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BUSINESS ASSOCIATION'S | INFLUENCE. There was one Mean convention at THE BULLETIN‘S DAILY STORY P G g o R T s THE LILY AND THE SUNFLOWER ¢ Eleanor Craig sat before her small desk, the pen in her hand moving busi- . when a voice broke across the still- of the room so suddenly that she the repub- Hartford at which Men'$ association Horwich Bulletin and Conrier. manifested was when the nomination of an attor- | al was in order. S: in your veins? on has died of the many | it received? cannot satisfy : human _ heart. ‘Fnrm Piscatorial Consider, Eleanor. your life’s soap-bubble visions.” Eleanor extended her hand. and T look at (hin(z,.Q from a different S/ a "I Wlxh ,you a with Harry | When ambi 114 YEARS OLD. montun; 3450 .ntond at the Postoffice at Norwich, as secomd-class matter Telephone Cnlin: Literature : price. 12e & week; Soc young pony galloping up the stairs, the happiness for | out having done any r flying, and a general annnum-wd] heir decision pleasant journey, Mr. said he quxem. 1s about to gallop down a nor caught her by and held her fast Witlimantie Office, l-ln-.. Telephone 210. Nerwich, Friday, Sept. 16, 1910. 1 see you on my return?” | and Eleanor softened. be very glad to see you—as had the other mounced that | was elected “don’t be such in the library said Florence. a convict trying guess he wants to pro- REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET. A 3 | to escape Men's asso- | ion to the d For Govermor, six xnm.un were up, Boyn- > had prom- of Hariford. For lieutenant Govermor, rence clattered down cushion under - Jooking upwards t clouds that were saf too preoccupied Histers woros washed her han went down of New Haven. For Secretary of MATTERW H. of Bridgeport. For State Treasurer, COSTELLO LIPPITT of Norwich. - pre She rose hasti tended her hand. pale and fagile. Then, after Your voyage motioning him | has ou go 0 soon For State Comptrolier, ERADSTRE THOMAS D wish T could return the compli- “1 fear therg h burning of the midnight tion to the work before 1 went I hove the results are gratify- of Thomaston LONG-DISTANCE CARPING. been too muc] aig—Eleano: of Norwalk. Could T but For Representative-at- promise nm when 1 mum_ 'rnm are most ur i e stooped nd picked up her hook from the grass. it you are reading? > kind of literature you 1 CONGRESSMAN HIGGINS' RENOMI-; Eleanor calm- made other face flushed . s the only thing 'm she hesitated, The old Thit bestowed yo and—and— was silent for a hard that I broke down, advantage of the fact | that you are nervous and tired and un- but honestly | want to take ways of rec ) thoronghly path will be a thorny | 0 low HHit nis ¢ tired to want anything but hap- ttae on expen + of the depariment « slender white ne marked assistance to the z turists of his dietrict by having the | and dlstrict for love and ou are a lily, rulgar sunflower strive "—Boston Post. THE REPUBLICAN PL ATFORM rd Taft the A an people have a good : EDITORIAL NOTES. two things predaceasors he old soldiers { recent date hava been purposes of public o the endorsem: e and better publi t: advance to the cause of widened efforts i . more generous relief of suffer isan objection ventures a 11 —t‘nf\n« ing end most heart 5 done by the . prevention y the noble He has prep nee Jlrl changes in our own the disturbance siness inevitably at- | accordance wi spirit of the twentieth century, option of a practical measure f. ion and eontrol of public ser ions in sueh manner that | > people shall be the | protected m‘u ble utilitie v to his tactf MR. GOODWIN UPON THE RESULT ern and be fu and their shareholders legislative | part cment are not antagon establishment of $5.000 as the | tion of damages for death should | _misr .~;.rn<sr a- (md pure pa ibjected to peril sre adopted should have the protec- | an employers’ 3 sives to the enactment s humane end Connecticut to be set aside only thirds of each branch 1 opened on such es as to win the amendment fusing to be > should give ticable into dis- | Goodwin as our candidate for governor his colleagues | et and our ,-‘,. republi commonyvealth Entertaining the Profession. ism wishes to blanke t who runs chief. to be label | because they and has aston- fied them by ! S more than e gets help from comprehensive rep- fiddle-faddle pon the ticket Rodin Found Tt eost Hoke S Manuscript spread $112,000 how the purity prohisliton 2 model and never We send the great home with a fesling adals and onur regards k a thousand pardons. cannat be said new Maine s gees Arkanes- that as went 1 deficiency of | s the jungs fessionals takes an artist on his bare merits. The careless crowd, on the other hand, is apt to be influenced un- duly by the non -essential and the ex- traneous. So with l?t? ature and art. Showy humbug succeeds. The legitimate, reached by “straight” means, is likely to bore. Moral: Humor the public.— Chicago Record-Herald. TROUT*ALMOST KILL A DOG. Animal's Shaggy Coat. Wallace Short has a dog. is Skip. It was isn’'t any more. Its name long-haired, but it This morning it went fishing. = Short said no, but the dog said ves, and then it took a flying leap and with a bow-wow of delight landed in the center of one of the peols of | Frank Drumboller's trout hatchery on the Tranquility turnpike. The dog {was a bit hungry, and when It jumped it had its gaze fixed on a large trout that had been basking in the sun, with one eye on Skip and the other on a bread crumb near by. The dog had a long shaggy coat when it entered the pool. It had seen but one, and no means of knowing or even suspecting there were 3,000 other trout in the same pool, all full grown and hungry, for it was feeding time. Scarcely had Skip struck the water when it began to bark for help. Short and Drumbeller ran to the edge of the pool and what they saw made their eyes pop. The thousands of trout had massed themselves about the dog. and swim- ming around and around had engulfed him in a perfect picsatorial whirlpool. Occasionally ome of the large fish would make a side leap and take a bite at the dog. Skip was in a bad way when the men arrived. The silent mass of fish gradually would have forced him under the water. He had gone in long-haired, but came out like |a hairless Mexican dog. The secret was that Skip suffered from a skin affection, and his master had rubbed him with olive oil, appetizing to the fish. So they almost skinned him.— Y. Press. Had Him Treed. He bad never fished before, and his rod was new and shining with re- splendent varnish. Faultlessly attired, he was whipping a trout stream when, by some odd chance, he got a bite. The fisherman had hooked a nine- pounder from the way the line strain- ed. He was not playing the fish at all. With rod held straight ahead he was slowly and steadily reeling him in. How he managed to hold the fish was beyond me. Presently the fish was directly be- v the end of the rod. Did he stop? kept on reeling the fieh in, and ust as 1 reached the water's edge the fish's head touched the tip. The man even tried to pull him through the ring . Just then he saw me standing on shore waving my arms. He turned to me with a bewildered look amnd sald: “What shall I do now ?” The only thing you can de new,” T said, “is to climb up the pole afier him."Chicage Tribune old time New Haven democrat 3 e last night: “The names of | Baldwin and Buckinghem, the two | B's, strike me as a reminder of the Busy B campaign at the time when | the ticket of Hobart B. Bigelow of this city and William H. Bulkeley of Hart- ford stumped the state with the repub- lican gubernatorial campalgn in 1880. The moment they were nominated the republicans took up the slogan of the Busy B’s, and they kept up a hustie on this slogan until the end of the campaign. Perhaps this slogan of Baldwin and Buckingham may prove the winner in this campaign. Who | can tell?—New Haven Journal-Courier. Labor's Fo The great curse of the laboring man | is intemperance. It has brought more | desolation to the wage earners than strikes, or war, or sickness, or death. | It is a more unrelenting tyrant than the grasping monopolist. It has - | caused littie children to be hungry and cold, to grow up among evil asso- ciates, and to be reared without the | knowledge of God. It has broken up more homes and wrecked mere lives than any other cause on the face of the earth.—Car- dinal Gibbons. The Champion Eater Weakens. This is from the Maryville (Ga.) Tribune about “The Champion Eater”: “Parnell's champion eater was in Maryville Tuesday testing his storage capacity. He was here a year ago and performed a pretty good gastronomical tunt, storing away one and a half gallons of ice cream and two dozen oranges. This year he finds that he is out of condition, the best he could do when he visited one of the city's |ice cream refreshment establishments being the disposal of one and haif gallons of ice cream. When he looked at the oranges he had to back up and | admit that he wasn't the man he was a year ago.” Baldwin and Fisher. Speaking of Professor Fisher's opin- ion of Judge Baldwin that he is man of the past,’ and remote ‘in | ideas, ir to ask whether moteness is anvthing that alleged re- difference between mature judgment { and hasty judgment. The Springfield Republican thinks there is perhaps “a {little too much disposition at this | time to chuck all the wisdom of the past into the scrap heap.” It also intimates that if Professor Fisher knew Professor Baldwin better his ap- ehensions might be removed—Hart- fora Times Have No Regrets. Attacks upon the rich are hardl likely to make any of the rich feel so have the money.—Phila- delphia Pre A Surprising Confession. “We cannot great leaders.’ What! Ar added there two? the Colonel — Springfield Not Guity. With all his faults the American In- dian can never he accused of being a high financier.—Washington Star. A New England girl earns $100 a menth growing popcorn and making it into a kind of confaction Lenox Soap is yellow, but it makes a snow-white suds—a suds that sparkles and glitters and makes clothes and dishes and woodwork and pots and pans as clean as a whistle and as bright as sunshine, Lenox Soap— “Just fits the hand” Whirlpeol and Rip weather they sent from u night in this town. sense to see them at home again, but wish they had mer time back at wherever they were imagining they were having a good time.—Rich- | mond Times-Despatch. nav his wife. Odessa that the local to 31, clude 12 sections to be devoted to ag- riculture. breeding of various animal agricultural ments, making and peasant industries. standards and judgments,” it is more than the i sonable. fford to be without the 3 SHOWS DALY 230,7 And 8.%5 Vaudevills THE KALMOS LEILA_CAUTNA €1TH & PROCTOR'S [ ® "LAuneviie The Original Mar; CTOLE & COLEMAN CoMING NEXT WEEK The Laughing Horse — MELD OVER — THE EAGLIE AND THE GIRL. Greatest Sensational Novelty. Jane from the Buster Brown Co. Musical Nonsense Vaudeville's Greatest Comedy Offering THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SEPT. 15, 16, 17. CADETS DE GASCOYNE HIGH CLASS OPERATIC SINGING ACT. BENSLEY, Unique Foot Juggler. BERRY & BERRY, Eccentric Comedy Musical Dua SHARP & TUREK, in a Southern Specialty. RUTLEDGE & PICKERING Present a Rural Comedy Sketch “My Boy Jim. DILLON will present “The District Attorney ” MATINEES at 2.15—10c, 20c. EVENINGS at 8.15—10c, 20c, 30c. ENTIRE CHANGE OF PROGRAMME MONDAYS AND THURSDAYS. SPECIAL—Saturday afternoon, Sept. 17th, Children’s Souvenir Matinee. A Pencil Box and Pencils to the first 500 children. Swallows in Richmond, Va. Richmond is very kind "k home, there was left the Wants Real Fighting. A midshipman resigned it Jook: ious to do some Herald. as it he were real fighting.— Spoken Like a Trust Magnate. We are frank to confess that the Indian is that we are not enough to do jt—Topeka Capital. John F. Grout writes i Russian Consul cultural and economic Ouman, provinee of Valhynia, have or genized an exhibition for August next. The exhibition will machinery horticulture, and forestry, impl butte to the re- turning summer swallows and is giv- ing them a little touch of the sort of had while they were ab- Until these people 2ot | not one hot | We are glad in a hot old sum- the Springs, or that from the in order to spend more time with | anx- Y tha only thing that keeps us from robbing smart | & in- Latest Novelties Chignon Puffs Cluster Curls «.__for the New Coiffures Gibson Efflilet (o. 67 Broadway ’'Phone 505 The Goodwin Corset and Lingerie MODELS FOR EVERY FIGURE. CORSETS ALTERED AND REPAIRED. A GOOD IN VEST MENT for any are sofled be them dyed : nother shade. 1 they have been submitted to t We are experts at the business, an can often assure good results others have failed. Our work is fully done and our charges ve Lang’s Dye Works, Telephone. augiod | the home of | traits of your fancy waistcoats that ond cleansing is to have But do not he too sure they cannot be cleaned un 157 Frankiin Si. " DONT WORRY It Makes Wrinkles. ‘Warry eover ill-heaith wrinkles, that make you than you are. If you are sick, don't worry, but go To do | this we repeat the words of thousands | of other former sufferers from woman. ly fiis. similar to yours, when we say, about it to make ycurseli well. Aae Viburn-0. It 1s a wonderfal female remedy, ad you will admit if you try 1, Directions fer 'is ass are printea in with every bottle. Frics #ix languag 8125 at druggists. FRANCO-GERMAN CHEMICAL 108 West 129th Sireet. New York wersld QUALITY in work should slways Le considsred especially when it costs no more than Skilled men ars Our prices tall the the inferfor kind. employed by us. whole story. STETSON & YOUNG. may2>” does yow Bealth no good, and merely cauaes Jook olase Coz mMusic. INSTRUCTION for Violin, Cello, Mandolin EUGENE WALLNER, Director of the Academy Musical Club. sept16d 274 Washington St. NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teacher of Plane. Central Buflding. Room 48, CAROLINE H. THOMPSON Teacher of Musilc shington Street. F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect St 511, Norwialy, Cs A. W. JARVIS IS THE LEADING TUNER IN EASTERN CONNECTICUT. ‘Fhone 518-8, 16 Clairmount Ava sept22d Tel. L. H. BALCOM., Teacher of Plane. 39 Thames St. iven at my/fesidence or the pupil e method as used at Schawenks Conservatory, Ber~ lin. oct11d Lessons Individuality Is What Counts Ia Photography. Bringing out :he real personalit; the fine joints In character, the litt that make us what we are. | Toned down by the natural spirit of |an artist into perfect accord. Not & [thing of paper and pasteboard’ with ;& ready-made look. If you want a photo of your reay | self, or what your friends ses to love and admire, call on LAIGHTON, The Photographer, oppesite Norwich Savings Soctety. augisd WE ARE NOW READY to take care of all your (Carriage and Wagon Repairing and Painting, Carriage and Automobile Trimming and Upholstering The Scott & Clark GORPORATION, 507-515 North Main Stree!. NOTICE Or. Louise Franklin Miner Is now locatsd in her new office, Breed Hall, Rouvm 1 Office hours, 1 to 4 p. m Telsphone 660. augl?7d e WHAT'S NEW e THE PALACE CAFE Step in znd see us. FRANK WATSON & CO, mar3d 78 Franklin StreeA 1647 Adam’s Tavern 1861 offer to the public the finest standar® brands of Beer of Kurope and Amerioa, Bohemlan, Pilsner, Culimbach Bavariam Beer, Busy' Pale sud Burten, Mueir's Bcotuh Alu, Guinuess' Dublin _ Steat, C. & C. imported Giuger Ale, Bumkes Hul p. 8 Ale, Fiank Jones' Nourlah- ing Ale, Sterling Bliter Ale, AGReusas Budweiser S:orlita ana Pabat A, A ADAM, tlerwisn Tewn. Telephone 447-22. irsze NEWMARKET HOTEL, 715 Boswell Ave. First-ciara Wines, Liguers and C! T al Meals ani Welch Rarebit order. Johs Tuckia Prop