Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 9, 1910, Page 4

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Horwich Qalliliq and Goufief. 134 YEARS OLD. l-u-w-m.ne-w-t;‘&- FERE. | Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Conn., as second-class matter. Telephone Calla: Bulletin Business Office, 480. B:“:fln Editorial Room: 5. Bulletin Job Office, 85-6. < Willimantic Office, Room 2 Murray Bufldisg. Telephone 210. Norwich, Tuesday, April 9, 1910. —_— THE NEW LAW A DISADVANTAGE. “The people of Boston have awak- ened to the fact that another milk crisis is impending, for the new state Jaw throwing open the transportation of milk to anyone on equal terms with the contractors, a law which the pro- ducers wanted because, they sald, a clear fleld would be to their advant- age, it is now evident that the carry- ing of the commodity is going to cost more, when the question of rates shall have been finally settled, and it is elear enough that the consumers are the onmes who must meet these ex- tra charges, hence there is a prospect that there will be a strenuous effort made by the buyers to throw the cost of transportation back upon the dairy- men. This little cloud on the horizon foreshadows a strife which is likely to be without satisfactory results. As a Beston paper remarks: “The recent victory of the farmers will embolden them to fight again. They have proven the power they can wield by the withholding of milk. If they go to extremes fhe end can easily be foreseen. The new railroad rates will e paid at the back doors of the pub- lie. AN EXPERT OPINION. Ever since Glenn Curtiss dropped oranges in imitation of bembs at At- lantic City in July there has been a controversy on as to the aviator as a rifisman's target and thelperformance has been subjected to mo little ridi- cule to the uninitiated. The affair ap- peared to be ridiculous, but experts Go not seem to so regard it. Gen. George W. Wingate, founder of the Creedmoor rifle ranges, does not hesi- tate to afirm: *“I do not believe there a dozen riflemen in the militia of this state that could hit an aviator, <uch as Curtiss, while he was drop- ping bombs on a warship or the earth.” This is an opinion based upon ex- periemce, for it is a fact that a sheet iron deer, put ‘on trucks, which ran over a rallroad built like the scenic ones they have at the beaches, at cight miles an hour, proved so diffi- cult, In fact, that there was not one man at the range who could hit the bull's eye, which was placed over the heart of the deer. It s the opinion of Gen. Wingate that aviators will not be brought down from Jand shots, but that they will be attacked by aeroplanes in the air and thus be defeated in their purpose. A SERIOUS COMMERCIAL ISSUE. Dishonest practices upset trade, but ~what do the unscrupulous care if they make enough out of their tricks to satisfy their cupidity. News cormes across the water that the loss of sey- eral million dollars by British mer- chants and bankers through what were sald to be fraudulent bills of jading drawn in America against al- leged shipments of cotton has result- ed in a situation which may tend to embarrass the cotton export trade from the United States for a time, unless the utmost of goo:l common sense is employed by British bankers and importers. So irritated did the forcign recip- ients of the bills of lading in question become over the swindle and their in- ability to recoup themselves, that En- ish bankers have decided not to ac- cept llke commercial instruments after October first next, unless uncondition- ally guaranteed by banks having to do with them in the United States. As the banks of this country can- not legally give such a guaranty there is considerable uneasiness over the situation on both sides of the At- lantic. The American bankers have formulated a plan by which it is hoped to prevent further swindling of this sort and a committee of repre- sentatives of American bankers have sailed for England to cenfer with bankers there in the hope and expec- tation of getting English financial men to see the wiedom and propriety of agreeing to the proposed arrangement. Should it be impossible for them to reach an agreement it will interfere with America’s export trade in cotton d bring hard times to the -cotton spinners of Great Britain. WHY POULTRY RAISING SHOULD PAY. There is nothing about the poultry siatistics which leoks uninviting to those who would enter upon the poul- try business. It is probable that the agricultural states of New England raise a surplus of poultry while the industrial states do not. Massachu- setts and Connecticut have to spend milllons in pouitry grgwn clsewhere, and Rhode Island is doubtiess a big burer in the market. The Worcester Telegram advocating large increese of poultry raising in hat state says: “Massachusetts con- sumes each year about $25,000,000 worth of poultry and eggs. but raises only about $5,000,000 worth. As the other six states of New England do not produce more of such goods than they want, that balance of $20,000,000 2 vear is sent into the west for poul- and eggs to feed the people of Massachusetts. That spare $20,000,000 is worth keeping right here in this state. There is land enough and it is well located for the kind of farm- ing that is called poultry raising. Some of the best of the kind is done here, and there are well established samples of success all around. That and the shiftless hen farming is tak- ing care of only a fifth of the demands of the people here. The four-fifths is four times as large as one-fifth. Therefore there is rvem for doubling the poultry plants twice, and then it would do no harm if there was another doubling. The New York markets would take care of the surplus pro- duet This belug true it takes no genius to see that there is large opportuni- ties for dolmg & profitable bLusiness in this state, but it is a business for ex- perienced men, not fer tyros. -day—it takes 6 maise a fine S SR R ity Shosen P nougt wal ug! and coast-line enough to be r;:;grded as_an Eden for the American boy whether he has special play grounds set apart for him or not, but the pub- lic spirit of the place demanded the xh\y grounds and they have proved 80" satisfactory that all who doubted or oppbéséd. are invited to visit the grounds while in use and to inter- 'view the boys concerning them.’ The Newburyport News says: “Those citizens who have always cavilled at the idea of -having public playgrounds in the city, and who have declared that money spent for such purposes was mohey wasted, should now at least be fair-minded enough to visit the playgrounds in actual operation, and observe the things which are going on there. The matter is no longer one of theo- it is one of facts. And the facts will be learned mot by sitting at home and croaking, or by standing on the corner talking with some like- minded friend, but by actually going to the playgrounds and spending, not a few minutes but a few hours in seeing things as they aré. Those who know are more and more pleased with the practical working of tbe plan. And most of the children terviewed will say instantly that the new institution is a fine thing. ‘““There is nothing like play in the open air for growing children. But cannot children play alone, the ob- jector answers. Some children can, and some cannot. But all children will get better results physically and mentally out of thelr play if that play is guided by a skilled director. Watch them and see if this is not so Moreover the time will come when, as a result of this movement, the bet- ter order and conduct of the children will be noticeable. Youthful energy must have an outlet, and the city sheuld have some plan for it.” EDITORIAL NOTES. Meat is short 5 per cent., pork per cent. lamb 11 per cent, which | indicates another rise in prices. Getting up a reputation is one thing ving up to it §s another. Some folks do not seem to care-about doing either. New York is now catching sarage men selling gasoline by short meas- ure. Who doesn’t milk the automobile owner? | The family of Charles W. Morse o deeply concerned about the poor mar health. Uncle Sam is not taking seriously. it Senator Dolliver of Iowa points out that “when theé people appear to think all alike it is not so hard to find the thinker!” Maybe. The expenditure of a million an half for water means a permanent dition of five mills to the tax and we need the water. “In search of a sinner” is the title of Lillian Russell's new play. Having discovered several this ought mnot to be a trving hunt to her. The agricultural schedules returned | to the census bureau number about six | and a third millions, which indicates a great increase in land value: One or two states object to hoy chauffeurs and to chauffeurs with one he eye; and by and by one jag enough to annul a license. will The man who returns from his cation with his wallet looking as as an elephant's ear, canvot forgat that he has had a good time. Governor Patterson of Kentucky ha been reproved by an opposing major ty of 40,000, but he is not likely profit by a lesson of that sort. The long haul and the short haul have always been a burning issue and is likely to be so long as it costs more to send goods 75 miles than 120. The west is shouting for school- teachers as well as for reapers, and a few thousand women might find | mates and plenty of housework to do there. Baltimore should not get excited be- cause its water board splits on a comma. Boston not so long ago split upon a semi-colen and couldn't make repairs. Seldom an American city abides by the census figures from Washington They do not confirm the directory es- timates which are popular and hard to beat. Out west they are calling gleeful at- tention to the fact that it is only about 80 days to the November el tions. We shall all be glad when it is over. The men who use one collar bills | need them so badly that they cannot | brook delay if the design is inartistic I¢ is only those who handle $1,000 bills o have the face or the leisure to is D. ¢ are coining pickels. With the litile wire cages they can catch several hundred a day, and it doesn’f take long to execute the pests and the Upton Sinclair doesn’t realize that the men who have made their own way in the world are the only ones who can endow zenius, and they are the omes, too, who are sure appear to | to think genius don’t need endowing. “The colors on the number plates of Massachusetts automobiles are re- versed gach year. It is a_shrewd move on part of the authorities so that a glance is all that is necessary to tell whether a person has the register plate of the proper year.” Murderous Mania. No man grows insane all at once or over night. Long before homicidal ‘mania seizes = man there have been signs of its coming. He has been moody, melancholy and restiess. He | has made threfits. e has been| haunted by delusions that he was in- jured. by Some one or had “enemies.” Hallucinations —some orderly and sy tematic and associated with real facts, and seme purely imaginary—have overspread his mind and appeared in his $peech. He has been violent, and not omly “queer.” but clearly beside himself. He writes letters of nv rela- tlon to the world as it is, he makes strange. plans, he Is forgetful, careless and dwelling ‘on the possibility of re- veénge and injury. The man of whom these things, part or all, are true, ought to be put under in- fer attr | scorn, and haa flung herself out of the { down and out now—his health broken, | done, ana done promptly. all, 1t Pistol suggestion with the unbalaneed Heads to pistol murder.—Philadeiphia Press, | who likes to smoke is generally the man who does not care very violently for rning. He rather takes to the It was “Circus day” in Plympton— | a day alwavs eagerly looked forward 0 by the inhabitants of the lttle pro- vincial city; therefore everyone was out to see the street parade of the troupe, and the marvellous wonder: just unloaded from the gaily-painted | cars sidetracked in the railroad yard. As the heavy caparisoned horses smorted and pranced restively in sharp con- trast to the half-dozen ponderous ele- phants plodding calmly along, in the choking cloud of dust raised by their own enormous feet. Rehind them came the cage of ser- penis—with a great pvthon coiling it- self with sluggish but horrible sug- gestiveness about the arms and neck of the smiling, gaudily dressed “snake charmer.” Xt came the tigers— crouching with half-closed gleaming vellow eyes, and snarling raspingly: while pacing restlessly from end to end of confining cage, the huge lion—King—gave vent to intermittent roars of ugly protest against his en- forced Then came the less- The crowd, momeptarily increasing in density and enthusiasm, pushed and jostled: and Richard Agnew—unable by reason ofrill-health to escape—was forced to view the glittering pageant passing before him, and when he was trying to make himself believe how he hateqd as much as he had loved it in the days when he had been billed in this very show as the “most daring trapgze performer in the world.” Ttéwas in this same company also that he had wooed and won his wife, pretty Marie Duprez, the bravest bare— back rider in the circus. Yes, and one | of the white canvas tents in; yonder field had been the nursery and only home of his girl baby—brown- eyed, netite Almee. Al! life was worth living in these days. But since the awful accident that had deprived him of both health and nerve, he had been miserably py. He string. brousht rting tears. This scene all back so clearly—the night when iust after an unusually trying performance, he had announc- ed his intention of quitting ecircus life for a I nerve-racking existence, nd how Marie, in a perfect passion of rage, had declared she would never leave the ring for the humdrum réu- tine of the home; and hurled the one word “Coward!” at hilm with stinging tent ness! And in followed, her, o the night's engulfing black~ all he of the weary.months that had found no trace of the' child. Well, he was and his nerve gone. Marie was right— he had proved himself a cowar He pulled his hat lower. He would not see the sights. nor hear the old familiar sounds that still set every pulse leaping with desire to be back once more in the excitement of the circus arena—where even the danger attending each performance had been P % to a“ ‘m m‘ S » He pressed forward with the crowd.- s Comete, L Snt e ge ‘heading On it came, a veritable jugger- naut of destruction. It struck the van, carrying the lion's cage squarely —the terrific impact smashing the car, van and cage. As the bars cracked, the surly brute within leaped free of the wrgckage with a roar of rage, and stood with lashing tail and frothing mouth, quite*still in the middle of the street; but eyeing the surging masses of humanity on either side, as though deliberately choosing a victi Then, above the incoherent shouts of men—above the frightened screams of women and children—there rans out a woman's voice, shrilling in frenzied O, God, my baby, my bab: Richard Asnew heard, and franti- cally beat back all who barred his way; for, from the opposite sidewalk and 'directly in front of the maddened lion, stood laughing, brown-eved Aimee; /her chubby hands outstretch- ed, her soft lips curved in baby coax- ing! The man’s heart beating—he swayed dizzily; then his blood raced through his veins like liquid fire; his heart steadied, and with all his old-time agility and nerve he bounded between his baby girl and the working, dripping jaws and biood- shot eves. With a backward sweep of a tense h&nd, he snatched the child to him in a flerce embrac: then tossed her straight into the waiting arms of his wife. Then the cruel. paws flew into the air and struck him to the earth. The crowd awoke from its paralyzing stupor of frizht. A shot rang out, and King, t0o, fell—his head resting on the crushed breast of his victim! Men rushed forward then; women sobbed, gathering their children with- in their sheltering jrms. In the midst -of the confusion, man in_clerical garb stepped to the side of the inert mass In the street. Kneeling, he lifted one of Richard Agnew’s hands. It fell- back with the awful helplessness of death. He bared his head and stood up. “My friends,” he said, “he is gone! But let us thank God, for as brave a man, as true a hero as ever fell on the field' of battle!” Every hat came off, every head was lowered; and when at last the brief prayer fell into silence, Marie Agnew, convulsively clasping to her heaving bosom the child he rescued from the very jaws of death by the splendid bravery of her husband, the man she had cruelly branded as “Cow- ard!” staggered blindly to her deso- late home, there to live through, as seemed to stop jbest she might, the long years of un- {availing repentance that stretched be- fore her.—Boston Post. gerous. If he is, the physician can advise the next step. Many a tragedy would be saved if this were always Thaw would never have killed White, for his ins sanity hed affected him months be- fore the act. Restelli had been moody. Nearly all these sudden outbreaks of murderous mania have a previous his- tory of the approach of derangement. Most constant of all, a pistol gener- suggests its use. The pistol hab- a murder-making habit. If pis— tols were not so widely owned, worn and borne in mind, handled ' and thou t of, murders would be fewer. Smoking Among College Students. The one certain outcome of any gathering of the doctors is a disagree- ment. No subject on earth could throw them into greater disagreement than the question of how much dam- age tobacco does to the human organ- ism. And a recent discussion. of that eems to have plunged them into as violent a tangle as could be expected. Dr. Geo. Meylan of Columbia gives us'a sample of their divergent views, in an article in the current Popular Science Monthl In substance, this s ‘what they say: “Tobacco works no appr ble harm to man;” “tobacco ced harmful to the human And there is the whole ult of their inquiry. The majority, however, agree that after a man has reached maturity,.a moderate indulgence produces no distinct harm. Dr. Meylan refers to their findings in is pron constituti practical re: his own disect ion of the effects of to- bacco as a college professor finds it among his students, Students who have begun the tobac- co habit after reaching physical ma- turity, he finds, show no physical dif— ference from non-smokers, but- Show ority-in scholarship. It may be, he frank enough to con- c that even this is chargeable to mere difference in character. The man a silght infe jovs of club life, lounging and easy-go- ing habi generally. At the same time, it can har be disputed that a too early indulgence in tobacco is bad for scholarship and bad for theman. HEven the mature man who is neurotically inclined may be harmed by it. At all events we are justified in any effort to make smoking by immature youths as diffienlt ossible. The lady of Chicago who objected to a cigarette in a picture might make herself im- mensely more useful to society if she lent e m and her energies to a prac mpaign against the use of cigarettes by hoys. We can stand much more of that. You Can’t Boycott an Army. We cannot quite . understand the sudden outbreak of indignation on the part of the people of Durand against the sending of militia there to protect life and property against possible as- | ults by the Grand Trunk strikers and their sympathizers. They declare with great ‘emphasis that there is not the silghtest danger of violence or breach of the law. Was not the same statement made with reference to South Bend, Indiana and other places? The feeble attempt to embarrass the troops and the state by refusing to sell the former the supplies they need- ed was too silly §or a_sane communi- ty to even dream of. Does not every- body in Durand know perfectly well that if the commander of the troops could not get supplies otherwise he of embers. Then there 1s a forest fire. Deliberate destruction of the ' for- ests, the kind that Gifford Pinchot and other conservationists are trying to stop, 1s bad encugh, but that Kind has at least the merit of giving work to our woodsmen, and boards with which to build our bungalows. We may pay too dearly for the boards, but we get TEROW OUT THE LINE Give Them Help and Many Norwich People Will Be Happ “Throw Out the Life Line"— The kidneys need help. They're overworked — can't get the poison filtered out of the blood. They're getting worse every minute, Will you help them ? Doan's Kidney Pills have brought thousands of kidney sufferers back from the verge of despair, Will cure any form of kidney trou- ble. Mrs. H. A. Simonds, 117 Franklin Street, Norwich, Conn., says: “For the purposes for which their use is in- tended I think there is mo medicine equal to Doan’s Kidney Pills. The un- doubted benefit they have given to my friends warrants me in recommending them highly. I will cheerfully give the facts that lead me to testify in favor of Doan’s Kidney Pills, which were procured from N. D. Sevin & Son’s drug store, to dnyone desirous of knowing them for his or her own good.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember take no other. Acute or Chronic—Which? No matter if your kidney trouble is acute or chronic, Foley's Kidney Rem- edy will reach your cass. Mr. Claude Brown, Reynoldsville, Ili, writes us that he suffered many months with kidhey complaint which baffled all treatment. At last he tried Foley's Kidney Remedy and a fed large bot- the name—Doan’s—and tles ffected a complete cure, He savs: “It has been of inestimable value to me” Lees & Osgood Co. It is the weak nerves that are cry- ing out for help. Then help them, don't drug the stomach or-stimulate the. heast or kidneys. That is wrong. Vitalize these weak inside nerves with Dr. Shoop's Restorative and se2 how fast good - health will come to you gain. Test it and see. Sold by Lee & Osgood Co. Tubercuiosis Often Develops From Pneumonia Consumption readily have had Pneumonlia. from tuberculosis giyve a history of hav- ing had pneumonia. The lungs thus weak- ened are mors easily attacked by the attacks those who Many sufferers could seize all supplies in every shop in Durand by force, to bé paid for by the state at a fair price at the state’s convenience? You can boycott many sorts of people, but you can’t boycott an army with banners, not to say with guns.—Detroit Free! Press. Forest Fires and Fools. Now doth the busy little camper get in his work. No one knows why he goes cemping. Really, he would be in enough danger were he to stick close to his mother's kitchen. The perils of flying a kite in a sand lot are more than enough to tax his in- genuity. Yet he goes camping. He carries matches. He strikes one box— the”care of a physician, if possible, a rained alienist or specialist in insani- ful of them to make one fire, and| fumbles meal at that. Then he ty. He will know if the man is dan- goes away, leaving a smouldering pile ' Eckm: germs that cause consumption. For all those with “weak lungs,’ espe- clally those who have had pneumonia. Eckman's _Alterative is the appropriate remedy. Cures of consumption are ac- complished by Eckman's Alterative. But take it in time. There I5 no wisdom in walting until Tuberculosis is established. Health is never fully valued until sick- s comes, . > ¥ Wish I had known® of Eckman's Al terative two years ago. Since taking it 1 have gained twenty-eight pounds and 1 u_and Rt e e e «nd change of Realth it has (Signed) Th > J426 Broadway, Tckman's Alterative r Throat snd Lung troubles. and is on sa' in Norwich by Lee & Osgood other Druggists. It can also tained at, or procured by your Dri, for Booklet of -or -write for Evidence an Laboratory, Phila., Pa. Cas: | function, An_English Carnival. Though it is not for us to say so, there is something indescribably gal- lant in the way that we meet and grapple with our English weather. Year after year, with unspeakable courage, we keep up the fiction that the rainstorms, the dull humidity, the overcast skies and the cold are not the ordinary signs of an English July: but are totally unexpected and are an emergency 8o bizarre as to be. almost laughable. In these circumstances, wi mould pretense to an aggressive shape. We are not contmruy to retain oy e T s nation, eluy woul ve to v 3 barb pie which were up on the window O e Doard. Gricket matches are | sill—Bouth Norwalk Dispatch. Henley regatta, and we still give per- - formances of pastoral plays. And we 20 further. We assume the offensive. We have actually embarked upon the carnival. We had been awaiting our charce for some time, and at last it came with the Bournemouth centen- ary celebrations. As for the result, it must have surprised even the most optimistic organizers, though it is true that they did their work so well that they left little oppoortunity for fail- ure. Nevertheless, a carnival is not made by material arrangement, al- though it cannot succeed, gf course, without it. The carnival spirit must be present, and that was there. Nothing_like the Continental carnival held at Bournemouth has been seen in this country before. In the future, however, it will be seenoften. The carnival has come to stay, just. a: :;hln bp:geanv. has come to stay.—London b < vigil Mrs. Beers was rewarded when she saw a deer vault the eight-foot fence, and, after cautiously approach- ing the kitchen, reach up and eat some green peas and half of a rhu- Justa Reminder that for pimples, blackheads and other blemishes of the complexion Glenn’s Sulphur Soap is the best remedy. It clears the complexion and cures skin diseases. All druggists. HEl's Hair asd Whisker Dye, black or brown, Sdc. This Deer Likes Homemade Pies. Frequent thefts of garden produce and of ples and cakes from the kitch- en and pantry of the home of Mrs. Benjamin Beers, in Westport, aroused her ire and curiostity. After a long aven Kawow Soap w get out of it all the good unless you use it as it should be - l Bulletin Bullding Your Baby’s Health g &S Por strength and freedom from ill- ness start from the outside and work in. Nothing will better insure per- fect health for the little ones than a daily bath to which has been added a few drops of Cabot's Sulpho-Napthol About a teaspoonful to a pail of water. This will keep an infant’s skin in perfect condition. It will make it white and soft and will cyre any skin aflections that may already exist. Above all it will wvent infection where the cuticle is bruised or broken. Cabot's Sulpho-Napthol Soap is also inval- uable for the bath, being healing, healthful and soothing, con- t%inm_g a sufficient amount of Sulpho-Napthol to make it most effective. Sold only in yellow packages by 'W‘:;fi‘nm 10¢.; 25¢.; 50c.; 75c. and $1.00, SULPHO-NAPTHOL COMPANY, Torrey Bullding, 14 Medford St. SAWYER CRYSTAL BLUE CO., Selling Agts., 88 Broad St,, Boston, Mass. Fishing Tackle BLUES ARE RUNNING Steel Rod, worth $1.25, - - - $1.00 Luckie and Samsoen -~ $1.50 Fine line of Hooks, Artificial Baits, Gork Fioats, Lines, Bait Pails, Etc. THE HOUSEHOLD, 74 Franklin Street 7. Featurs Pioture. “Red Eagle’s Love Alfair,” GORGEOUS INDIAN SPECTACLE M. JACK MORRIS, Barttoue, In IMustrated Somgs. Matinee, Ladies and Children, 1y « : MUSIC. NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teacher of P Central Bullding. Room 4¢. CAROLINE H. THOMPSON Teacher of Music 46 Washington Strest. .+ _ F.C.GEER TUNER 122 Prospect Et, Tel. 811, Norwich, Cu A. W. JARVIS IS‘THE LEADING TUNER IN EASTERN CONNECTICUT, 'Fhone 518-5. 16 Clairmount Ava sept22a M. HOURIGAN SPEGCIAL ! For the next seven days we will sell our stock of Refrigerators Go-Carts Porch Rockers at prices regardless of cost. 62-66 Main Street. ive2a The Best of Summer Shirts AT REDUCED PRICES. Our entire line at a sacrifice. High Grade Fabrics some colors and patterns at prices in hand- you can afford to pay i McPHERSON’S, 14é\Hatler, 101 Main SL., Cily augld Have You Noticed the Increased Travel? & sure_sign of good weathér and ople Iike to get out inte air, We furnish the best method, and if you'll taka one of our teams you'll say the saz MAHONEY BROS. Falls ‘marl7d 3 Try Origntal Sherbert The Best 5¢c Drink sold in town, Avenue Made and served only at Dunn’s Fountain, 50 Main Strect. Jy30d Water Heated on the Run. Hot Bath in 5 minutes. DEMONSTRATION of Humphrey Co. Instantan- eous Bath Fealers at the Norwich Gas Co.’s office all this week. Come in and get a healer free. augld DR, C. R, CHAMBERLAIN Lenta/ Surgeon. In charge of Dr. 8. L. Geer's practws during his last iliness. 161 Main Street. Norwich, Cenn, novied FUNERAL ORDERS Artistically Arranged by HUNT .. * * The Florist, Tol. 130 Lafaystte Street, dunisa Is no advertisi T \

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