Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 13, 1910, Page 4

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rwich Zulletin unnd Guarfied. 114 YEARS OLD. —_————— Supseription Beics, 1% & week Soe & Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Conn, as secomd-class matter. Telephone Calls: P Bulletin Business Office, 480. Bulletin Editorial Rooms, 35-3. Bulletin Job ice, 35-6. ‘Willimantie Office, Room 3 Murray Building. Telephone 210. Norwich, Saturday, Aug. 13, 1910. The Circulation of The Bulletin. The Bulletin has the largest eir- culation of =my paper im Eastern Commecticut, and from three to four times larger tham that of amy In cemt. of the people. it s delivered to over 900 houses, in Putsam and Danielmon to over 3,100, and in all of these places it is considered the local dally. Eastern Connecticut has forty- nime towns, one hundred and sixty- Sive postofice ricts, and forty- ome rur~] free delivery routes. The Bulletin is sold In every town amd om all of the R. F. D, routes in Eastern Conmecticut. CIRCULA’I'ION ceeees da12 -5.920 8,087 1901, average 1905, average Week ending August 6 WHAT METERS SAVED. There is no good reason for oppo- sition to the installation of water meters in any city, and no onme is wronged - by their installation if the authorities look sharply after them and are prompted by the same just and considerate spirit which marks the conduct of private busin Boston affords a fine example of the efficacy of meters as water savers. “With the installation of water me- ters in but 15 per cent of the resi- dences of Boston, 11,250,000 gallons per day less water is being used than a year ago at this time, resulting in a saving of 3825 per day in the city's water bill to thes metropolitan water In other words they have saved to the taxpavers $297.000 a vear. The taxpavers have mno reason to find fault with the meter system. IN GOOD FORM. Chatrman Comstock “comes back” good form in his letter to Mayor her, showing that Judge Baldwin would be a strong candidate notwith- standing the reasons Mr. Fisher had for thinking him weak. Mr. Com- stock makes a hearty appeal for a high standard for the state democract this vear—Waterbury American. There is nnthing surprising in the fact that Chalrman Comstock does come back at Prof. Fisher In good form, for that is his usual form, and those who know him wold be sur- prised If he did not. He knows that Judge Baldwin is able and Chairman Comstock’s optimistic viston has placed in his forefront a political fluke by which he thinks the judge is to be swept into ofce by republican votes. The republicans are not go- ing to do things for revenge In No- vember, but for principle’s sake.. They know the demoeracy is not a good are to be promoted If they do not care anything about Roosevelt's reform policies or Taft's valiant fight to en- force them, they will do what Chair- man Comstock hopes they will do. A WORTHY ENDEAVOR. The St. Albans Messenger has en- tered umpon a campaign of refo which might have been started long ago In Connecticut as well as in Ver- mont_for it is simply to stop sense- Jess iying. In view of the approach ©of circus day The Messenger say: “If you go to the circus to-morrorw, ®o honestly, go because you know you want to, and be frank enough to say so. Don't lay it on to the children more. We are pretty much all ittle children when it comes to the and the same old tinsel an.d trappings, the same old semi-barbaric is eubstitute if republican policies Gisplay of tawdry pageantry, the same old rumble of the heavy char- Jots. swaring of the elephants, blare of the bands, and the same old feats of skill and daring and the same old anties of the clowns emuse or inter- est us as they did vears and years ago when the circus and us iers smalley, Perhaps we grown-ups see it in a different light now_ through a Ionger perspective, and some of the unresjities of the glittering confusion of spectacular joys do mot deceive u as they did once. But it is the same old circus for all that; the same old crowds of happy humans that attend it. and it is worth the holiday to feel young again and enjoy some kinds of things that do not make one think 100 hard or too logically.” And it's the same old preachment and the same old hope and the same old result; end when you come to think of it, the same old human na- ture and the same old fun-loving world. The pretense is so flimsy the truth is visible all the time. The scheme of the Massach bureau of employment to lease idlers to farmers will not work. They need men who are willing to toil early and Jate, like themselves. The grocers of Frookiyn propose to adopt a cash-carry-away-your-own- package system as a means of cheap- ening goods and lessening their own losses. Oklahoma shows great growth. The people for the past ten years have been told that was the place to get a farm for mnothing. That's what draws. In the suppression of Kurea Japan shows she is @ capable in the work of tyranny @8 Germany was under Blsmarck or Russia under Nicholus. It is predieted that the hobble skirts of to-dey are destined for the rag-bags of to-morrow, or church Farmmage sales 50 years from nogp A 'MAYOR'S CONGRESS. The 14tk annual congress' of the mayors of leading American cities will be hel@l at St_Paul on August 23, Wwhen a comparison of experience will be indulged in as to the management of municipal affairs and city govern- ment will be considered from every rational point of vie Among the subjects upon which spucial addresses will be delivered and which will afterward be opened for &eneral discussion are “A City Art Museum and How to Make It Valua- ble to the People;” “The Workhouse as a Reformatory; :Government of Cities by Commission;” “A City's Control of Outlyin' Districts:” “Home Rule for Cities;” “The Relation of the Municipality to Its Public Service Companies;” “What Citi Are Doing and in What They Bxcel. This summer school for the mayors of wide-awake American cities shoul1 be enlightening enough to impress the country from one end to the other, for good government is what the peo- e aialis B R g et cannot have it anywhere if they ars careless abput the character and abil- ity of the men they put in charge of public affairs. THE NATIONAL CONSERVATION CONGRESS. The National Conservation congress “which meets the first week In Septem- ber will lend its influence to check the slaughter of birds in America, as well as to the consideration of forests, fuel and water power. The wild bird as a helper and a factor in life is not appreciated by the class to which he is of direct henefit although if tbe Statement of the late George AngeM of the Massa- chusetts Humane society, that without the presence of birds man could not live upon earth, they are of direct benefit to us all To quote William L. Finley of the National Association of Audobon So- cleties, will give an idea of the vajus of the bird in dollars and cents. He for years our wild birds have been dly "decreasing. As a result mil- lions of dollars are taken from the pockets of the farming class every vear to fight insect pests, and this amount is increasing. The inroads of the Hessian fly upon the wheat crop in 1904 were esfimated at $50,000,000 The cotton worm is a great menaco in the south, where it destroys from $25,000 000 to $50,000,000 annually of the coiton crop. The cut worm is a pest that is prevalent throughout the country: although the loss is widel: aistributed and not felt so heavily, it enormous. The coddling moth in- jures fruit crops to the amount of $20,000,000 annually, With the con- tinuous loss of bird life in our coun- the loss from insect and rodent ts last vear was estimated at the srmous sum of $800,000.000. Without the birds our forests would be swept as by a blast of fire. Our trees would look like an army of tele- graph poles. Last year insects caused n estimated loss of more than one adred million dollars to the trees the country. (sireful analysis of the stomachs of thousands of wood-peckers, titmice. creepers_ kinglets, wood warblers, wrens, ~fiyeatchers, swailows, nut- hatches and other birds show ' they do nothing else but eat these devastating insects. This is their life work. De- oy our wild birds and yau destroy our forest The lumbermen have cut our for- @sts, but the lumber is used to build homes. The fisherman catches our fish, till they are almost gone, but these ara used for food. The capital- ist- captures the water-power rights of our streams, but these he puts to economic advantage. But the plume hunter slaughters our wild birds, ani uses our resources for what? Is it to make women more attractive and beautiful? 1§ so_ he is a failure. EDITORIAL NOTES. Some of the boys who are ambitious to fiy are very likely to fall. There is seldom a peach that tastes quite as good as it looks in market. Happy thought for to-day: The best remedy for rude words is deaf ears. . The man who doesn’t do his duty is the one who would kil the man who does. Heavenly baseball will need no um- pire, so the issue on that point is useless. This would be a more agreeable world if every vacation came up fully to expectations. Miss Le Neve, Dr. Crippen’s boy, need not despair. A New York dime show has made her an offer. When a $1.000 counterfeit bill-is an- nounced it mever creates any interest or excitement among the people. The politicians should bear in minl that excitement in dog davs has never been regardéd as in good form. King George's imperial senate plan gives a government by commission look to the rule of Great Britain. If Aunt Delia’s apple pie ever should zet upon the arket she would gather wealth from a small royalty upon it. The mayor of Toledo was arrested xceeding the speed limit in an Mayors must respect the law 10 auto. there, Sixteen participants in an Ohio riet e been indicted for murder. That way to quench the riot spirit. sure A Pittshurg who said Mayer ynor ought to be shot was prompt- sent to jail. It might have been When John himself fined by an smiled. D. Rockefeller founi $8 for over speeding Ohio justice he must have Boston doesn't often have a fire for the extinction of which 16 cities and towns contribute aid. That is a rec- ord of this week. think that the is sound old story Frank Munsey may statement that this country is news. It is only an uld, that bears reiteration “Time to Prepare. The {nterstate commerce commis- ston may s well brace itself for the problems the airship will bring up In the near future—Washington Star Always in Form on Election -Day. Miss Democracy feels nervous when sh> thinks of the come-back record of the republican party.—Washington Post | | | TRE MAN WHO TALKS The people who are always on their uppers have too many wants and are excessive in their self-indulgencies. Economy is only a synonym for self—| denial. No one ever saved money who did not practice it. ' Seif-denial at first seems to be a good deal like pun- ishment, but when the result is visi- ble it becomes achievement and af- fords delight. Take systematic saving —The tight box that takes the nickel for every other soda, for every other cigar, for every other entertainment, or tie dime for every other cream, or every other self treat of candy, at the close of the year is apt to show up a great many ‘dollars—dollars to bank, or doliars to buy a suit of clothes, or dollars to pay a long-overdue bill to make good one's reputation for thrift, and magbe for honesty. One of these little boxes is just a revelation of one’s self to one’s selft—it bespeaks to the user _increasing self-control, ~which means power.—self-respect, _ which means manhood, increasing. finances, which means ease and freedom if it just leads one from the condition of a borrower to that of a lender. appear to be wedded They are not in accord have no regard m to know Some peop! to_perversity. with law and order, for the proprieties and npthing of the little amenities which long service usually invit Their friends and families call them trials, and the world calls them something worse. ‘They are just victims. There are no two things that victimize men, Wwomen and_children more than sel- fishness and’ fmmature conclusions. They lead to self-delusion and many disturbing illusions—they lead to ex- cesses of various kinds and to chronic disorder of the mind and misconduct of every character and degree. Noth- | ing but our faith can make us whole, hence, lack of it produces counter ef- fects. Few of these people are as bad as they seem to be to us. They create their own unhappiness, and that is why we should guard against Any disturbing effects they may have upom the pleasure of living. They have their lives to live and some of them stray far from the paths of peace. Interference is not what they need, but light, and ‘there is nothing better than the Iight of love to touch them. The graceful rudbeckia—one of the litye sunflowes—swaying in the wind always pleases me, although ten vears® acquaintance with it has revealed to me . that its root-spreading habits Malke it a nuisance, if not a Teal pest. Frem three plants bought ten vears ago I have no doubt that, to keep within bounds, I have destroyed 10,000 plants. & bushel of roots ha To keep it within limits > to be taken up and thrown away every spring. It is full as prolific as the white daisy, and it s a first cousin to all the flower: in the aster family, even to the gil- lidus. Its height is one objection to it, but by cutting back the main stem in July it can be kept down—its bug- giness is another objection to it, for it is covered with red plant lice which seem to be immune from attacks of the syrphid flies—the natural enemies of the aphides—and it takes constant spraying to clear the lice from the stalks. A few hundred of them wave around the edges of the garden and I must confess I like to see them. It is a sign of fall when you see birds migrating south, in a sense. On August 5 k of small birds of considerable passed south over Norwich, which s to me an in- dication” that they closed their season and actually farewelled. Birds do not go sduth or come north be- ase of approaching cold, as is pop- ularly supposed, breeding season but is bécause thair over—their work is dome. The im tion of birds is very imperfectly understood—eartl¥'s feaihered wanderers cannot reveal to man why they have abodes thousands of miles apart—why the swallows of Great Britain comeé to spend part of the Year in Africa, or why the swal- lows that skim the lakes of Connecti- cut should part of the vear skim the lakes of Brazil Some birds move north and south by zones, for instance, the Labrador robin winters in New England—the New England robin win— ters in New Jersey. The cedar-wings and other birds come north in Febru- the orioles come in May and the humming-birds from the tropics later r four months they come—for four ‘months they go. This procession of birds is one of nature’s wonders. A bunch of koch August sunlight is a sight to please an artist. tIs filmy foliage and its danc- ing shadows—its emerald green and shaded greens—mak a thing of beauty, so full of artistic play as to excite the fancy, that it is difficult to swaying in the decide which kochia is prettiest, in its dress of August greens, or In its dress | of September crimson. Its flowers appear to add nothing to its attract- iveness, but they do scatter sceds SO flavishly that where kochia has been once instalied it is permanently lo- cated. It bas no photospores to open and close like the chameleons to mys- tify ana amaze us by its ability to take on imitative colors, but it has a way of passing from its cool green beauty—from its fern-like graceful- ness to a “burning bush” which makes it a fayorite for various garden uses, and under deft hands it is trained small, taking on the same globed or oval form, giving them in the row, a symmetrical appearance which is al- ways attractive and hence it is fancied for border as well as a decorative plant. A goldfinch has just flown across the half-acre with his cheerful music- ally whistled notes and _that wavy flight of his, and I asked myself why it flies in curves nd his whole tribe flies In curves like the long rollers of the ocean. Thi: is what our aviators call “gildin, This is not wholly peculiar to the goldfinch race, any more than the bee- line of the humming-bird is solely pe- culiar to him. Some birds go in flight as straight as if shot out of a gun, and some move with the labored ef- | Tt of an oarsman. The ducks, | may have noticed, have an oa | flight, while the hawks and gulls and | swaliows sail in curves through the air. gracefully and with indolent ease. What a clumsy flier the pared with the wing-ac robin is com- ion of the blue bird, who in turn belonss to the flute ter-winged tribes. “Experienced bird— students and insect-students, too, oft- identify genuses by their charact- eristic manner of flight when thay pass them afar off and at a high rate of speed on the wing. Out from the heart the mouth speaketh. A western par: pher S “It_is betfer to have gless wife than a horseless carriage.” Now in this strange and squally some men_ have both, world of sin and some men have neither. But what about the nagless husbands. The habit of nag- ging knows no sex, and sometimes where two ‘nz together in tuck, and everiasting shouting unworthy a human soul, d it is dly becoming to a brule. Thinking a partier's faults spoils the thinker — thinking of their good qualities just stirs: the cockles of the thinker's heart. aggers have ne family metimes been bound it is nip-and— it isn't. This about things is We abuse qurselves with our minds more than we Injure the other fellow Think of the good things of life- in preference to other things and there will be more good things in life for ou 5 The young jrobins daily visit the 1 am a stranger in o great city, alone. Returning just now to room at the hotel, after a long, disappointing day, to my fern. Coming in tired, I Aind my room fragrant of them, and I forget the day's bafflements and ‘my own utter weari— ness in the delight of breathing their breath, and cooling my hot face in their freshness. Who can have sent them? Tuckeé 'in among the green I discover a card, with a name written on it—hat of the lonely little steno- grapher who did some work for me yesterday. I remember we talked to- Bether for a few mibutes after our work was done, that she told me her worries, and that ote or two things I tried to say seemed to comfort her. My first feeling is one of regret that she should have wasted a half' day’s earnings on me. Yet—not wasted, perhaps. - Possibly she guessed that I too, am lonely, and she may have felt the need of giving. For the need of reaching out to anothers need is overpowering at times. and not to be repressed by the weight of a day's wage. Out of the bigness of her heart's need she sends me the gift of flowers—with love: and out of my heart’s need I accept—with love—the sweetness of her gift. Iam no longer a stranger, for 1 have found a friend. Tonight, sitting here alone, yet com- forted, my thought goes back to the quiet years I had with mother after father died, when she and 1 were left alone in our old heme to be all the world to each other. As we walked and worked and played together, she used to tell me long, sweet stories about her rollicking childhood and dehlia patch regardless of the cats and they look fresh in their first plu- mage, devoid of the red breast, which covers a rather slim figure. These un— travelled birds are always under the supervision of the mother bird, who does no more than to sit on the perch and watch them. They will not hear the call of the middle states when the Eastern Connecticut robins get to- gether to go south a few hundred miles to spend the winter. They are roosting infants now, and do not know that when the signal is given for de- parture ‘that the night-time will be the time of flight, as it is also a time of great peril, nor do they dream of this endurance test which rounds out the life of a robin, initiates him into the mysteries of the call of another <clime where he first awakens to the bird-hearts’ pulsations for ‘“home, sweet home.” The little innocent has the schooling before him and when he éomes back he will bring a red breast and a cheery note. It has been said that the only hymn of praise to God worthy the name is right living. It is easy to profess to be good, and to practice evil; it is easy to stumble through life and to ask God’s forgiveness every day; it is easy to think ws are something we are not. If we make each life a temple to the Most High, it must be dome by mot only an earnest desire to do right, but honest living and Christian doing. The golden rule is a good foundation for the temple of life, but it is not the temple. Our concreted yesteidays furnish the material .for I, and the artificial blocks may fill_their niches, but they will not count. The heart and consciznce of man are the only true ‘bullders and unless they enter into it life wilk not be what as Christians man is expected to make it. SUNDAY MORNING TALK QUICKENING ONE’S PACE. This is not a message for sensitive, highgstrung, ultra-conscious, over- \\drk?d vérfion.w. ‘They are galloping along plenty fast enough already. As one of them said to me the other day, “I just hate to hear the hymn, ‘Awake My Soul, Stretch Etvery Nerve,’ given out in church, for my nerves are stretched up to the breaking point now.” No, this is a message for the sluggish, the phlegmatic, the slower- footed mortals, with whom I shall be obliged to classify myself after my experience last week. I was walking along a familiar street toward a place which I visit almost daily, when my friend Castleton passed me swinging along at a vigorous pace. “What's your hurry, oid man?” I shouted after him. “Am T not good enough company for you this fine morning? Are you trying to make 4 new pedestrian rec- ord?’ “Are you not going rather slow- er than usual?” was his rejoinder, as he waited for me to overtake him. “T don’t often come this way, and that may be the reason why I am walking o fast. Do you know, parson, that I really think the average man walks faster on a comparatively new road than on a famillar and beaten thor- oughtore > There was my morning lesson. And it was in the nature of a warning. Had I lapsed into a dog trot, as I paced n accustomed beat, day after day? ‘Would I press on with more eager and elastic step If I w treading a less familiar way? Or to drop the similies and get straight at the heart of the matter, should a man now and then examine himself to see whether rout- ine has not taken off the edge of his interest and to a corresponding degres reduced his encrgy and impaired his influence. He has solved life’s problem, who, having found the highest Hl)e‘rd at which he can profitably work without overstrain and without fever and fret can maintain that pace when the nov- elty of what he has been doing has worn off. One of the truest and at the same time one of the most familiar of proverbs is this: “A new broom sweeps clean.” We see that constantly illustrated in the sphere of human ac- tivities, from the mald in the kitchen to the judge on the bench, and. the preacher in the pulpit. Men do not, as a_rule, continue on-the high level of effort ‘and _achievement which they reach at some exceptional moment in their careers. Most men would rather try some new job than to work hard at the old one when it has become dis- | attention | tasteful. I never pay any whatever to the compliments I hear ministers and parishes exchanging that ve lived together pnly, three months. “Wait till you have had two vears to- gether,” 1 always say, “and them come back and tell me how you are getting therefore, to keep fresh and virile and, if you please, popular, one way at least to secure the thorough approbation of your own conscience, is to quicken your pace periodically, to plant your standards from time to time ittie higher up the mountainside. d this is us desirable a course for schools and soceties &nd churches and wther instifutions that are in danger of rossilizing, as for individuals Can you walk a little faster this coming week so that you will not be passed by a man who has no more real vitality than you possess? Can you quicken your intellectual - progress? Can you sharpen your moral percep- tions? Can you love God and your neighbor with more intensity 2 if some emergency came you srobably coul but why not go it now? ~ # THE PARSON. ‘:‘:::m lllld It tM 1 l I:l- onheld in "‘,.1;-' Loarih an ‘s fourth an- exposition will be -great brick state exponition and will be fi u of the state agricultural 2ges. -auee willreach between 100,000 and 200,000 people. from all sections of the coun .,., Ohlo mlnwr proportion of blushed like a ‘m. They were % ol its coal by ery than any other father's favorite, always’” state. “I love them because he did. Just as T love everything he loved, be- cause I Jove him.” “Then they are my favorites, too’ 1 cried, putting my arms around her. “Is it a story? Tell it to me. Mother smiled. She was sitting in her own comfy old rocker, knitting, her slim hands busy with rose—color wools. Her soft hair was chestnut brown, barely streaked with grey. Her gown was of smimmering silk, turned away at the throat, where it was fin- ished with ripples of filmy lace. Al- together, she was, like Dante's Bea- erice, a “most gentle lady.” ‘He had been going in and out among us _ail “From the first, he seemed almost one of ourselves; ~se much so that I thought nothing of his coming. I was brought up with brothers and cousin: and he seemed one more among our many boys. }e was not a boy, though, but quite grown up, al- ready a man. Before the summer end- ed, he had spoken words that changed the whole round ‘world for me. That day he brought me two beautiful car- nations, one red and one white, and asked me to let mm pin them in my hair. 1 was shy about it, and would not, but said I would pin them in my- self. As I stood up in front of the mirror, with my arms raised to my head, he came and stood behind me, and fooked over my shouider, and then we both laughed to each other's re- flection in the glass. He told me how he had loved them always, beginning with the little clove pinks In his grand- father’s old-fashioned garden, going on to the wild pinks of the woods. to gar- den pinks, and all sorts of pinks, until, one day, he saw for the first time— carnations!” : ON ODD Dressers and CHIFFONIERS ' In different styles and finish FOR THE NEXT TEN DAYS From $4.98 up to $22.50 These are -exceptional bargains. REMEMBER we are headquarters for anything you may wish in the FFurniture Line. QUALITY HIGH. PRICES LOW. GCHWARTZ BROS., 9-11 Water St. SCHWARTZ BF.0S. 9-11 Water St. IS JOl2M| L1-6 "SOHE ZL1HVMHIS “I'm glad he was m{ father, and you are my mother,” I cried. = “And that I did not happen to be somebody else instead of your child. Qh, moth— er, what if you and I had had to go through * life—pissing each other!” Mother's eyes - shone. As though speaking to herself, “I have learned.” she said, “that one’s own are one's very own. My children could not have Dbeen born into any other woman's arms. They that belong together can- not miss each other at last, not wholly, nor forever. Her face saddened. Once or twice she opened her lips to speak, then shut them tight. But, at last, “He and I d#a miss each other for a time,” she said. “Partly it was his fault, partly mine. Some one came between us, to make trouble. I ought not to have listened. I ousht to have trusted him. Then, suddenly, he went away. And he did not even say goodbye. “But he came bac] i brought him back “Carnation; umphantl. “Then it is a story,” I exclaimed. Mother shook her head. “Not a story,” shs said, gently, “but a se- cret; his anq méne. It will never be told, daughter mine, but it breathes in the breath of the flowers we love best.” Does The Question of Saving Money and Getting Better Work Interest YOU ? If it does send ybulj orders for Steam or Hot Water Heating, Mother smiled tri- After that, as fong as she lived, I kept carnations, the red and the White, close to the mother’s hand. One day, when I had my arms about her, anl her head lay on my breast, I hold~ ing her as one holds a child, she slip- ped away from my and she did not e e By moie ™t 4 e et e |l Sanitary Plumbing or Repair . tween her and me. We that belong together, can never miss each other. As we did not miss each other along our earth journey, so we shall not miss of meeting on the upper path beyond. And they two, the father and the moti- er, will make room for me. At th very last, remembering the “secret,” I covered her robe with carnations— the loveliest of rich, full, white ones, | the sweetest of rich, deep red. And she carried away two in her hand. | Work to us, and get the best work for the least money. it 1 shall write my little Stenograhper friend tomorrow, and tell her how the breath of carnations breathes of all that life has held for me of warmth Remember the Place. and sunshine, of love and joy and tenderness unspeakable. “ THE RECLUSE. . Robert Brown Estate, 55, 57, 50 West Main Strast. ARTHUR M. BROWN, Manager Telephone 133 Open from 7.30 a. m. to 5.30 p. m. Respect to the Court. Into Judge Lummus’ court in Lynn, came, as The Lynn News tells it, a man ‘with “weather-beaten overalls, a shirt which was widely opened at the throat, and shirt sleeves rolled up above his elbows. The judge looked at the witness sharply. Then he said to Chief Burckes, “Why dbes this man <ome here dressed like this” ‘The question was too deep for the chief to answer, so he side-stepped it. When was he summoned to appear? next asked the judge, and when the chiet replie ‘last evening,’ the judge re- do not care to hear his tes It may have been that the timon; EVERY GRADUATE EMPLOYED Others who have not yet graduated are also holding good positions Jltilrmm. fil Mlfiy L. - Goolest Spot in Town i Feature Picture. “The Great Train Hold-up,” SENSATIONAL W¥ MR, JACK MORRIS, In Mustrated Sonws. Ladies and Children, . ODRAMA Paritone THEATRE UST 28 aEST vAUL)l:VILLE MOTION Pt ,rUREs HANGE no THURSDAYS. 1Pnn 20 20 anw 30 AUG NDAYS 10 Music, NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teacher of Plane, Central Bullding Room 48, CAROLINE H. THOMPSON Teacher of Music % W shington Stry . 2. H. BALCOM, Temcher of Plane. 9 Tharses S, Lessons given ni my residence or the Home. af U gupil Sume mainod ns jsed 8t Behnwenks’ Convervatory n. ect11d r. c. aEER TUNER 122 Prospect St 811, Norwial, ¢ A. W. JARVIS IS THE LEADING TUNER EASTERN CONNECTICUT ‘Fheone 5186, 16 Clairmount sept22a M. HOURIGAN SPEGIAL ! For the next seven days w will sell our stock of Refrigerators Go-Cart Perch Rockers at prices regardless of cost Main Street Tel, Av 62-66 sv2a Have You Noticed the Increased Travel? 1t's & sure sign of good wveathe fine roads. People like to get out the open air. We furnish the bes method, and it you'll tako one of o teams you'll say the sarue. MAHONEY BROS. Falls Avenus mar1ld Try Origntal Sherbert The Best 5¢c Drink . sold in town. Made and served only at Dunn’s Fountain, 50 Main Street. __vaoa MAXWELL For Sale The swellest looking car and gren est bargain ever offersd M eylinder, 45 H. P. oV modern appliance, 1 w base, quick detachable rim Been used carefully, now 18 at of the shop. N. B. We have several cars, Litlls used—prices right. NEW POPE-HARTFORD, M WELL AND OVERLAND CARS for RESULTS THE am oF THE NORWICH COMMERCIAL SCHOOL (Broadway Theatre Builving) We teach the latzst systems in accounting, tlhc system of short- hand that won in the International Contest at Washington in March--GREGG--and the only correct system in typewriting-- TOUCH ¢ Fall Term Begins August 29 CHAS. S. DONNELLY, Principal. tmmediate dellvery. Call for demonstrations. M. B, RING & SONS mar224 High Grade PIANOS Latest Sheet Music AND NEW STYLES WALL PAPER AT Yerrington's 224 2%4 >4 Y 49 Main Sireel

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