Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 20, 1910, Page 4

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aarfizuh Bulletin and Confief. 114 YEARS OLD. A s e PLE. There has been no class of swind- lers more successful in this country have taken millions out of New Eng- land, never to return. The Mining congress is In earnest to make an eud of this kind of swindling and it has succeeded in getting six states to pass a law of its own draughting, and is pressing it upon other state legisla- tures, The principal section of the Conn., as cond-class matter, Telephome Calls: Bulletin: Businees Office, 480. Balletin! itorial Rooms, 35-8, Bulletin, Job Office, 3i Willimentic Office, Buildtmg. Telephone 210. Norwigh, Tuesday, Sept. 20, 1910. Pntered at the Postoffice at Norwich, law is: “Any person who knowingly makes or publishes in any way whatever, or knowingly permits to be so made or published, any beok, notice, repert, statement, exhibit or othér publication of or concerning the affairs, pecuniary condition or property of any corpera- tion, joint stock association, co-part- nership or individual, which said book, The Circulation of The Bulletin. Nerwch. . ecemt. of the people. Im Jis comsidered the loeml daily. n nine {owns, one nm ! five posteffice districts, = e rural free delivery routes. The Bulletin 1s town and om all of the R. T. routes im Eastern Comnmecticot. CIRCULATION esesssssenscsces 4413 ~...5.920 8.0!7 1901, average 1905, average Week ending September 17...... Mml:lc AW !’I'A’IE TICKET. For Governnr. CHARLBS A. GOODWIN of Hartford. For Lieutenant Governor, DENNIS A. BLAKESLEE of New Haven. Tor Secretary of State, MATTHEW H. ROGERS of Bridgeport. For State Treasurer, COSTBLLO LIPPITT of Norwich. For State Comptroller, THOMAS D. BRADSTREET of Thomaston, For Attorney Genmeral, JOHN HLIGHT of Norwalk. For Representative- Large In Con- gress, JOHN Q. TILSON of New Haven. CO-OPERATIVE ROAD BUILDING. Towa is setting the nation a good example for making through roads at a minimum expense to the taxpayers. The river to river road, 124 miles in length, which was completed in one hour by the 10,000 citizens who would be directly benefited by such a road, by one hour’s co-operative work, was her first manifestation of ability. Now the Des Moines Capltal calls attention to the fact that “the citizens living along the line of the Burlington rail- road between Burlington and Council Pluffs have projected another river to river wroad,” famd adds: “Hhey mre pgoing to call it the Blue grass road. The name is a happy one. And the work of organiz- ing for the road should begin at once. Meetings should be held at Creston, DOttumwa, Fairfleld or Mount Pleasant for the work. These river to river roads do good two ways. They serve the public and they also serve as a means of awakening the township trustees to a sense of their duties and responsibilities.” This co-operative road-building might prove a means of getting rid of | some of the cartpaths in the New Eng- land states which are now miscalled roads. TWO YEARS IN JAIL, There is not anybody sorry that the secretary and treasurer of the Sugas trust has been convicted of defraud- ing the government of the United States for underweighing sugar and fined $5.000 and sentenced to two years in prison. This appears to be a vic- tory for the government and to smack of justice, but we learn that a stay has been granted, and that the whole case may have to be fought over again three or four times, with the final out- come in favor of the defendant. The power of money is shown by the way in which decisions are reversed by the courts and by the technicalities which shrewd lawyers can raise to defeat the ends of justice. Sentencing this man to jail and landing him there are two distinct feats. MAYOR GAYNOR AND THE POLI- TICIANS. Mayor Gaynor doesn't find it possi- ble to prevent the politicians from say- ing many things about him that are not so. It looks as if the men whe would make him governor of New York are the ones who would like to end his career as mayor of New York city. He constantly annoyed by people who claim to speak for him. ‘I speak for inyself, said Mayor Gaynor, the other day. “No one is authorized to speak for me. If any- one is doing so it is under false pre- | tences, I have not discussed politics with anyone and T will not do so. I am still a sick man and am trying to get well. I have no interest in poli- tics. If people continue to hother mg about such matters I will go away where I can have quiet.” Tt is strange that under such cir- curhstances a man should he persist- ently annoyed. ° Mayor Gaynor cer- tainly should be given a chance to live in peace and to regain his health. The Hartford Courant wants to know why Mr. 8eymour did not chal- lenge McLean to debale instead of lulkeley. That is 10 be seen without Lelng snswered. The Chicugo News says: It is aiffi cult to See what Mr. Taft can have 1o do with Mr. Boutell's determination to rul or not te run. Mr Taft is an Ohte man. THpse indicted packers at Chicago are so familiar with the law’s dela that they know they can make several trips to Eurvope [before results are reachps s The Bulletin has the largest cir- culation of any paper in Eastern Conmecticnt, and from three to four times larger tham that of zny in It is delivered to over 3,000 of the 4,053 houses In Nor- wich, and read by ninety-three per Windham it is delivered to over 900 houses, Danielson to over 1,100, amd in all of these plaees it Connecticut has forty- red and sixty- forty- mold fm every prospectus, notice, report, statement, exhibit or other publication shall con- tain any statement which is false, or which is wilfully or fraudulently ex- aggerated, or which is intended to give or whieh shall have a tendency to give to the public generally or to any per- n a less or greater apparent value to the shares, bonds or property of said corporation, joint stock associa- tion, co-partnership or individual, than said shares, bonds or property or any part thereof shall really or in fact possess, shall be deemed guilty of a felony, and ubon conviction thereof shall be imprisoned for not mére than five years or fined not more than $5,000 or shall suffer both such imprisonment and fine.” This would be a wholesome law to ‘be enacted in this state. These swind- lers need be checked everywhere. THE NORTH POLE. than the fake mining companies who | i he was the head. There is little interest in the state- ment that John R. Bradley and Dr. Frederick A. Cook have gone in search of records which Dr. Cook claims he left somewhere on his way home from the North pole. Now that the public has been twice told about the North pole, it does not know much more about it than it did before. A bleak spot on the ice in the center of the Arctle ocean may interest skaters, but it has ne interest for the average man. There is no proof that any man ever stood on the North pole and waved the American flag. It is of no con- sequence if Peary and Henson and Cook all did, There is nothing lively about the North pole. It is not at- tractive to even the ice barons. GOOD WORDS FOR LUCIUS TUT- TLE. There is no doubt that Boston values | Lucius Tuttle as a citizen as well as| a railroad manager. Speaking of his retirement, a Beston paper says: “President Tuttle has not only been a railroad man of mark, but a public citizen of high ideals and honorable service. He has taken a broad view of all large questions, and has helped in shaping some of them the right way. He has by kindliness and jus- tice won the esteem and respect of all the employes of the system of which He has had pop- ularity with the public and with labor 3 is not the easiest thing to attain. “While it is true that the Boston & Maine has not fully kept pace with modern requirements under President Tuttle’s administration, it is also true | that it has not been his fault, person- ally. He has alw given, to the very best of his alnllt\ conscientious and untiring service to the interests of New England.” EDITORIAL NOTES. Happy thought for toda A good talker does not always know when to | stop. Colonel Bryan was all right when | he predicted that Arkansas would go democratic ‘When politicians cannot get together under the plum-tree they must be all out of sorts. If the $5 bill is to be made smaller there is no intimation that it will be easier to get. An Indianapolis saloon keeper says| the free patronage of the police force M. was what bankrupted h There are ministers in Towa who are going to desert the vice because the salaries are inadequate. | ed States senators are | not a vain ambition with them. The fact that New York has 9,000 law officers is visible evidence of the turmoil man has created in life. The timid citizens who fear that Roosevelt will be made permanent president in 1910 should set together. “Down with the boss is a popular political slogan, but of bosses are left the usual number after the conflict Is over. Speaker Cannon advises the repub- licans to keep cool. He is an artist at that, without going in his shirt- sleeves. When everybody gets busy it is pre- | dicted that money will culate in | greater abundance and things will be ! cheaper. The American hen's output com- | mands $660.000,000 anually, while the American hog's lags $100,000,000 be- hind her. No cartoonis hn~ the genius to ex- aggerate the appearance of a millinery window today. It simply is an esag- geration, In view of political antics in his own party it is not strange President | Taft doesn't feel like being his own | successor. H Out west a bribed man is regarded as being insane by his family and friends, hut the world looks upon him as a croolk. ‘When Boston gathers all the nearby municipalities under her wing, she will be getting well up to the head of the great cities. oubt that as inter- foothatl be no be just year There appears to politics going esting u gume with the new rules. generatty the devil louks more like a4 dude a workingmau He stan and winning ways is to this, ax It is unow conceded that than for style | victory in . Maine appears to a more stimulating effect Massachuseits democrats sses of grog apiece. The leather factoriex of have a gross annual output of § 000,000 The have had upon the than two g I-lea’\d { Richardson “You never can tell what's going to happen at an election,” remarked the old wheelhorse after moistening his parched throat -with a fluid that did not resemble water, -and adjnskmg hls chair to his satisfaction. “AN thinks he has the opposition beaten by several city blocks, and hasn't a cae on his mind until the returns come in, and then he finds that he is mutilated beyond recognition. He can’t realize that the landscape flew up and ‘hit him.- And when he does realize it he goes hnuting around for the reason, and he is'likely to find that some little picayunish thing has put him out of business. “There was a primary election in our state the other day and in my county a man named J. Clarence Tolliver was candidate for county attorney. He came to me early in the game to ask my advice. I told him that he'd have to reorganize his name and place it on a sound commercial basis if 'he hoped for success. He thought I was Jjoking. I couldn’t.convince him that the matter was important. ““The voters have tco much com- mon sense to line up against a man for such a reason as the way he ad- justs his name,; said the young man. He showed me documents that testi- fied to his high character as a man and a lawyer, but I told him they weuld cut no ice. “‘The voters in this part of the county simply won't vote for & man who parts his name in the wrong place,’ said I; ‘they’ll associate you in their minds with J. Pierpont Morgan and F. Augustus Heinze, and a lot of other money barons and copper Kings and when they go to the polls they’ll make a horrible example of you. “He thought T was in my dotage and He ‘he went ahead with his fireworks. made a really wonderful eampaign, talking to big erowds at every school- A few days be- me and he had everything wrap- house in the county. fore the ele told me t ped up and sealed for delivery, opponent,’ said he, ion he came to My the race.’ i (% < hate to throw wet blankets’ I replied, ‘but your name will kill you.’ “And it did. The voters simply spread him out flat and used him for a doormat. Since then he has had his sign repainted and his name now ap- pears as James C. Tolliver and when he goes forth to bleed and dié for his country in the future he’ll have better luck. » “After the election two years ago 1d Judge Pembroke came to me al- most, broken hearted and asked if I could explain his defeat for congress. Apparently there was every reason why he should have been elected. He was on the winning side and every other man advancing his views was elected, but the judge was turned down. His record was above reproach. He really was a fine old man and a seat in congress was the goal of his ambition. He had been badly beaten and was all broken up. He couldn’t understand it. He wanted me to tell him the truth. I always tell the truth —after an election. “‘Judge, I asked, ‘wWhy in the name of all that is ridiculous do you dye vour whiskers? If you want to know why you were defeated look in the mirror. A man_ with greenish-black whiskers and White eyebrows is a joke.’ “Often when people ask for the truth | ti's the thing they dom’t want. . The judge swelled up with indignation and went away, and is still wondering, as he soaks his whiskers in prepared dyes, why the voters were so ungrateful and unappreciative as to turn him down. “I know another man who has been trying for years to get an office, and has always failed, and .it was only aft- er many campaigns that he discovered ‘will need a hyp- notist to convince him that he was in | the reason, for people don’t tell a can- didate the little reasons that govern them. 3 “This man was at a pienic years be- fore, when he was young, and the girl he was escorting fell into the river, and he stood on the bank yelling for help instead of jumping in after her. 7 | The fact that he couldn’t swim did not excuse him in the minds of the peopls, who never forget a thing like that”"— Chicago News. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR A Eiret Th ht a recommendation from the distin- irs ought. guished architect. “Go to Skowehe- Mr. Editor: As I was perusing the | gy Maine,” Richardson was saying Norwich Courier a few days ago I saw a letter addressed to-The Devil, and | Lim by saying he had not come to be the first thought that came to my mind | trifled with. “I am not trifiing,” con- was, What North Stonington man i) {jnyed Richardson, “I was about to getting for Brewster's Neck?| gay that there is a house built and oc- Reaching the signatur: written by a w in the case of| Spowhegan, which is one of the very |equipment for actual accomplishment Hewitt vs. Main, who testified the | rag Queen Anne cottages I have seen |88 governor than can_ possibly be ntiff's bill in question was a Tea- |y the United States that is really | Stown by any man of 70, no matter sonable bill, pay and, the bill a second time. LAFAYETTE S. MAIN. North Stenington, Sept. 19, 1910. Paying the Price. The American public may sympathize with young Robert Winthrop Chandler, but how old John Jacob Astor, whose descendant he would despise the man who, laying his name and his fortune at the feet of a notorious actress, allows himself at the last to be kicked out of FEurope for some more fav !\Tm] ‘n‘\'m‘ and who goes wearily “This fortune aliows him Mie. _Cav alieri admirers with her. the Russian Prince Young Chandler met her ar blood W meeting foreign when they her soon York have habit women of come over. Whether a fell in love with her personally or with rround- the halo of notoriely that ed her does not matter. From Paris c were wedded, and after that they ZT,%?,\",‘«,,‘fi“élv'?‘,‘?.en,"’,n’a“%‘é’fo‘u‘x'x%e’i*ii dropped out of public notice, and the | mozoin into one-half pint cold water. world supposed they were happy. Of | Stir and let stand several hours before the marital troubles that beset them }using. Massage frequently with_ this the world would know nothing now |cream. it will remove all dirt and ex- if it w niog: fors the: - woe-begome | SEM " oll from tho clin-pores and in husband himself, who has told tales | kled face, but & fresh, emooth, clean- out of schoc !looking skin of velvety texture. I also That is the price that this scion of | find this preparation excellent for re- the shrewd old founder of the Astor {moOving tan, sunburn, blackheads, family s to pay for his folly. It is| freck and large pores in the skin. the usual price that is men like him who put pleasure and self-gratification above all, else. not so old, fortunately, lesson may do him good, turn out a and he ma all.—Washington Herald. i and \\'!U} remove that sh)nt\' B2 O SRR look which is so annoving to Had ths Vote of Every. Townsman: E\-.m_ You will find_this lotion much | better to use than face powder, as it As far as reports have been re- | sily like powder nor ceived the only candidate for repre- | face that “powdered scentative to the next Vermont’legi lature who received the tleman from_ Norman Mattison. sman received| J. O.: To remove those disfiguring all of e S town, nine in ! hairs from your face and forearms, mix fhmber. And the representative |@ little delatone with enough water to I found it was | finally, -Main had to ingplank of a steamer is gone and only $20 a| first came to e brought some of her Among them was Dologorouki. after al, as most of the rich young of notoriety me the news that they demanded of He but that the fine American citizen after unanimous vote of his constituents was the gen- his line. The applicant was insistent for a time, but finally compromised on when the applicant angrily interrupted cupied by Major S. W. Gould, in Queen Anneish.” Trial of Crippen. | The trial in London of Dr. Crippen has already developed the fact that the human remains found under quick- lime bricked up in his cellar cannot be identified as those of his wife, with whose murder he is charged. Dr. Pep- per of the London university, testified for the prosecution that they are the remains of a human being, whether of a man or woman he cannot say. So long as the direct proof is lacking, the fact of the death of the person alleged to have been killed and the fact of ‘that js not regarded as political " The Laugh ng Horse Presented by Harris Grove, Milton & Perry. VAUDEVILLE’'S FUNNIEST COMEDY 0FFER|NG. — LIVE AND WA to especially y New and Original Sketch .of profound 'or EUGENE ,WEST and CATHERINE HENRY. TWO OTHER FIRST- LET LIVE — interefi written ~ LASS ACTS killing by the defendant, as alleged, will be almost impossible to estabhs’h with legal certainty. But it is not absolutely !mpossible to establish the corpus delicti, the body of the crime, by indirect proot. In New York state and in other states the written law forbids it. Not so in Great Britain. There it is a legal rule discretionary with the court. If the motive for the murder be proved; if; it be shown that Dr. Crippen obtained poison of the unusual kind found in the dissectad body:; if his skill as a dissecter be established; if he had in his possession the requisite surgical instruments not used in his ordinary practice as a dentist; if it be shown that he purchased. quickume, and. if circumstances point to his presence in | the house and in the cellar at the time the guilty sepulchure received the vic- tim, the evidence might seem in an English court to be complete.—N. Y. Times. Baldwin’s Equipment. At present Simeon E. Baldwin is so conspicuously better equipped for the serious duties of the governorship that if the competition were for any palcxp t would be ended before it began. The apprehension among republican poli- ticians is evidence of the appeal the candidacy of Judge Baldwin makes to the voters of Connecticut—Hartford Times. ‘A good lawyer, yves, a very compe- tent and distinguished judge, unques- tionably. Does all that make him con- spicuously equipped for the sericus duties of the governorship? Connect- icut has had many conspicuously good governors not judges. To mention a few—William A. Buckingham, Joseph R. Hawley, Hobart B. Bigelow, Rollin S. Woodruff, sharp, shrewd business men. What school can be suggested that will better equip a young man for the governorship than that afford- ed by the position of secretary to the governor? Add to that experience, natural abilitv, a liberal education, ei- ergy and the young man's preroga- tive of looking forward instead of backward and we have a much better how learned or how distinguished he may be. ‘The remmlscent age, the eminently respectable and to be respected, is not the age conductive to the largest ad- ministrative results.—Waterbury. Re- publican. Assuring Posterity. With both Mr. Taft and Mr. Roose- velt out for comservation, who can beat it? It is already reasonably plain that we will be.conserved.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat. In Germany paper is used in the manufacture of false teeth. Mrs. J. 8.: Wrinkles and other marks | of approaching old age which now wor- ry vou are very common. Howeve vou will not-have to worry if you will follow this simple treatment. Apply to your face every night a greaseless To whiten and beautify 1 your face, neck and arms, dissolve four unces of spurmex in a half-pint hot water, adding two teaspoonfuls glycer- Apply this lotion freely and it will your skin wonderfully and up . Tt makes the skin soft and ] find this spurmax lotion ex- for removing and preventing: chapping and roughness of ake a paste, cover the surface of the Health and Beauty Answers BY MRS. HAE MARTYN Mrs. R. P.: If your hair is getting so thin that you have to wear false hair, you should begin at once a treatment to rid your scalp of dandruff which is the direct cause of all scalp and hair troubles. If you will mix together an ounce of quinzoin, one-half pint of al- cohol and one-half pint of cold water, you will have a dependable remedy for your hair troubles. Rub this gently into the roots of the hair twice a week, and it will destroy the dandruff, stop yvour falling hair and in time promote a new growth of hair. This quinine tonic ap- plied regularly will make your hair soft. lustrous and keep it from splitting at the ends, Minnie ¥I.: As you do not like the jdea of wearing glasses since they make you look so much older why don't vou try treating them first with a good eye tonic? If you will get am ounce of crystos. dissolve it in a pint of water. vou will have an eye remedy that will prove very refreshing and strengthen- ing. Drop a few drops in each eye two or three times a day, and I am sure jt will do your eyes a world of good. It will not smart the eves. I find it excel- lent for dull, tired, watery eves, and a great aid even to those who have to : As long as your blood is loaded with impurities. those impurities will be forced ‘through your skin, and the application of external remedies will do no lasting good. for they do not reach the cause. Dissolve one ounce of kardene and one-half cup of sugar from G ¢ will have all of the 1€ Where ‘the unsightly hairs are|in one-half pint of alcohol; then add influenc of state that|growing, let it remaln two or three | IOt water to make a full ‘quart, and wiil the repre: wnlan\n fmm Burling- | minutes, then wipe off and wash the | You will have enough inexpensive, old- ton with 4000 Rutland, | surface with warm water. Although | fashioned remedy to rid vour blood of R 600 eta e Yoy aruggist will charge you a doller | Impurities, stimulate your liver sand mont scheme of fown representation | [Of an ounce of delatone. this safe | COTTect your digestion.’ Take a table- scheme . N | Yeatment for superflious hair is pre. |Spoonful before each meal and your ridiculous. &nd a Stronger | farred.to the electric nsedie. for dela- |'Sallow skin will again take on’ the that fact cannot be |tone is painless, less expensive and can | Peautiful color nature intended you to cage —of . R e applied in the privacy of vour own |have. Your circulation and general oE Clastanbiiry: yme. Should the hairs return, they g“;{{‘ will improve, and _the of et et e 1 be light, thin and straggly. A sec- | Plotches redness and other eru Y or third treatment with delatone | Will cease to trouble you. No general system tonic can be made than 1d News. will remove them forever. = e bty Jollswing this kardene recips, Tty ; Josephine: 1In treating your scalp |il. and get rid of that “run-down” feel- Sl Al e for dandruff, it is necessary to keep the | N8 1f Major Samuel W. Gould of Skow- {scalp as clean as possible. Shampoo _ W= 2 ressman elect from the | freely and often as you need #t, but Juliet: Yes, any one afflicted with strict, dwells in the use p or a soap jelly, as the | superfluous flesh is always at a big twenty years ago, could find in the United S ates \ i S 5 mpoo will. Jt lathers freely, dries{each meal), and your burdensome flesh fame he reccived an application from ckly without streaking and leaves| will soon be cut down. The effect a very rich man to design and build | {he hair Tustrous, fluffy and easy to do | this harmless remedy is generally no- for the latter a Queén Anne cottage. jup. After the h. 1y the | ticeable within a week, and you Richardson explained that |same tonic recommended to Mrs. R. P. ! feel much better. uctures were entirely out of TABLETS; cure that cough by using Lee & Osgood's Comp. Syrup wisely directed, will cause her to WHITE PINE and TAR. It's easy to take and the children like give to hér lnlle ones only the mo, wholesome and beneficial remedies EElS Satih 5 2 + 2 ud ouly when actually needed, and SEE, WINDOW DISPLAY the well-informed wother uses only 1 and geutle laxative rex —\'llr‘ll a laxative is required, as it is wholly free from all objec- tionable substances. To got its ben- eficial effects always huv the genu- ine, manufactured by the California Tig 8yrup Co, When was at the height of his igs and Elixir of will make vour halr dull. lifeless ampoo; it will put new Iife into vour | - and cleanse vour sealp.as no other | paral ! LEO, nir sealp harsh. Shampeo with a | gle. To get rid of that annoying fat, e lenant of cne of the fe# |iauspeonful of canthrox dissolved in a | Stop at your druggist's the next tima cimenis "_' genuine Queen Anne jcup of hot water: then rinse in clear ou are dQ\\"I town and get four ounces itecture the late H. R, Richardson ; water. You will find this a wonderful | of parnetis. Dissolve this in 13 pints disadvantage, whether married or sin- hot water and take a tablespoonful three times a day (five minutes befo: of will This is the message we are station Xill the cold by using Lee Retall Bepartment, I in our show window. Come ! weather is starting up the coughs and colds The Lee & 0Osgoed Cempany, sending out from the wireless Quick ! Danger! The cold & Osgood’s LAXATIVE COLD Norfvlch, Conn. Norwich’s Leading Temple of Amusement Wonday, Tuesday, Wedoesday, Sept. 18, 20, 2' MADDEN & FITZPATRICK =IN— The Turn of the Tide. WARD. KLARE & WARD in a comedy sketch entitled The Twin Flats. JOHNSTON & TALLY, i Comedy Singing Act. ‘ DUFF & WALSH, Dancing Act. KENO, WELSH & MELROSE, medy Acrobatic Act Matinees at 2.15—10c, 20. at 8.15—10c, 2Qc, 30c. sept19d A = MusiG. NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teacher of Plano, Room 48, :l Central Bullding CAROLINE H. THOMPSON Teacher of Music 46 Washington Street. F. c. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect 8t, Tel. 511, Norwich, Ca A. W. JARVIS IS THE LEADING TUNER IN EASTERN CONNECTICUT. 'Fhone 518-5, 15 Clairmount Ava sept22a %. H. BALCODL, Teacher of Plamos 29 Thamaes St Lessons at my residence or a4 the home of the E pil. Same meth u fi:d at Schawenka Cemrntory, Individuality Is What Counts Ia Photography. Bringing out the real personality. the fine joints in character, the little traits 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 a ready-made look. If you want a photo of your rea) self, or what your friends see to love and admire, call on LAIGHTON The Photographer, opposite 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 CORPORATION, 507-515 North Main Street aproa Norwich Savings Soclety, 'NOTICE Dr. Louise Frank!in Miner Is new locatsd in her new ofice, Breed Hall Rovm 1 Office hours, 1 to 4 p. m. Telsphone 860. augl?d ——— WHAT'S NEW —— THE PALACE CAFE Step in and see us. FRANK WATSON & CO, mar3d 78 Franklin Street, 1647 Adam’s Tavern 1861 offer to the public the finest standerd brands of Beer of Europe and A Bohemian, Pilsner, Culmbach Bavarian Beer, Bass’ Pale and Burton, Mueirs Scotch Ale, Guinness’ Dublin _Stout, C. & C. Imported Ginger Ale, Bunker Hill P. B, Aje, I'rink Jones' Mourish-~ ing Ale, Sterling Bitter Ale, ,\nh-u..- Budweiser, Schlita ana Pal A. A. ADAM. Norwich ann. Telephone 447 Jyg28 o By DR, C. R, CHAMBERLAIN Denta/ Surgeon. In charge of Dr. 8, L, Geer's practwe during his last iliness. 161 Main Street. Norwich, Senn, noviéd THERE no advertising m Eastern Connecticut equal to letin for busfiness resulta tum i e Bal Evenings (

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