Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 23, 1910, Page 4

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‘;}witb Bulletin and oufied. 114 YEARS OLD, price, 12¢ & week; 50c a a year. Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Conn., as second-class matter. Telephone Calls: usiness Offlee 480 1letin torial lletin Job Ofllco. Ba— Willlmantic Office, Reom 2 Wurray Bullding. Telephons 210. Norwich, Friday, Sept. 23, 1910. Bulletin REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET. ¥or Governor, CHARLBES A. GOODWIN of Hartford. For Lieatenant Govermor, DENNIS A. BLAKESLEE of New Haven. ¥or Secretary of State, MATTHEW H. ROGERS of Bridgeport. For State Treasurer, COSTELLO LIPPITT of Norwich. For State Comptroller, ' £HOMAS D. BRADSTREET of Thomaston, For Attormey Gemeral, JOHN H. LIGHT of Norwal Congrossmen. First District, B. STEVENS HENRY of Vernom. Second District, AXDREW N. SHEPARD of Portland. Third District. BDWIN W. HIGGINS of Norwich, Fourth Distriet, BEBENEZER J. HILL of Norwalk. Con- JOHN of New Haven. e e e Q. TILSON WORTH REMEMBERING. True-blue republicans should not forget what President Taft's admin- istration has accomplished in the way of progress for the m: Perhaps ColomaeRoosevelt put the matter in the briefest form when he pointed out that Taft's administration was to be cre@ited with the following achieve- ments: “The ereation of a tariff commis- sion; the adoption of maximum and minimum tarift law treaties with foreign powers; the proper treat- ment of the Philippines under the tarift; the inecrease in the efficiency of the interstate commerce law; the programme providing for the taxing power in connection with the corpo- rations doing an Interstate business; a postal savings bank bill; the con- stitution of a commission to report a remedy for overcapitalization in con- nectlon with the issue of stecks and bonds.” The fmperfections of the old party are marny, but they are not the thing of most importance, the things which should be uppermost in the thought of the voter. These must be recog- nized as long strides ahead; and a parcels post and other good things are coming from the same source. The party to tie up to is the one which not only promises but has a record for performing. WHERE AMBITION WAS UNPROF- ITABLE. Vice President Sherman made a mis- take when he became ambitious to figure largely in the New York re- publican convention and took such a stand with the Old Guard against Roosevelt and was selected to act as temporary chairman by the managers. Everybody supposed then that he was sure of being sent as a delegate; but he has done his level best at Utica and failed to carry the election. Mr. Sherman will not be a duly accredited delegate to the convention, although he may be able to act as a substitute for & regular who is willing to make a vacancy to give the vice president a chance. The Providence Journal, com- menting upon this political incident, says: ‘“There are some persons who may see .an impropriety in the participa- tiom of the second officer under the TUnited States government im a loeal primary, and especially in his own be- half; but Mr. Sherman is a very prac- tical politician, he has never ex- hibited superf sensitiveness _in such matters chairman of the state ¢ which position he is bosses; but ble to sit as =a to do so it will be necessary him' someone else’'s credenti triwmph of his opponent in his home district is lJargely sentimental, though not altegether s0. It may es have its effect on the final result a toga.” MAYOR (‘AYNOR AND THE PRESS Mayor Gavpor has no reason to mealy-mouthbd in his estimate of New York press, for he had the hovor of heing eiected mayor of New Yor without the support of a ingle pa in that city; and he s proven to b a real reform mayor from the s art, although he has had all kinds of o posttion and been subjected to eyvory kind of eriticism. In writing to his sister, recently, he said: “But the time fs at handi wher thes<e journalistic scoundr have ¢ to step or get out, and I 2m recady now io do my share to that end They are arsolutely without souls. I de- cert people would refuse to look at such newspapers the thing weu'd right itseif at once. The journ of New York city has been drazged to the lowest depth of degradation. The grossest railleries and libels, stead of honest statements and discussion, have gone on uncheck One cannot help sympathizing with the decent newspapers.” The mayor has reference to the un- scrupulous sensational papers which slander decemnt public servants and de- ceive the people; and they are popular because they are bold. Such journal- ism ought to he discountenanced by decent people everywhere. Since soug writing has Leen recom mended a8 2 regular schoul exercise at Chicago, it 1s now asked if the thne is coming wheu children will take their arithmetic lessons home with them and play them on the piano. A regular physical examination of the police is what Chicagn stands for. She e ainving for a healthy enforce- ~ent of the iaw TRUTHS FROM SPEAKER CAN. NON. horse in political campaiging and gives voice to many wholesome truths cannot be denied; and on the occasion of his nineteenth renomination for con- gress, the other day, he said a few things not only quotable, but worth the while of all republicans to make a note of. Among other things he said: “The minority party in congress al- ways indulges in talk about economy, but they vote for the largest appro- priations, There are now in the various committees of the house of representatives bills introduced by democrats alone, which would call/| for appropriations amounting to nearly $500,000,000 more than was appropriated. “I have no defense to make of the’ Payne law, for it needs mnone. It is the enactment of the pledges made by the republican national convention in 1908. It is in keeping with the policy | iof protection which the republican | party has maintained as the correct revenue policy ever since the election of Abraham Lincoln; in fact, it is in | harmony with the very legislation of the first congress under the administration of That pelicy is to protect the Ameri- can producer from the unequal com- petition of the foreign product, in or- higher plane than is the labor of Europe, Asia and the ]S]dflds of the sea. “My notion about progress is that it should be a movement forward, not simply a loud noise about the neces- sity for the movement. I have seen men who promised to get 60 miles out of an engine that had been mak- ing only 30 miles an hour, if they could only get hold of the lever, and I have seen some of them, in theii ignorance, reverse the engine, send- ing it ama the whole train back ward. I have met claimed he could extract gold from sea-water; but I have also seen John T. Raymond play Col. Mulberry Sell- ers and heard him get off that dramat- in it seriou ic sentence, ‘There’s millions and I have measured the pretensions of the former Wwith comedy of Raymond as he illustrated the humor of Mark Twain. I _nay be a little old fashioned in sueh mat- ters, but I prefer a demonstration (o | a declaration, and our friends th enemy who are demanding another tariff revision to bring into effect a revenue tariff in place of the protec- tive tariff look to me like reactionaries who would reverse the engine and’go back over this phenomenal haif-cen- | tury fore the war. Qpedkar Cannon knows what he talking about; and he knows that a re- versal of the present republican poli- cies would mean a recurrence of theo hard Cleveland times. Are republicans ready to turn the govern- ment over to the party of Bryan—to democracy and disaster EDITORIAL NOTES. It was the men lowest down who trust cases, parts of New England. political qua linger mani hint. It is deplored in man ters that Secretary fests no ability to tak Great Britain taxes automobiles a cording to their horsepower, and the fastest runners pay the highest tax. “They-haven got-me-yet” smile the one Collector Loeb of New Yo is susp d of having excited most. A Chicago minister says that “flirt- ing is a national peril” TUncle Sam has never been -caught in the game, | vet. The socialist vote fell off in Maine 21 per cent. at the September election; and the prohibition vote over per cént. real villain in the play, but it thought to be extra-hazagdous to so identify him. The statement that the New York | republican convention was fixed be- fore it met might be true, and then it be stale news The Illinois law against bribery ler of himself but the buyer of is e penalty, tted. to a men eve is om advertisement any > best « \I\ an have is low taxes, clean streets, | ss school facilit the | hand for all strangers f jonally get together a their salaries should but ‘the wirch >s and kee Happy thought ciful ‘man does take the | which he for not blame for is himself guilt ll‘ml on it st in 1 The democratic p that voices the sentiment that “the country needs a rest,” should send a marked copy to Champ Clar lonel Bryan s of censervation pol James J. Hi doesn’t hesftate to I say that the conservation of common | sense is a mighty importan atter. Dr. Forbes on'¥ averment that “all the world is going cra re- minds us of the man id “Byery- body in Boston was drunk but me! In the west hoth parties are pledge to put a stop to co the charge that mone trol the primaries pi pre but is spent to co i es, being made. convention, it remarked that one of the delegates finds that he in g0 back to the shop to get a wrench. Boston shown slower growth in the 1 ten years than in any decade for two centuries » wonder Bos- ton desires to take in the murnnmlu.,, cities, Well, Uncle Joe (annon has o right to feel proud over having bLeen nomi | nated for congress the twentisth timne He appears quite sure of getling there, too The mayor of Boston has appeal to the school children to lead in movement to l\’p the streets clean. There is ample evidence that the ol folks neced all the assistance they cun ge* That Speaker Cannon is an old war- |/ first revenue ! ‘Washington. | der that we may keep our labor on a | the man who | the | of progress to the old order be- | is | rational got the longest sentences in the Sugar | The frost is on the pumpkin and the | pumpkin will soon be in the pie in all | The man who bribes the weak is the | is | its in- | ‘When the plumbers meet in national | not | Here is the advertisement whidh | Mrs. Perkinson read in a’'story paper: “With the aid of the little contriv- ance shown in the illustration you can make one pound of butter go twice as far -as it has ever dome pefore. Take one pound of dairy butter costing, say, 35 cents, and one pint of sweet milk, }nostmg four cents, and put them to- gether in this little machine and give } {the crank a few vigorous turns and vou have two pounds of firm sweet | dairy butter, worth 70 cents. Price | of machine, $3.50." It was last week that Mrs. Per- kinson read the advertisement. The next day she sent a money order for the machine. Mrs. Perkinson figured | that the Perkinson family used two | pounds of butter a week, and that by | using/ the machine she could save about 30 cents each week. Thirty | cents-a week at the end of the year \anxnun(\ to a new dress or a bonnet [\\'Ilh a plume,_ There were plumes on all her visions { until the machine /arrived. A She took the wrgppings from it shook the sawdust out of it, held it up to ths light, wrinkled up her face {and looked into it, and then said “Hum! Then she put it down and | walked across the kitchen and looked | at it again. It looked like a mnew- fangled churn with complications. | Mrs. Perkinson's tv isters, who | were making, her a visit, were taking | an afternoon nap, so Mrs. Perkinson at once telephoned the dairy at Ahe corner to send up a pound of hutter and a pint of milk. Soon, as the result of the machine’s “‘itchcrfl!t there were two beautiful ‘bricks of butter reposing on the cab- inet where but one had reposed be- fore. Mrs. Perkinson immediately put on her hat and started for the shop- ping district to pick out the bonnet with plume. The slam of the front door awak- ened Mrs. Perkinson’s sister Sadie, who vawned and stretched and took her (]Pr‘p breathing exercise and then got up and pushed her feet into her slip- pers and went to the kitchen to get a drink of water. Before she had got the drink her gaze fell upon the bllt— ter machine. Then she read the print- ed slip of directions lying on the cabi- net. i about “If i 1, what do | that asked Sadie of the ceiling. that machine works the way it says, Jim and I ought to be able to get | married at once, for it" would cut ex- penses in 0.” Sadie evidently thought married life buttery sort of existence. y excited, she charged on the she ppeared rfectly good vou know la ver; a drop of milk in the house!” nounced. “rn 'phone for a In a comparatively short time, | thanks to Sadie and the butter ma- | chine, there were four golden bricks | of peautiful dairy butter on the cabi- net, Sadie put the butter into the REVERSION TO TYPE refrigerator and washed the amazing machine. Then she dressed for the street and went downstown to tell Jim all about it. The slam of the front door aroused Linnie. Linnie stretched, yawned,. groped about the head of ghe bed untjl. : she had found her gum, rose, put onm her slippers, drew her kimono about her and went to the kitchen for a | drink of water. She saw the butter machine. it vestigation diselosed A four peaufiful pounds of butter in the refrigerator. | Linnie ‘phoned for two quarts of sweet milk. In a comparatively short time, as a gratifying result of Linmie's in- dustry and the effects of the butter machine, there were eight beautiful bricks of butter reposing on the kitch- en cabinet! Linnie put them into the refrigerator and went out in the neigh- borhood to take orders for butter. A few minutes later Perkinson let himseif in at the front door, hung up his hat and ambled out to the kitchen to tell Mrs. Perkinson that he was heme, that she couldn’'t get supper any too quick to suit him, He did not find Mrs. PerKinson, but he did find the butter machine and eight pounds o1 butter! The sight gave him an inspiration! He ‘phoned for four quarts of milk. Before Mrs. Perkinson returned home with a sample of the trimmi: that | was to go on the new hat there wer¢ sixteen pounds of butter in the refrig- erator! ‘When she went to the kitchen Per- kinson wvas sitting with a mpad of paper and a pencil adding up a column of figures. “What a you up to now?” inquired Mrs. Perk on, suspiciously. “I'ce been trying that butter ma- chine of yours,” explained Perkinson. “It’s great! With a cow and a peund of butter to start with we can raise twenty-four pounds of butter a day That’d be seven-ninety a day. Multi- ply that by three cows and we'll be ing in our own automobile before the end of the year.” “Oh, isn’t that just too lovely!” said Mrs. Perkinson. “Fix some ice water while I get supper and wel'll talk it over.” “Now,” said Perkinson, “T'll tell you what let’s @o; I'll get a firkin to pack it in and we'll let on to the dairyman that we got all this butter from the country and he’ll take all we can fur- nish him with. TV pack it tonight and we'll sell it to him_ in the morning, keeping out a pound or two for a start, and TIll write dad tonight te send mé in one of his cows!” Next morning as he looked into a tub containing eight quarts of sour milk and one pound of perfectly good but baul\' scattered butter, Perkinson is what I would call a I didn’t think that machine was any good, anyhow. You might as well think that by putting a ribbon, a feather and a piece of wire into it vou could get a new hat!"— Chicago News. | LETTERS TO THE EDITOR As Mr. Miller Vlews the Situation. etin of Tuesday, tfrom the Hartford mes the 8: At present neon E. Baldwin is so spicuously better equipped for the serious duties of the governorship that if the competition were for 3 | that is not regarded as would be ended befo apprehension ticians among repu evidence of the ; of Judge Baldwi f Connecticut.” appeal malkes to is an' article erit- a Waterbury part of me from hat school can bz suggested thit will petter equip a young man for the gover ip than that afforded by the position of secretary to the govermor? Add to that experience, natural abilit a liberal education, energy and the young man’'s prerogative of forward instead of b have a much better ¢ tual accomplishment can possibly be ehown by 70, no matter how learned or tinguished he may “The reminiseent age, tho respectable and to be respe che age conductive to the ministrative results.”-~Waterbury publican | | | | | | w, dear Bulletin, this is a T that all are interested in, and | writer from observation | the temper of the vot T this neck o' woods rig connected with th Goodwin will b2 co | cisive vote in Nove | have taken an ad 2o forward to gr | umphs. If re | such scaly proceeding | ed by the Goodwin ¢ i Dt mt the shameless a nomination nate. The o vin and his cohorts by publicans is a matter does not carry the balance of named by staunch, tried and republicans. When the Goodwin eleme - ac- lishing their chr was r the only them., " the was then e convention at once came back 1e ropublican e n, and when on comes in »vember ithey found with no stain on the ence putting a daub on a pre-concerted laminated plan to e hezad of the ti 2 J Loss of Appetite 1s loss of vitality, often a forerunner of prgstrating dis- vigor or tone, and is ease. It is serious and especially so to people that mmust keep up and doing or get behindhand. The best medicine to take for it is the great constitutional remedy Hood’s Sarsaparilla ‘Which purifies and enrich 1 builds up the whole Get it tod: in chocolated tablets s the blood tem. called Sarsatabs. SChfiOi Books and School & upphes ACADEMY mmxs NEW AND SFCONDB-HAND. | | | All the New Books Supplied by : ' GRANSTON & 8. Cash paid for Sccond-hand Books, .septitodaw liguid form or Re- | § | New England Inns. Before the advent of the motor the roadsid> hotel in New England was in a bad way. Its prosperity received a heavy blow when the railways wers| Norwic built. The stage coach disappeared and travel on the highway virtually ceased, except in the matter of merely local traffic. Finally the spread of no-license and prohibition removed the chief re- maining source of profit for the rural hostelfy by closing its bar. Most of the old taverns and roadhouses went entiraly out oi business. after a dreary struggle for existence under the new conditions. In great stretches of rural New England there nor board for the wayfarer. The occa- sional travaler by carriage or afoot was likely to find himsell journeying in the loveiy countryside where cvery pros- pect pleased and only the hotels were vile. A revolution has bezn wrought in a few years, thanks to the touring Dilapidated taverns have been reger erated and, good, new hotels have sprung up in many places at the bid- ding of the automobilists. There is a certain genius for hotel keeping in New Englanders. A majority of the noted landlords of the country orig- inated here. It is good to see this talent among us revived. Even in the little tim= there has been for their.de- velopment we already have not a few country inns here in New England which rival in charm and comfort the famous inns of old England.—Boston Globe. Against Arbitration. A commission to consider the ques- tion of New York city’s congestion of population is met, in proposing to es- tablish a local arbitraticn board for laber disputes, hy Mr. Gompers’ sirong opposition. 2Mr. Gompers does not be- lieve in arbitration, basing his opinion on the breakdown of the experiment in New Zealand, and on th2 general prin- ciple that “if the award of the com- nijesion is against ' the workers, and th2y are comwpzlled to work against their will, indusirial slavery begins.” He might have quoted also the failure of arbitration in England. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA Lenox Soap is the favorite lau;l- dry soap of millions of women. It suits them better than any other soap. Sold by grocers everywhere from Maine to California. Lenox Soap— “Just fits the hand” " look like new. DONT THROW AWAY your garments because they are faded or soiled. LEWANDO’S, America's foremost French Dyers and Cleansers, may be able to save you the price of a new gown ? IF YOU HAVE ANY clothes that have become faded or soiled, or the color is (passe) not to your liking or out of styls, BRING THEM HERE—we may be able to dye or clean them, and make the same to Miarshall’s Purchasing Agency 164 Main Street, with the Norsich Cireulating Library. We have more than 1400 i h alone for LeWando's Dyelng and sabinfio with. the mworks doog by LeWANDO'S Do you know that ied regular customers here Cleansing «Co. All are For the family’s shouhk Children use it like grown-ups. Brilliant, lasting. One operation. Speedy,handy’ The F. F. Dalley Co. Ltd. Bullalo, Tamilton, Ont. was neither bed | | 'I'IIE uuama uam Vaudeville's - Craziest Comedy Offering. ROGERS & DORMAN, The Dixie Butterflies. __The Dixie Butterfies. | _Singing Comegionns Lorraine, Dudley & Co. reseating “The Finish™ A Sensational Comedy Dramatic Playlet. JENNIE GERARD, Singing Comedienne. POLI'S ich’s Leading Temple of Amusement Best Vaudeville. Latest Pictures. Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sept. 22, 23, 84 JONES & DEELEV. CAMILLE TRIG. PERCY WARAM & CO. LEWIS & CHAPIN. LESLIE THURSTON. Matinees at 2.15, 10c, 20c. Evenings at 8.15, 102, 20¢, 30¢. + Special Nights Sept. 27—Taftville Night. Sept. 28th—Odd Fellows’ Tuesday, Wednesday, Night. Thursday, Sept. Co. Night. Friday, Sept. Mitzhel! 20th—Reid & Hughes & 30th — Porteous ight. INSTRUCTION for Violin, Cello,- Mandolin EUGENE_ WALLNER, Director of the Academly Musical Club. septi6d 274 Washington St. NELLIE 5. HOWIE, Teacher of Piano. Fletcher Music Method. Room. 48 Central Building. CAROLINE H. THOMPSON Teacher of Music 46 Washington Street. F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect St Tel. 611, Norwish, Ca A. W. JARVIS IS THE LEADING TUNER IN EASTERN CONNECTICUT. ‘Fhone 518-5, 15 Clairmount Ave sept22d T H. BALOCOM, Teacher of Pinmo. Lessons 29 Thamss St, jven at my resid the home ofi { ;:Iled at Schawen e the pil. Same mo!hod ag a Con!orvnlory.‘ Bers ‘Thix is the station in our show window. weather Kill the cold by using TABLETS; WHITE PINE and TAR. It's it. 25 cents a bottle. The Lee & 0sgood Compauy, Retaii Bepartment, message we are sending Come ! is starting up the coughs and eolds, lLee & Osgood’s cwre that cough by using Lee & Osgood's Comp. Syrup ea WINDOW out from the wireless Quick ! Danger! The cold LAXATIVE COLD v to take, and the childran 1i & DISPLAY. Norwich, Conn. lndnvnduahty Is What Cousts In Photography. Bringing out the real personality, the fine joints In character, the littla traits that make us what we 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 reay self, or what your friends see to lova and admire, call on LAIGHTON, The Photographer, opposite Norwich Savings Soclety, augisd WE ARE NOW READY to take care of all your \Carriage and Wagon Repairing and Painting, Carriage and Autemobile Trimming and Upholstering ‘The Scott & Glark CCRPORATION, 507-515 North Main Strest apred Or. Louise Franklin WMiner In now locatsd in her nev ofice, Breed Hall, Rovm 1 Office hours, 1 to 4 p, m« 1clsphone 660. auglie e A——— e WHAT'S NEW e THE PALACE CAFE Step in znd see us. FRANK WATSON & CO, mar3d 73 Franklin Street. 1647 Adam’s Tavern 1861 offer to the public the finest standarn brands of Beer of iurope and America, Bohemlan, Pllsner, Culnibach Bavariam Beer, Basy Pale and Bu Muelrs SBcotch Ale, Guiniess’' Duablin Stout, C. & C. Imporied Gluger Ale, Bunker Hill P. B, Ale, ¥iunk Jones’ Nourish- ing Ale, S(e.an Bitter Ale, Anheuser Budweiser, Sohlitz and Pabst. A. A ADAM Morwich Tewn, 'leleahouu “T~ Jy22a PHER no advertising medium iy Eastern Connecticul equal to The Bule letiyr’ for business resulls i

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