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Genuine Expert Beel FANCY NATIVE LAWMB NATIVE MILK-FED VEAL WITH LIVERS ANDySWEETBREAD BAND'S A-1 SAUCE MAJOR GRAY’'S INDIA CHUTNEY ROCKY FORD MELONS SWEET JERSEY WATERMELONS Preserve and Pickle PEARS PEACHES PLUMS FOMATOES PEPPERS ONIONS GHERICINS CAULIFLOWER BPICES AND HERBS omers Bros. septid DR. KIMBALL has removed his alifice to 2 Ereadway, Wauregan Block Hours—2-4 p. m. Sur > Te! SPECIAL For Today On y Star Dance Folio Ne. 10 Just Publ 43¢ Your only this folie 4 price. th We have made up anether of POPULAR MU'SIC at 2 cop- for 150 THE PLAUT-CADDEN CO. Plaut-Cadden Building Music Department, 2nd Floor JUST RECEIVED [ | a mew importation ol “ White Castile Soap| 10¢ a cake at ‘ DUNN’S PHARMACY,} 50 Main Street. | ssptaa | Hgiej_Yn@Hgtumed Home? H tha anning Wall ers e Curtains, Shades Goed's. Draper: nd o1 Wiliow SL. trical Dep’t., Alice G as & Elec Building ALABASTINE The Sanitary Wall ('oalinq‘ White and sixteen shades| rplied to ar For Salo By FEED C. CROM Stere ELL 87 Water Strest septTdaw We Serve the Bes! ICE CREAM and CAKE in the cily in our Ladies’ Grill Room. WAUREGAN HOUSZ, The Parker -Davenpori Co., Props. Ihiuvid l-i;;kel l firaxs bo. Tableware, Chandeliers, Yacht Trimmings and such things Refinished. “» ’7 Cheetnus Bt. Norwici, Conis Ght,l&umtig. Norwich, Wedn ept. 14, 1910. ay, It is not daybreak now until 3.36. Hot weather will prolong the clam- bake season. Motorists reveling September re s. in the fine There was a dense haze until after o'clock Tuesday morning. Coon suppers will soon be timels 15 an occasional coon is being brought Miss Elna M. Doty will receive piano s at her residénce, 41 Cliff street, Today in the church calendar is the ast of the Exaltation of the Holy Vesper services will be resumed in St. Patrick's church next Sunday aft- ernoon, Most. of the cottagers at Fastern Point' are plann stay later than usual this fall s Katherine ¢ mbert, manu- Tadtirer OF Haié B Mabrey’s, of the shore towns are doing damage number of blackbir ern Connecticut people who at- ¢ Eucharistic congress in Montreal are coming home. of State Matthew H. Rog- ples of the new bal- sending samples s to officials who desire them Althou s er too warm for a . trade. the dealers report that there is a falr demand for oysters. In the leading cities of Connecticut 65 bullding permits were 18- Thurs s the day set for the an- nual state tournament and sheep bar- . er of the Bristol Gun ciub at th grounds in East Bristol Low Rates to California. The “Sunset Man” will be here A fornta and the low ratos A J. H. Glynn, N E. A, 170 ton street, Boston.—adyv. Springfield Republican notes t Miss Helen Lathrop Perkins, who p ling the choir of the as opened a studio in A recent gift to the Otis library tter's fasciculi the memorial The M nan of the Tea Cup | nn, Wa are closing a success- Arst s the former Gibard Kk e site of the old Pe- juse, New London. The Anchor- : has be 1 patronized hroughout the summ Very Low Colonist Rates ' and far L. P. outh Bldg. o 4or te from east to the sou L, at 2.45 and was admired n Connecti- ptoiad X,v-l&l tent of the ¢ and Dr Dece ter t R. off NEW NORWICH FREE ACADEMY BUILDING. NORWICH BULLETIN. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 19 10 of $100, the t be obtal income the free people o large an Heading the list with a contribution The Bulletin will receive sub- yout §2,000 towards the essity of a new bu g d for a long time, and d as long as possible, but e full amount of its cost can ned from outside, the of rom the funds that will have d in payment will greatly demy. It i believed th ion dollars has been pened by the Academy in fur these advantage It has cost the Academy about $75 a ear for each pupil, and from the pup sum of § s been received, ing v t of 360 a which each pupil has reccived as cost of instruction by gifts of b tors an As the i each year, the cost of maintenance cases, and were it not for gifts and legacies from time to time it would be impossible to carry it on. For I years, while the income s i ite, the trus- tees and friends school raise he school and any appeal to th been and con- sums annual he value of the training the elved, not at the expense of or r parents, but from gifls of the liberal hearted lletin ed to re- nd all contributions, both e Bulletin leads the list with Contributions Morning Bulletin $100.00 DEDICATORY EXERCISES = e has| FOR NEW BUILDING. " | Siater Hall Held a Large Gathering of i — Former Pupils and Friends of the R« Edse ey of Bast Lyms Institution—Dr. Luther of Trinity M Burton College Makes Address of the Occa- : sion. Rinker s e With Slater filled for the tion to their home on Washington | President Dr. Lowelly SR Her vubats Trumbul for Boston. where he will vis s | er, Nicholas, while transacting Miss Ruth Lord has returned to her home on Washington street, after spending the month of August w Miss Sarah Loring at Watch Hil TENNIS TOURNEY. Four Mcre Matches Played on Tuesday Afterncon Four more g n the teunis sir gles h itnament on th iris on Tuesday afternoon wers played. D, Brown defea ymington -1 and §-2 Oleott won from Gilbert §-0 and 6-2 Browr two from Alling & 6-0, w game hetween Miteh and ¥ Carey reauifed in two to for the former, 6-1 and 6-2 ing: Foss won his two gamss from Stock- well o= Mondzy, 6-1 and 7-5. fe that the Lewallyn Pratt wing statement regarding the new building S. Luther, Re Principal Henry ent Dr. Lewellyn Pratt heart- Iy welcomed the large gathering and roferred to the fact that the vear had been a busy one getting ready for the transition from the old to the new, but it was desired to ask their friends to join them in the opening of the new iilding in the simple exercises plan- ned, as thought best to ark thi gress in a fitting manner. Rev. Dr. Samuel H. Howe, pastor of Park Congregational church, was call cd upon to invoke the Divine bless Under the direction of F. W. Lester the quart )t the Broadway Congre gativnal church, Mrs, Charles Tyler Bard, Mrs. Fredérick S. Young, Louis A. Wheeler and Walter F. Lester, sang Great Is Our Lord, by Foster. Dr. Pratt’s Statement. then made the several vears it has besn mani- to the Free Academyv corporation erectad fifty-five building fund for the new Free | Academy building, which is occupied today for the first time Dy pup Costinz approximately $100,000, th has already been by subs tion and gifts the sum of about $5: leaving about $48,000 to be the trustees are anxious to have the debt cleared up as soon as possible, in order to remove the encumbrance and to permit the great educational wor to move along unhampered. Duri the existe of the institution it is conservatively estimated that the tax payers have been saved $1,000,000 in | taxes by not having been required to main a high school The my was opened in the of 183 1 has been free to Norwic with exception of small fee of $15 a year. since ring a prief time, when, owing to a period of financial depression and a failure of a portion of the income of the school, it v cessary to charge a larger su close the school. That trouble was soon met by a liberal subscription on the part of the citizens of Norwich During all these fifty-four years the | taxpayers have not been cailed upon to pay one cent to furnish ec above the grammar grades. It is es timated that at least a tax of two mills the doilar would have been neces- sary to found and maintain a hig school, which even then would not have been upon so broad a basis or | £ many advantages as years ago had BULLETIN'S FREE ACADEMY FUND. | Subscriptions Will be Received From the Public for the New Building for Which $48,000 More is Needed— | “*- Amount Already Raised Is $5'2,000—Opportunity} for Philanthropy at Home—Dedicatory Exercises | ‘With Address by Dr. Luther—Description of Building. | had its day. ¥or a long time it had been overcrowded, and was present deman Three y opened a the time did subscription but owing to the financial condition of | riptions from the public in behalf of | no longer sanitary or safe under the | ds. ago ths for corporation rebullding, not eecure a sufficient men and women doing great things in the world who look back to this school as the place where they received in- spiration toward high endeavor; of those also who had gone out into | the broader life and who had taken in- | to the unseen world the principles and | the ideals held before them during their | happy years in the Norwich Free Acad- A Guiding Influence. I cannot help thinking also of my own feelings on that anniversary day which T tried to explain to vou as T | recounted how in my own bayhood this | school had stood for something great- than then existed elsewhere and had backoned the boys and girls of my was suggested by the | schools of that day. Now we are in a different frame of mind, not forgetful of the past ,indeed who can forget it! but thoughtful of the present and_ especially thoughtful of the future. ; we are not forge little country time toward a fuller development than | light, and the automobile, which prob- ably would have killed him befors he reached his plit¢e af business, however. This is a trite subjéct, Note partieti~ Jarly that I have said 1othing about fiyirg machines. Almost aquithly trite fs the correlated fact that men’s in- fellectiial efvitonment has also beed enlarged until §t i% scarcely recogniz ble. 1 should like to talk to you about an hout on the changed attituds of man- a due to the general acceptance of what we eall the doctrine of evolution, but I let that go with a mere mention. What 1 am gotting at is this—that the Jrocess:s and methods of education have been changed with other things a8 the world has gone on, and that, however we may regret it, we must pive up one after another of our cherished theories and fohow the Z Gheist fearlessly wherever he sha lead. Requirements Are Greater. I do mot mean particularly to urge the necessity of keeping pace with new discoveries in science and in litera- ture, of weicoming new branches of study and of leading our children along paths Which we ourselves are only explorers, although I do mean this, but what I have in mind is most of all the question that has been forging its way to the front with refersjice to the real principles and aim of the educa- tion of our children. When thig school was started it was possibla for an am- bitious student here and later in col- lege to obtain a comprehensive survey of the whole field of human knowledge Today such a_thing is scarcely possi- ble. ~When this school was founded it was true that a hoy who was grad- uvated from it might be d to be fairly well prepared for the duties o citizenship. 1f the same ig true today ix because the Norwich Free Acade- my is now a very different thing rom the academy of 1836. This is because it is more difficult now to be a good citizen than it was fifty years ago, /d s a_result of that greater difficulty | the Norwich Free Academy must have | a larger equipment, must =mbrace in | its curriculum a broader field of study. its pupils more thoroughly must tr and more extensively than ever before. Tt is because you realize this that we | are here today celebrating an advanc | in those directiona I have sus- | gested. | Good G w izenship Principles Unchanged | We are not forgetful, of course, th | the principles of good | unchanged and unchangeable. patriotism, self-sacrifice, those have ways been essential they are essential row, and forever will be. But in orde: Honasty, that honasty, patriotism and seif-sacri- fice may have their perfect work, it in | necessary t our graduates shall know a great deal that could not have been taught them fifty vears ago. They ful of the past. There is nothing mi more pathetic than the removal or struction or conversion other u must understand not only what civic but how civic right est be worked for, how righteousness is, n | 2ousnes; | You Can e— Best Afford :. one sone that has 15¢. the sake of your comfort and your complexion, come to know the always effective and incxpensive ears’ SOAP most power for good.’ For Cake for the Unscented ammmeme Miss Mabel mer., Miss Ruth way home fr sence in Eur r brother Howard, of Mason, whos York, vaudev have met wi United vaude: to go through circuit. A Dbig lot found been counted YOU business i account. desirable us count customers. All Dep: Shetucket. Incidents in Society day from Roiterdam, Holland. Miss Fanny Bliss and Miss Edith M. Bliss, who made a brief visit with their return from a summer of travel in Europe, have arrived at their home on Lincoln avenue. pair, is in town for a few da These Nei in Atlanta Many small account Thresher from Mystic, where she spent the sum- has returned K. Northrop is on her om several months' ab: pe, having sailed Satu in Brooklyn, N. Y. on Member of Crack Team. the team of Howard and m the Broadway, New lle managers call a great s They th great success on, the ville circuit and are soon the west on the Orpheum eighborly Georgian, of bad eggs have been They must have in the census.—Savannah ARE MISTAKEN if you assume that because your s small you cannot have the convenience of a bank are more han one large one. Let you among our many artments of Banking. The Thames Loan & Trust Co, St, Norwi:a, Conn. Me septitd lons at Rallion’s Made R. C sept14Ws LASSES and Repaired BOSWORTH, Optometrist and Prescription Optician, Room 5 Shannon Building, Norwich, Conn. Clocks, Artic! Gifts, Largest Lowest ) sum to warrant undertaking the task.| of an old school building. To me th can most surs be attained. _Your Some additions having been made to | cling about such an edifice or the place | pupils must know something of the the subscription list—although not| where it stood associations and Sug-| machinery « overnment. something m morz than half what was re- | gestions as holy as any that can be| of the mechaniém of party organiza- quired—It was decided a year ago that | found in a _church or in the greatest|tion, They must learn about those [it was imperative to begin at once.| cathedral of them al Ts there v | things which make for municipal wel- Accor. ihe bullding that 1s opencd | sweeter picture than that in Ian Mac- | fare so that they can understand why today and that will be occupled by the | jaren's story of the old Scotch school- | city government in the Unite tes school tomorrow was commenced. | hous: that made way for a modern | is so often a humiliation to Am ¢ A large number of the best modern | pyilding and whose simple methods | and how the shameful conditions wh choolhouses had been visited by the | were displaced by modern organization? | obtain in many places ¢an best be im- commiitee of the trustees and the ar- | yio tells how from time to time mid- | proved. | chitects chosen, and much study had | ji, azed and elderly men would go and | = Now all this rush of new studies Bean, Sixen, that s bullding with mod- | sidnd'for o one time silent amons tha | which cannot be lgnored has come co- Academy and of Norwich might be se- | 5°0% There the, swmpler sohoo oo | e necessity. Not only it me cured. Tt had been expected that a| Ul ARt AT B SNEY BY! Tmany | dimeult now o be @ good citizen than large part of the old building could be | Jlronging memories. Who knows | It ever was before, but it is obviously L s L © D¢ what high hopes and burning aspira- | more difficult to become a good work- impossible and that nothing wou! iy | man than it ever was before. And meet the raquirements of the se but | 1O L Seneen IS T L Gie asnnc] ) en 1 3 A“.\- kman I have in mind a new building throughout his has DUASS SSRRL .86 - now,. glving Wi g Bedoic oca n 1o which m devote b T something finer, if not better? Who | €very vocation to which men d ’]’};,n L "f ‘l“t\ T.:n‘;) = s P Hownd Trom (e folnis ) simple | Yer, the doctor. ‘vur-‘ rgyman \;w en- for the five hundred and Toce seholars, | 10rDing? Who can 'tell iow far. the | Eineer, the hanker, the raiload mian to have schoolrooms abundantly light- | destinies of the natlon have been de-| O T TSI (0 Tl VoV "those wh ed and ventilated, to guard in every | termined within the walls of the| &80 of evers sort: ves and those way the health and safety of the|Schoolhouses of the land? Who dare | 10 " the poorest paid tasks acholars, to make it possible for the | Suess what records are scored upon the | PWIDIeSE e | teachers to do their best work, and to | Very walls of these places where boys | (& WUCH | suggested th2 best i provide increased fac i2s for the sci- | @nd girls have learned sor small part 'y s can be done is a far more difi- entific, convenient and practical in- |Of the wisdom of the pasi ndertaking. T say, than ever be- lay the impression upon wax cy | inders ana aisks made by the manifold | voices of mankind or by instruments of music may be seen by the human eye, and the sounds, articulate and musical, may be reproduced at will for | the human e What the phonograph | does for the human senses any mate- | rial thing may do for those keener senses which we can imagine but which | we cannot gain. The recitations and | the lecture and the singing and the hings good and e that have been | aid within the walls of the school- | houses do somehow stamp themselv upon the very substance of the build- | ings themselves, so that in the re-| moyalL ‘of 8 solhouse one destroys records that would never be availabie. | indeed, but which to the imagination | are_priceless, Nevertheless, old things must pas: a and also new things and better | | things must take the places thus made | vacant. If there is a tinge of regret at the removal of what has served its | | purpose that need not cool or | with which we welcome the things that | | are to be. And so when a great insti- | tution like this takes a long step for- e TA TR RaIE e ot Ao ward, when a community says to 3V. DR. LEWEILLYN z children, “You shall have better things, | oy pr pPLAVED Sl i iherway: Of Sisntlithe ana ja fairer opportunity, and a_broader| RE * PEAVEL 5 oR {dona. will meet with your commenda- | fathers” we all rejoice and congratu- | (ipried on with more careful study in tion. We are confident, too, that the [late the people to whom such things| (.01, zo0d people of Norwich 'will give to us | ar m t | The Age of Specialization. way the debf o rred _ So it comes to this, that it is no Sl 558 S francuried | Maintaining Positon of Leadership. | 1onger posaibie or e oaanana dren. The Acc \lways been | We of Eastern Connecticut rejoice|try to teach little of | the of Norwich, and Norwich |0 see this historic school maintaining | everything, that proce I e its position of leadership in the region | is Inefficiency. We hear a great de | Much credit is due to the of which it is an educational center.|of talk about the “all round man. [ who have wrought with suct In a fair city, redolent wit very | Fifty years ago we were using all superintended the work wit essence of Ne land, from whose |round bullets, but we are not using | itance. and to the builders 2 | rocky b med soldiers who help- | them now: we have discovered that so faithfully discharged their obliga-|ed maintain and build and enlarge|they are lacking in penetration. The | tions ana so considerately that all mas | their country, it is fitting that there man who is just as good at one thing ‘“,‘. don without accident hould be a school which for all time 1 il r may generally be | We wish to express our thanks to the | shall keep pace with the swiftest and | described as just as feeble in one | principal. ‘the ‘teachers and the schol hest development of civilization. | thing as he n unether. Briefly, ars for the cheerful and aitient way | There is this fine thing about the Nor- | man d has reached the point where | they have endi the wich Free Academy, that with all the | they must bec whether they like es of past year, den iy and the sense of public re- | it or not regation of spec | r thanks to the alumni | sponsibility which marks the ' Ameri- | Ists: and the atest educat | have co-operated with | can high school at its best there clings | broblem centers around the question | 12rous St ription to Iso something of the pec | Wh and how shal ion in | ildin immd. and we arge here of the old fashioned study be NG arlier | reserve of thanks for those whe nd academy. This atmosph question, namely this some- | planning 1id us in the futur is something which is scarcely des | thing of learning of the past which ! In conclusion he stated that it | able and which baffles analysis, but I|can proy v be laid aside by most si the openin of the old school building | think it is true that, whatever its com- | dents? 1Is it worth while that our boys "'H\r’nu er> were present | ponents or its nature, it indicates a |and girls shall devote a great _Trinity, Weslevan | Jittle higher reverence for learning as | their time for several years to studies sities. Four cars | such and an appri ation of the high- which are obviously those of an an celebration of the hlest things in intellectual life not com- | cient culture rather than of modern v the presidents of OWN | monly found in institutions of similar | efficiency? 1 anLex myself by say- inity_ware here and represen rade, but different history. It will e | N8 that I think they may prof | tives from We n and Yale. Today |the crowning glory of this institution |in most cases lay aside such studies, | we are glaa to welcome President Lu- | if it maintains this academs Spirit. nat|@nd as this opinion will doubtless ther of Trinity college. in struggling against the new things | (Continued on Page Seven. ) Brocidost Euthere: Address: that are here and are coming, but in connection with these novelties | Calling attention to the invarse ratio in attendance of the college presidents | Amazing Developments in Half Cen- | | strength. he remarked that they wer A At by ar e | what was coming forth. Having four- | wiat will he taught in this academsy |ished in_the half century. only W0 |guring this coming academic ysar was|Are in Full Bloom Now — But You | found it necessary to attend four yvears | onirdi " o arort NE ACACEmIc year was g | a0, ‘ana now T am here alone, said | SRUTELY undreamed of by the revered | Needn't Tolerats Them at All— | President Luther, as you are showing | b ams when ot oub his work here How ta Remove Quickly. | further aigns of extension and IM-|Those of us who have been allve to fer o< hie aad=d that e conld now see | i e umazing development of| They are hideous things, those faciay e th fod of our vears staud|preciles, but casy to remove with i | aghast and slmost tremble when we R ) g Continuing. President Luther said [ think of it all The whole rmaterial | A\,H:M‘ Lo \j‘ Al Lt anniversar hool. | the morhing out of beds which would |Jamaica Plain Mas sl LT Oure g e e an D55L | have made our graniperents stave 1o | would be a failure, like all the rest I've upon things that had ben achieved. We | amazement when they were children. | fied: but no indeedl | had not used were” thinking of the principals and | Many of us take a bath tow many | the Whole jar when you could see the teachers who had labored faithfully | pathiubs do yeu suppose there wera|change. Now my face is free from here for half a century, of the lon |in Norwich in 18567 The braakfast|freckles, which I could never say be- procession of hove and girls whe had | would present more novelties to the | fore.” received here their preparation for the | ancient whom I have nmoned out| Get a two-ounce package of Kintha | worlc of their lives ar for the higher |of the past than would the county fair | (extra strength) at tailet goods counter studiee which called many of them |of his day. a great many more. 1 need|of Lee & Osgood and see how quickls to the colleges and professional schools. | not dwell upon his surprise at the|it will remove even the worst freckles. We were th! ing of the small army of trolley car, tha telephone, the electric Get your momey back if it fails FERGUSO sapti4d Sterling Silver, Silver Depositware, Cut Glass, Etc. Useful and Desirablz les for Wedding Finest Goods Stock Prices John & Geo, B Biss The No-Korn Shoe for Tender Feet. Eace and Congress. $3.50 N & CHARBONNEAU, Franklin Square, = N Per or! Stre sept10s OTICE Platt Avenue will be closed frem Broad Street untii further notice. to Warren der et Commissioner E. C. LILLIBRIDGE OUR STORE WILL BE OPEN TONIGHT. Remember this is Hair Pin night. We give them out at 8.30. Come and get one. 500 Pairs of Nottingham Lace Curtains $2.50 Quality Fer $1.39 Pair A manufacturer’s close out of drep patterns enables us to offer you one of the best Lace Curtain bargains we had. This must seem doubly attractive to you as it comes at the beginning of the Fall houses cleaning season. There are about five hundred pairs in the lot, perfect and designs vary from small, neat Renaissance and Cluny lace effects, to the bolder type of fine Nottingham lace curtain patterns. Not a pair the lot worth less than $2.00, and mere than half of them actually werth $2.80 a pair. Sale starts this morning. early and secure a good selectio. (Third Floor) have ever Come Last Call on ‘Wash Dresses And Suils It is our intention to clear out thess lines and with that object in view we have priced the balance of our steok at ridiculously low prices. Women's Wash Suits, white and ol ors, values up to $8.98—choice $3.98. Women's White Lingerie Dress others in figured dimities, value $5.98 —choice $3.00. Women's Linen Dresses, solid eolors, blue, pink, lavender, value $10. choice $4.75. 36-inch White Wash Coats, $3.00—choice $1.50. valus Women's One-piece House Dresses, fine lawns, prettily trimmed, valuc 3169 and $1.95—choice $1.48. Big Reductions on Muslin Kimonas and Dressing Sacques Small lot of assorted patterns, reg- 19¢ quality—choice 8c; regulap quality—choice 15e. 50c Dressing Sacqu quality—choice 3%¢ Ralance of ou choice 25¢ and all our $1.25 and $1.50 quality r 65c. One lot of Children's Chambray Dresses, one to five years, regular $1.00 choice 50c. | The Reid & Hughes Co. We Recover Furniture and Do Carpet Laying, septl4daw Norwish Business College Day and Night Classes NOW IN SESSION. New students enter every week. Individual Insfruction. More positions than grad- uates. Write or call. W. E. CANFIELD. Derma Viva Whitens the skin at once If used in place of powder—has effect but does not show. Eruptions, Freckles, Moth or Liver Spots. Brown arms or neck made whiter at once. Price 50c. Sold by UTLEY & JONES THERE Is no advertisin Esatern Conneoticut far Buainass latin Teduiia. — " Fon Bui?