exception entirely friendly to the in- terests which they are expecting to supervise. 5 “I think that any commission, chos- en as you propose, will in the long run e found made up of men of a similar as. This seems part of the natural ler of things and is in no way in- tended as a criticism of their personal integrity, honesty or ability. “I think a portion at least of the commission should be elected by the people, and T believe that in this way the commission could .be kept more in touch with the interests they are call- ed upon to protect; for the whole pur- pogs of your commission, as I under- stand it is to protect the interest of the public geferally, not assuming, however. that this interest is neces- sarily hostile to the corporations in- for I heartily believe that the when volved: interests of the two are one, properly considered, “The general public wants. efficient service at as economical rates as are consistent with the reasonable profit of honestly invested capital They have no right to ask anything more. They ought not to be expected to sub- mit_to anything less. “Your commission, if appointed by the governor, will in a very short time, in my opinion, be found a§ subservient to the interests involved as they are as at present constituted.” Mr. Gunn speaks as an able lawyér and as a legislator of experience, and his words are worthy of considera- tion. The controversy leaves no doubt that it is impossible to draft a bill that will meet the ideas of the party lead- ers so completely that it will not be subject to various corrections and amendments. EDITORIAL NOTES. There will be no opposition to Chi- na's scheme to spend $50,000,000 for battleships in America. The state of Georgia appears to he dead broke, but she thinks her credit is good for $600,000 more. Merry del Val ought to be popular in Spain, but that is where he is now getting his hardest knock afety pin has repeatedly prov- s worth, but never more decided- ly than in the Crippen case. August is working to show that the man who predicted that it would be a wet month, knew what he was talking about, The war on the flies makes the sile of fly ‘traps lively, and the factor.es are planning to make more traps thon ever for 1911. A 20th century philosopher advises making marriages more dificult and divorce easier as a way of making less business for the courts. News being dull, we are told that Taft's message, due in December, will cover fourteen topics, treated on four- teen pages. Ve one under 18 years of age cin chauffeur’s license in New Yorh, rule there that it takes a gooi boy to run an automobile. Down south they say good roals put the everlasting kibosh on partisan- ship—here in New England it is mak- ing up a new order of partisanship. No get a They sized A prisoner in the Minnesota peni- tentiary won his freedom by growing 4 three-pound lemon. Prison doors have alwaye opened hefore the mighty, Alaska one-fifth as much terri- tory as the whole United States—an inviting empire all by itself—and it promises to be the country’s 49th state. The leaders of the English suffra- gettes gre women graduated by her scliools’ of learning. England has reached a condition when sheé sends her ablest women to jail. The Central Vermont strikers have accepted the wage schedule offered be- fore they went out, and to fill iie places now open. The surplus will have to seek jobs elsewhere, Tillinghast, the flying machine ventor, of Worcester, - who has got most praised for least achievements, is hard to suit. He says the New Eng- land fair grounds are not big ehough for him. Denver is the latest cit in- to apply to the treasury department for informa- tion concorning the formation of an cmergeney currencs associatian, THI lmnkl‘! the twentieth city that: has THE MAN WHO of keeping our minds off TALKS \ 3 The art of living consists principgit our selfis interests and upon subjects which in- spire happiness. Do not with me, for me s the within us. Me and mine rails on the narrow guage the me-and-miners can broad views of existence—they never get the_real cream of life. get together riches, but the good book 1ells us that riches take seives wings and fly away. £0od, but it cannot buy hope’ and the joy which is It seems to be man's way- tion which is God’s way to tion unless it is applied to those higher uses which fill the heart w because their ures of others, his love through them. k is at The vacation of most vacation an untimely death, sult of thoughtlestness. a lakeside one warm <ently 1 noticed three we boat with a man of the ocars showed that tyro and that he aid’ not peril that he was in pussessed of good sense he have the boat enough party thought excellent because with him, foj that feduced the of four inexperienc sporting on the wate of peril chance for a of their reckless: is happening every day and the won- der is mot that vacation are so many but that few. 1t is a good rule to ing except with a thoroughly compe- tent person who realizes never crowds a boat and what to do in a moment The world could get along almost any class better i without the men in overal in which some people look them would -not give yo pression, and yvet all that and through which. they dence bf wealth was made ed men. Overalls are the conegructive work, from th the water works, from dwelling to the palace Wheelbarrow to the autom. alls give material form, beauty~ ta that, which brai and design. The greater debt than it doe in overalls, for he is the the defender of homes an A sneer at overalls tells © and a lack of appreciation, not _qualities to be proud ca, like every Iy overalls—without the De. cuss things surely other Men gather just gossip. ~ The ay assembly the betters of 1 ing talked up. and one b declared: it was better to the “dollars & man had inherited than enemies to be loved for the made.” - They did not all this sentiment for several think that the man who enemies to his credit was the man who except for the dollars his lap. Then one remark way ular way in _life, who was loved for done was in no sense other fellow if personal was the chief aim of life and body was inclined to endorse his sen- timents was approved, and_the. o that it wa e ‘loved for the doliars inherited than for the enemies made. of our ways very often b ing persons, who see our do not see their own; tion is without are unmindful can see their errors can see our own. We are less zifted in this line of and that effect bec of the fa Burns _wrote 00d man? for as simple he lo: try to develop his hoo <crooks, with his depths and his shal lows, his good and evil; al a problem must puzzie the trospec: little time to self-inspect did we should not have to errors of our ways, for Xnow them. thinge should use inereases the pl The root of happiness lies in nioblest conceptions of the soul— it oniy flourishes where man manifests ragedies—the vaca- nists go out for joy and they meet usually as the re- As 1 sat by afternoon re- whose unski Had keri more than two women in while there was an tragedy they manifest evi- world owes no man a other country would have whi of least resistance was the that _the what he hadn’t We are counselled to sce th and surprised to see that thefr admoni- better is where the bar is, nine times out of ten. When Bobby Lord, Our ways of be reversed. and then | get imbuad hog that is are the two of life, and never take “They often unto them- Money is the abiding unbounded. to self-ela- condemna- ith pleasure the bottom in a ful use he was a realize the he been > would not on that was risk. This ced persons r without & < just | mess. - This N tragedies e so do mo boat- the danger, knows jusd of peril. without could he way askance at that im- they enjoy an u by overall- e symbol of he sewer to the, plain from the obile. Ove force and ns conceive °s the mam builder and | a the state. f igmorance ~which are of. Ameri- is most- it could not when they | women will in such an| ere be-. ight fellow | pe loved for had gree with seemed to could make superior to no _credit nfelll in ed that the pop- marn he than the admiration >, But To- affirmation s better to error well-mean- errors but they are ause they ct that we thar) we all more or perception, to reform what is do but and _his oks, ks 1 in de s not popular— fon. be told the we should viewing we should be very good missionaries | to ourselves. Do you ever look at ¥ and wonder how mucl character is to be seen does nothing unless he: 1 signs of himself. Alfr says how me ed it'be whut vou are like” If ¥ bit you will see that the presses your taste, your I of . it, for order, your of our garden your own it? Man s some Austin xry our garden, provid- our own, and I will tell you ou think @ garden ex- ove or lack regard for work and cleanliness, your knowledge | of the various plants,” fro in which they are treated, the way c., so that a competent person gazing upon your | can read and garden someth tastes work. you be, but he can tell you particulars what you be w ger of doing you an injus! who do’ not gardenj never the companionship of flow Thixter said she used to talking to them and admir! if they were human being: When dog-days comme is not well defined and th is stated to be from 30 In ancient times dog-days when the dog-star, Si with the sun, which oc as Julw 3d, but now by Pliny, July 19th, cepted. Dryden des his time thus: Lion, mounted high, tha barks from afar, and with breath infects the sky; below is parched. the us. fry. - The shepherd driv ly flock hehind the covert and seeks rvefreshing the sly wolves to their those very shades shades and streams your charact is ge ribes urred @ the dat and streams, require, your | by your | He could-not tell you all that | i in various ithout dan- tice. Those really know | wers. Celia find herseif | ing them uI‘\ | nce or end eir duration | to 54 days. | commenced | rius, rose early | fixed | enerally dog-davs is in Syrian h his sultry the ground heavens hbove s his fami- | of a rock, rivulets nigh: | hade retire, | new and | want a cooling breeze of wind to fan | the raging fire.” But dog-days has the public confused with dawn or exit. The close, comfortable weather of A eraily Whether seven does ice. they last four The boy who has a love objects ia & menace to t) tte reason thal hio one o ér he has living mi or s Bocket—touds, turtles. or Such boys are not bad bos wore given to uets than and they are ‘Raturally design when tion. A small hoy with pocket created . mor awonz o crowd of wonen place the other day thin lereate anong policemen. become separated the dog-star and | and reference to humid un— weather, weeks o not in this age cut any | for natural ie timid for tell wheth- | nekes 1 his entipedes, | | ervthing. purely superficial, 5—they ar to pranks— innocent. of ey creates a comnio- mice_in. his excitonient | in a publie firebug cif He had for= ‘gotten all about them, and when. he | 1iberty and the women screamed and |1 was not able fully to accede to his | ping of a trait which I haa never { number of | before the glass and scant the time ust is gen- | accepted as gog-day XNext to mother, Phyllis: who blood-kin, but been the good long as the chil scemed to-her as mi grandpa world as Grand, the cousins, or the garden. and and the long white, winding the silver-halred minister in the ing house up the hill. To the chi Aunt Phyllls looked old, yet always the same. summer to summer, she never grew older. Like everything ¢lse at Graldpa's, she was ome with the unchangeable. The river and gar- din” were always the same; the Sun- day stillness never varied, not even on week days: the village grew into the rocks of time, the village trees were primeval. Aunt Phyllis was part of it all, still, staid and serene. Outside, in the great world, things changed. ' To and from the big eity one hundred miles away, in and out among the city -thoroughfares, people moved swiftly, streets were continually being torn up ‘and laid down againnew buildings sprang up like mushrooms over night. Even the child’s tes grew as she grew, a little and a. little more all winter 1ong, so that by sum- mer tucks had to be let down, and sleeves lengthened, and manners im- proved. Going to Grandpa's was like stepping backward a century or two, stepping out of the city rush into the perpetual hush of days and nights that were all alike—and Aunt Phyllis was one with the unchanableness of things: iike the rigor of the rocks, Hke the steadfastness of the stars, like the springing of meadow grasses, like the tenderness of the - blending, brooding sky. Phyllis* gowns. black silkc for Sunday, her second best, white dotted black siik for afternoons, the black and white stripped muslin for church going on hottest days, the levender sprigged for home wear, and, lastly, the ginghams and calicoes and percales for her morning work. The and straight; and straight sleeves that looked arms, hanging from the pegs. sleeves were plainly hemmed at the wrists, as the long, straight skirt: were hemmed at the foot. Once, the little child pressed her rosy lips to the two sleeves of Aunt Phyllis’ working sown, they looked so precisely like the loving arms that often cradled her at night. Next to mother, Aunt Phyliis had the sweetést eves in the child's world. Mother's eves were hazel, gentle and soft and sympathetic, yet with red- gold gleams of migehiet in them. Hers | were the eves Of a happy woman, & woman tenderly loved and tenderly loving and altogether lovable; _one about whom the “plaidie” was always wrapped to “chield her from the cauld blast.” The eyes of Aunt Phyllis were blue,” faded a little, and dimmed, as though in earlier years, perhaps, the { beauty of the blue had been washed away in tears. They never sparkled and danced, like mother’s, they did not shine nor melt mor burn mor beam. | They were qulet, almost _colorless, every-day eves. You might not notice | them until they looked at. you, oh, s0 kindly! They belonged with the in- drawn lips, the high cheek-bones, pink | flushed, the lifted eyebrows, and the' | furrows over the brows, ploughed deep | by sorrow and trouble and care. They | belonged, too, with the swift, sure step, the restrained voice, the gentle ways, | and the radiant smile. They were wells | of loving kindness. A sad Httle story was the story of unt Phyllis’ life. Belonging to no in’ particular, she had grown from early childhood under the sheiter of Grandpa’s roof. As a “little mogher,” she had guarded and played with the Aunt Phyllis was tall and spare and straight. She had high check bones, | and deep-lined curves from nostril to took out his handkerchief in a crowd of women the mice made a break for fluttered and fainted over such g little thing as that, and the boy was fright- ened out of tem vears' growth, for ho did not know he had done anything to stir up such a commotion until the matter was explained to him. Ha thought everybody should like the dear little mice, but mow he knows that they don't, and that dear little mice are likely' to make trouble for nfm. Why should the golden-rod excite depressing thoughts? It reminds one | of fall and approaching frosts—of late | August and September pastures fleck- | ed with gold and purple—for the pur- ple aster is its later associate: and %0l and lavender are the ruling col- ors among w owers when the flo- | pg e ral season 18 closing, The golden- | pane meir Ancin oS et o Tag rods come at mid-July and Increase come to be like o cherished daughter until mid-September. T do not know | 16 house, The growing boys and iwhich is the preftlest, a field of gold- | girls turned o her as fo an older sis- o in New Hampshire, or & field | ter; to their ohildren of e generation of daisies In Massachusetts—In the[jster she was—as the child felt—next mass both flowers make a pleasing |ty mother. At elghteen she was mar- exhibit. =There is sunshine in both. | ried; at twenty she was a mother; at The golden-rod has not the grace of | (wenty-two o widow, alone in the the daisy—it does not sway S0 pret- | world, penniless, with a fatherless Aily upon its stem—but It has the 'child in her arms. After this began, ElowW of & Summer sunset, the shim- |in the hiome of her girihood, that life mer of cloth of gold; and it stands|,: gentle usefulness, or swift activity, for success and benevolence. To read |of noble self-restraint, of sympathy the K‘z‘lflfé‘-'l"d aright is to find «cheer | and loving kindness, that ' growth of instead of gloom. | humiy_queenlike persomality, that, as | Aant Pryllis, the child knew and jov- | ed, ana was never to forget. To her, | the story could mever b8 wholly sad | the life lived was so rarely beautiful. SUNDAY MORNING TALK All about the house and grounds the child used to_follow in Aunt Phyllis’ wake. Often Phyllis would laugh, and ask her, “Why ‘Whereupon the child wpuld respond Wwith an unanswerable “Because!” and there it would end. “Because I love you,” she might have ®aid, had she been a grown woman, not still a child, with a child’s dumbness of expressio From the little bed- room under the roof where she watch- ed Aunt Phyllis wind the snowy tur- ban about her head, down the slippery old oak stairs to the kitchen, in and out and about keeping room and pan- try, doorward and wellsweep, the child was continually at her heels. Now and then, as it happened, she uld throw her arms about the woman’'s knees, as high as she could reach, and say, “I love you, Aunt Phyllis. I do, I do.” Doubtless, this went far toward recon- ciling Aunt Phyllis to the child’s shad- owing of her as she went about her household tasks. For into the wom- an's lonely heart must have fallen like refreshing dew the love-homage of a little child. As the child knew her, Aunt Phyllis was always bright and sweet, cheery and kind. She never saw her do an ungentle thing, she never heard her speak an ungentle word. No matter how hot the weather was nor how long the days, no matter how crowded the old house might be with children and children’s children, Whether busy with cooking and brewing and baking, or with rounding angular corners and smothing off pretty acerbities, or with keeping all sorts of posstble tangle- ments untangled, the child saw only the patient, high-browed gen heard only the gentle, low- cheery voice, felt only the tende ing heart—“at leisure from itself.’ This is a sketch, rather than a por- trait. The beautiful life was never painted, nor storied, nor sung. It was lived humbly and obscurely, in a far away village, itself obscure. Like Long- Children Ory FOR FLETCHER'S Acute or Chronic—Which? No matter if your kidney trouble is acute or chronic, Foley’s Kidney Rem- edy will reach your case. - Mr. Claude Brown, Reynoldsville, Ill, writes us that he suffered many months with kidney complaint which bafed ail treatment. At last he tried Foley's Kidney Remedy and a few largs bot- tles effected a complete cure. He It has been of inestimablé value Les & Osgood Co. THE INSIDE OF A MAN. ~ A rather unpleasant incident has aet\ me pondering on what men are on the | inside. An ol friend failed to receive a letter from me, duly mailed, relat— ing to a subject on which we d al- ready conferred and concerning which desires. The letter miscarrying, his sensitiveness on the main question led him to send me a very brusque, per- emptory note, in which my old-time friend revealed a phase of his nature entirely new to me. Fe had some pro- vocation, T admit, and by this time we hive, patched matters up beautifully. But What surprised and for. the mo- ment distresseq me was the outcrop- thought he possessed. Every now and then our acquaint- ances startle us by such disclosures of themselves. The fact that they do this adds to the zest of human inter— course. Not infrequently some capac- ity with which we had not credited them comes to light, some hidden love- linéss of the spirit, which makes us profoundly grateful ana stirs our ad- miration. But, alas, quite as often we are saddened by the revealings of im- patience, irritability, vanity, envy or selfishness. This happens often enough to make us less and less Inclined as we grow older to estimate men by thelr ap- pearance. Here comes a man down the street. He wears broadcloth and a silk hat. Behind him walks a man in overalls. Here comes a woman richly dressed and behind her a plainly-clad woman. Over yonder are massed together a persons, handsome and homely. But what do these distin tions tell concerning the inside life Preclous little. The only way to find out what a man is on the inside is to live with him Jong enough to get at his real spirit. /The folks who eat with us and work with us and play with us are the ones who know what we are at the center of our lives And vet' they do not know us absolutely. That can be affirmed only of God and measured of ourselves. Therefore our estimates of others shoula always be tenderly made, al- w s subject to revision, always made with the remembrance that we know others only in part. Still more important is it to give such attentior to our inside life as will enable it to bear the closest scrutiny and that will also foster a legitimate sense of satisfaction with what we are. Tepend upon it, the chief joy in life arises from within and not from with- out. What folly to prink long hours given to storing the mind with useful thoughts! Whom do vou live with most closely, your _rolatives, your friends or yotrself? I want to appear well before men, but I want to ba what T seem to be. I want an inside life that shall be sufficient in itself and not dependent upon outside attrac- tiops. Within are the large and rewarding and inspiring thoughts. Within are the great loyaities to others. The wounded French grenadier, submitting to the surgeon’s knife, could honest- 1¥ say, “Cut a little deeper and you will find the emperor.” Within are the fountains of feeling that refresh us when life becomes a dry and weary thing. Within is the soul's response to God and the capacity for fellowship with him Over andagain Jesus emphasized the inside of a man’s lite, the color of the skin, tlie amount of adornments, the spoKen \Word. the general bLearing, ev- unted for comparison with the real belt ‘wishin. Ir that is tris and pure P 3 and aspiring, the inner c¢hamber er houses noble thoughts and sweet af- or o ectlons and generous impulses, then' BOA! Jou_are Mvingthe richest, happiést w. nd of life, no matter what your ex- |- TE ternal surroundings = ATER: NOTICE On and after this date, August Ist, 1910, the use of hose for garden, lawn or street sprinkling is prohibited until further noticz. The condition at Fairview Reser- voir at this time makes this action necessary. : Any person violating this order will be deprived of the use of city water. naught In D OF Qur entire line at a lnéttfhc. High Grade Fabrics in hand- some colors and patterns at ptiul you can afford to pay o | ll fl, E | | ll 0 AT REDUCED PRICES. FirsNorsy Balng ob (b oty 3 Minute Class William Penn, John Curran, Williman- c. Georgic B., John Walz, Norwich. ud;‘y" Aliston,” Josepl' ' Bedard, Nor- ch. Billy B, J. H. Bailey, Norwich. Aqua Rose, A. M. Etheridge, Norwich. Hazel Thistle, L. A. Chapman, Norwich Admission Carriages and Automobiles Free. Arrangement has been made for 15 Races called at 215 p. m. Winter's Goming Be prepared by having a Steam or Hot Water Heater installed or your present one put in first-class DO IT NOwW and save money, as prices will be higher later in the season. PERHAPS your Plumbing needs attention-- if so, don’t wait, but have it done now and avoid the rush later. McPHERSON’S, 1 Maia St City order. Send us your orders and get the best work at the lowest prices. Robert Brown Estate, 55, 567, 59 West Main Strast. ARTHUR M. BROWN, Managor Telephone 133 Open from 7.30 a. m. to 5.30 p. m. F°=Og°=0fi°' Final Clearance $15 Men’s Suifts - Now $ 9.50 $20 Men’s Suits - Now $13.50 $25 Men’s Suils - Now $16.50 THE PRICE REDUCTION IS ATTRACTIVE BUT DO NOT OVERLOOK THE FACT THAT MANHATTAN CLOTHES ARE MADE EXPRESSLY FOR US BY THE FOREMOST MAKERS IN AMERICA, AND ARE SUPERIOR IN QUALITY, STYLE, FIT, WORKMANSHIP AND VALUE. THE ASSORTMENT, DESPITE HEAVY SELLING, STILL AFFORDS A WIDE SELECTION OF CHOICE STYLES. Straw Hats Now $1 YOUR UNRESTRICTED CHOICE OF ANY STRAW HAT NOW IN OUR STORE AT $1.00, former prices were $2, $3, $4. Men’s Low Shoes Reduced $4.00 Oxfords Now $3.00 : $3.50 Oxfords Now $2.50 $2.50 Oxfords Now $1.75 AIll Lasts and Leathers Men’s Shirts, Summer Underwear, Fancy Hoslery, Belts, Neckwear, Efec., now attractively priced. @he Mlankattan 121-128 Main Street The Leading Store in Eastern Connecticut devoted exclusively to Men’s, Women's and Children’s Wearing Appare! | !l ll | | fl | ! Annual Meeting OF THE Gentlemen’s Driving Club August 6th, 1910, at 2 p. m. sharp An afternbon of good, ol 0 sport, Natlonal Rules to govern. 2.18 Class, Pace or Tro! Dnnu!o Bdlrn, Thomas F. Burns wieh Star Tucker, Merrill Jones, Willimantie Efta R, W. F. Batley, Norwich. Bonnie Wilkes, Frank &m| 1| wich Myrtie R., Jolin Charon, Norw) ¥red R, i. L. Chapman Peter Pan, Joseph bed 25 cent -minute car service fr BREED THEATER, Chas. Mculty, Coolest Spot in Town Feature Pioture. “THE FOREST RANGER,” COWROY DRAMATIO PICTURE MISS HELEN HAMPTON Sop in Selected Sonue s and Children, s Lessee. Matinee, La Jyda MuUsIC. NELLIE S. HOWIE, of Plano, Central Butiaing. CAROLINE H, THOMPSON Teacher of Musio 46 hingten Street L. H, BALCOM. Teacher of Plame. 9 Thames Bt, Lessons glven the home of the | nsed at Bohawenks Conrervatory. 1in. oot1 c. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect Bt 511, Norwioh, Cu A. W. JARVIS : IS THE LEADING TUNER EASTERN CONNECTICUT. F hone 518-8, 18 Clairmount Ava sept22d M. HOURIGAN SPECIAL ! For the next seven day: will sell our stock of Refrigerators Go-Carts Porch Rockers at prices' regardless of cost. IN 62-66 Main Street Jv2a ELMER R, PIERSON Horse Dealer Telephone 177-1 e Have You Noticed ths Increased Travel? 1t's & sure sign of good weather and fine roads. People like to get out ihto open air. We furnien the bes hod, and it you'll taks one of our teams you'll MAHONEY Falls Avenus marl7d Try Oriental Sherherl The Best 5¢ Drink sold in town. Made and served only at Dunn’s Founlain, 50 Main Stre:t. Jy20d In work should alwa be conside especially when it costs no more ¢ the inferfor kind. Skilled men aro employed by us. Our prices tell the whole story. STETSON & YOUNG. may2ia WM. F. BAILEY (Successor to A. T. Gerdner) Hack, Livery and Boarding Stable 12-14 Bath Street. HORSE CLIPPING A SPECIALTY. AUTOMOBILE TO RENT. elephone 883, aprasa DR C. R CHAMBERLAIN vfi"mr/" Surgeon

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