Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 28, 1910, Page 4

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Forwich nlletin nud Goufied. 114 YEARS OLD. m-,‘:’m--lum- Entered at the Postofilce at Nerwich, Conn., as wecond-class matier. Telephone Call RuMetin Business Offiee. 4 n Editorial Rooms, Job Office. 35-6. Willlmantie ©ffice, Reom 2 Murray Building. Telephone 210. Norwich. It is delivered te 3000 of tha 4,053 howses fa Nor- 4 read by mimety-three por Wesk ending September 24.... REPUBLICAN STATE TIOKET. For Gevermor, CHARLES A GOODWIN of Harttera. Por Licuteannt Gevermor, DENNIS A BLAKPSLUE of New Haven. Por Secretnry of State, MATTHEW H. ROGERS of Bridgeport. For Seate Teeanusor, COSTELLO LiPPETT of Norwich. For State Comptrofier, THOMAS D. BRADSTREET of Thomantes, For Atterney Genoral, JOMN H. LIGHT ot Norwalk, Congreasm. First Distriot, . STRVENS HENRY of Vernon. Second Distrier. ANDREW N. SHEPATLD of Portiand. Thira Distrmot, EDWIN W. HIGGINS of Norwicw, Fourth Distroet EBBNEZER J. BILL of Norwalk. Cor JOHN Q. TILEON of New Ha — THE RESIGNATION OF CUMMIS- SIONER GATES. ‘The resignation of Andr Trom the board of railread Gates ommis wioners came as a surpriee (o his east ern Connecticut friends, who hoid hin 4n high estesm for his polilica wuchievements and courteous manners In s restgmation he said that he wished to return to the pmuctice of tI law and to be free te Gscuss and act upen public questioms that terest to all. Mr. Gates is a native ©f Lebanon, and began his politica <aresr in the eighties and waus made clerk of the general assembly from 1589 to 1892; and in 1896 was clerk of the sepate. In 1891 he became a member of the board of schoo of Hartford, serving on 1he ul 1897. In 1399 he was ag Pprosecuting state attorney of Ha sit ard un- ointed rtford county, which office he Leld until 1899, On the election of Govertior McLean, the governor in his mesBage favored 2he creation of the offies of tax con missioner and on the passing of met crestiug that effice by the general | wssembly in 1901 Mr. Gates was ap- | pointed to position #or the term | of four years. In 1902 he was elected | <hairman of the republic#n stale cen- | tral committes, which place he held | until 1904, when he was defeated for the office by Michael Kenealy of Stamford, the present stete chalrman The defeat of Mr. Gates by Mr Kenealy was only secompMshed after ane of the hitterest comtests in the hiso: of the committe in s | flght the thrce-cornerad e fight betwesn Hawley, Bulkeley Fessenden was interjected. Mr. Gates lost the appeintment by ome which was said te have been cast b a men who was later governor of the state. In 1965 Gov. Henry Roberts appolnted Mr. Gates a member of the radiroad commissies and he was re- soointed by the iate Governor Lille 05 e has the best wishes of hie east- ern Connecticut frisnds for his suc- cess in whatever fleld of endeavor he may venture. Claveland Jeads Baltimore in popi- lation, and this puts Cleveland up where Baltimore would like to remain Baitimore wiMl have to whoop her up if she expects to count up ten years from now A great many men who see the handwriting on the wall and are freely AN EXPECTED RESIGNATION. The resignation of Executive Secre- tary Geedwin had to come. It would harély do for the occupant of that office to be running for the position of his own chief. The heavy respon- sibilities that rest on the secretary come upon him during a legislative session and there will not be another session untl after the election. Mr. Goorlwin has enjoyed the confidence of two governors, and has won the highest opinions from the many vis- iters at the executive chambers. His tact and good judgment have been of areat use to his superiors in office and have made friends for him on all sides. He will be missed for a while at the capitol, but we venture the prophecy that he will be back there again when 1911 arrives.—Hartford Courant. There appears to be no reason to doubt that the people of Connecticut are going to sustain the republican ticket and the republican policies. They really cannot afford to do any- thing else. Candidate Goodwin won the fight, and it is presumed that all political differences were settled in the state cenvention, as they should be. He is capable and courteous and has rong friends in all parts of the state, none stronger than those who for dim in eastexa Connecti- cut, e eastern counties have been known as the republican stronghold {irom the infancy of the party, and the voters know too well what republican- 1sm means to swap it off for democ- racy. Politically this part of the state but speak should not be regarded as being be- tween the devil and the deep sea. There is no confusion. The people know what to do and how and when to do it. Candidate Geodwin is the coming ma DEATHS FROM ACCIDENT. The census bureau’s annual bulletin upon the s of death in this coun- t shows that te the railroads is to | be attributed the largest number of | dental deaths. .As classified the | | | | | | causes of accidental deaths last year | were as follows Railroad accidents and injuries, drowning, 4,558; burns and 5,992; injuries at birth, hereaft- | be classified under diseases of early infancy, 3,508; injuries by horses and vehicles, 2, not including in- juries by street cars, 1,723, and auto- le accidents and injuries, 632; in- ies, 1,997; in- ases, including other accidental accidental gunshot moh juries in mines and qua halation of poisonous conflagration, 1,837 poisening, 9 wounds, 944; heat and sunstroke, §16; colé and freezing, 251; lightning, 150. iere were 1,174 fatal injuries by wchinery, chiefly in factories, but the large number, 10,108, of accidental traumatisms of unspecified nature makes it necessary to consider many the figures given above as only ninimal, and it is important that the ans of injury be specified in all re- irns death from accidental vio- There was a decrease in homicides ind suicides during the but the per cent. of decrease was too small to regarded as a sign of permanent mprovement. It appears to be a fluc- tuation the cause of which is not made clear by the reports TO KNOW THE OTHER SIDE. Whenever there is a public issue ev- ntelligent reader desires to learn hoth sides of the question that he may act inteliigently whenever and wher- ever the subject may be discussed or acted upon. The letter of President | Mellen on the public utilities bill, | printed in The Bulletin Tuesday morn- | ing, is fair enough and clear enough | to invite the carnest attention of all | persons interested in the subject. | There is no abler advocate from the | business side of the question than he; and he talks rationally with a view of helping rather than antagonizing the supervision sought through the public | utilities movement. He is opposed to |anything that smacks of political su- | pervision because a judicial commis- | sion would be more just, acting i must upon acceptable evidence, | upon popular prejudice. 1t looks as | If this was the real safe and sane line | of procedure. bis is an experiment at best, and what President Mellen is desirous of seeing is that mistakes shall not be made which will impair the efficiency of the 'great railroad he represents, | and which might actually cause the people more serious annoyances than any they suffer tod Just how to proceed with this regulation is up to the legislators, and it is to be hoped that all sides will be given a full hearing and the commission be so pnstituted that its acts will all be i and command the ect of the people and the corporations it is de- gned to control EDITORIAL NOTES. sure of reach- she would cer- outlook was heav- It & the smokeless stat Sunny Jim Sherman has shown that te be in the swim a politician need not have the popular approval of the people. s never to be a short- willing-to-run” in he woods are always There appea t It has been decided that a sick au- tomobile-ambulance is about the worst thing that people in haste have had ) contend with. General Brayten, the political boss of Rhode Isiand, could accomplish maore without eyesight than most peo- can with it The reason Colonel Roosevelt never shrinks is because he feels that it is his duty to see that the other fellow does the shrinking. The fashionable hats for girls ha.vel her reached their limit or the door- | ways of even the business houses will interpreting it will ha surprised that they ever reached such conclusions on such siim indlcations. Just loek at some men you know and ses M you de not think that it woulfl be harder work to make angels of them than to make a glass house of Frank#n square. Sarah Beenhardt is a great-grand- mether and she s still contemplating a teur of the United Stutas. She doesn't kmew that the duys of her youth are gons by t paper at the west says that can be said of that it never struck she was down. they feel sure that a eftective in keeping ¥ =5 fiwin FE Sk have to be enlarged James J. Jeffries still afirms that he has nothing to say. He has got fAnancially where he can afford to let his bank account talk | The way the game of politics is be- ing played suggests that new rules and a strict obgervance of them would be a great improvement. Many a gubernatorial candidate is wondering whether November will find hhm in line for the governor's chair of runuing for the woods. The latest over-Sunday toll for au- tomobile touring was seven killed and three times that many injured seri- ously. A high-priced pleasure. Robert Winton, head and sole mem- ber of the Winton Publicity agency, was resting in his office with his feet eicvated on the desk. There was & pleased smile on his face and the cigar in his mouth pointed upward at an angle of 60 degrees. He cvidently was at peace with the world —and he had 2o0d reason to be, for he had just arranged a profitable deal and was anticipating the pleasure of a_visit that evening to the girl near- est his heart. Mary Duvey did not con- sider hersalf Winton's intended, it was well known among her most inti- mate friends that she favored the voung advertiging agent far more than ihe other aspifants for her hand. How- ever, Winton had never done anything to distinguish himself from a score of young men of her acquaintance, and Mr. Duvey himself did not consider seriously his daughter's suitor, who with his “Publicity Agency” was the laughing stock of the business district. But Winton quietly went his way, despite the disapproval of Duvey and the ridicule of his business associates, determined to prove to Mary that he was made of “the right stuff.” Now, this contract had come as a godsend and he was prepared to exert all his energles to bring it through suc- cessfully. Mr. Charles Brookstone of the fa- mous department and mail order store, known from one end of the country to the other, had interviewed Winton in regard to an advertising scheme and had instructed him to spare no expense to make it succeed. A few days later one might have seen three heavy coversd drays enter an anclosed ‘field on the outskirts of the city. A gang of laborers appeared and soon the noise of hammer and saw and sledge rang out busily on the other side of the high board fence.. Simul- taneously with these happenings there appeared in each of the great dailies @ page blank except for these words in heavy black type: “Watch the Sky This admonition was printed in the newspapers for several days until the curiosity of the public was keyed up to a high pitch and thousands were af- flicted with sore necks from following the advice of the advertisement. The climax was reached on Friday, May 13, 19— The usual words were changed THE BULLETIN'S DAILY STORY THE COUP THAT WON THE GIRL - — J ard there appeared only the single word “Tonight!” As evening approached, from every point of vantage eager thousands stared into the heavens waiting for what they knew not. Suddenly at about 8 o'clock a brilliant light illumi- nated the sky and the people were as- tonished to read these words, traced az if by fire across the sky: “BUY AT BROOKSTONE'S.” “TRADING STAMPS.” For several nights the same adver- tisement appeared in the heavens, and, combined with the great press notices, served further to advertise the store, with the result that it was thronged and experienced the greatest week in its_history. Still doubtful as to the success of his scheme, Winton was busily figuring oul the cost when the office door flew open and in rushed the great merchant prince, Brookstone. He grasped the agent by the hand and shook it hearti- Iy, erying: “Name your price and you shall have it!” But Winton, his fears set at rest by the merchant's words, quietly handed the excited man two sheets. On one: “To Charles Brookstone. Winton Publicity Agency, Dr. For services renderad, $4,500.”" The second paper was a bill from the X. Y. Z Electrical company for use of £00,000 candle power search- lights, accessories, carpentry, etc., night of Friday, May 13, 19—. While Robert Winton was paying his usual visit at the house of Mary Duvey her father in a sarcastic manner indicated one of the items in the paper in regard to the advertisement, saying: “There, Winton, that's the sort of man 1 would want my daughter to marry. ©One who could plan and execute such a coup as this.” Winton said nothing, but produced the bill which hz had given to the proprietor of the store. Tha old man read and as he read the fronical look faded from this counte- nance and was Teplaced by a pleasant smile. ~“Well, Robert” he said, *I guess I have been mistaken. Shake!” A few days later Mary and Robert paid a visit to the parsonage and had a certain legal rite performed to the satisfaction of all concerned.—Boston Post. taken the people to get the govern- ment to move in that direction. thought for tod When | thinking that everybody is examine vourself care- you are straight. Happy you get to crooked, just fully and see if It is predicted that this country will have a farmer president by and | by. It certain | or ly deserves to have one, and he will serve his country proudly. France has a hundred millions of shortage in her wheat crop, and Rus- sia has a surplus of equal amount. Thus nature usually sets up a bal- ance. The man who made ten thousand flying over the Alps did not know how to light; hence a large part of the money will go to the doctors and nurses. The mayor of Indianapolis cannot tell whether his water meter is wor ing or not, for the water board has not sent him a bill since he was elected to office. Aunt Maria must be delighted to see Theodore up against it in a way that tries men’s souls. But Theodore will not be finished by convention ad- versities. sh Illiterate Voter. h government inquiry as to the illiterate vote has brought out some | facts s that may well afford food for thought” to American opti- mists. Out of 5,770,000 votes thrown | at the recent general elections in Eng- | land and Wales but 17,151 were cast Dy illiterates. The illiterate voters Scotland were as 2,044 to 600,000, in | Treland 22,000 to 220,000, Unfortunate | \ Ireland is already coming in for lec- turing on its educational shortcom- | ings, but these admonitions will be accompanied by bad grace from some | quarters. It may, for instance, be doubted if every state in the union can show a very much better average of educated voting than Ireland exhibits. We often speak of ourselves as the most ecommon schooled people in the world, whereas there were in the United States in 1900, according to| the census, ,180,069 illiterates above 10 s of age, of whom 3,200,745 w hites. Of the illiterates’ 5,224,- neither read nor write. The native white illiterates numbered 1,408,345, In 11 states adult illiterates aggregated over 100,000 each, Georgia leading with 158,247. The truth is that we are not keeping abreast witn_some the countries of the Old World | which have made education a natlonal function, like Germany, France and Great Pritain. In Germany outside | the Polish provinces fliiteracy is all but unknown. The British voting fig- res speak for themselves. — Boston ranseript. 5 The Tipless Hotel. A year ago a tipless hotel of the first class was opened in London. The | management “positively announced” that no gratuities to waiters, porters, maids or other emplo; would be permitted or suffered. The “experi- ment,” hody called it, seemed ertreme sting, but the result was cons doubtful. Skeptics said “Wait a month or two.” The hotel is now a year old. The public is assured that the no-tip poli- ey has been enforced to the ietter, that the establishment has prospered beyond all expectations, and that there has been no trouble whatever in get- ting employes—and good, fit, well- mannered employes, t00. This is very gratifying news in- leed. Presumably the hotel pays wages and salaries that compare fa- vorably with those of hotels where tips “o.” or run riot, at all hours of the day and night. Mere prohibitions. where temptations exist, will not erad- icate an abuse. But if evermbody is satisfied at the tipless hotel there is no reason why its policy should not succeed permanently.—Chicago Rec- ord-Herald. The New Football. In a few days the football season will open in earnest, and aiready the gridiron gladiators are getting into shape for their future exploits. This vear it will be a new game of foot- ball that the college and university It is Unrivalled .. .., . s qualities which make Pears’ Soap the leading agent in producing and maintaining, o radiant beauty of complexion. Low in cost; high in all good gualities is ears’ SOAP Thera is no pretence that it will take as long to raise the Maine as it bas Cake for the Unscented e | auite teams will present to the public—a game said to be equally as spectacu- lar and much safer than the old game, even if some of the sensational play: be found lacking. We shall see. The new rules, it is claimed, make mere sizes and weight of less import- ance than formerly, and open up pos- sibilities for speedy and quick men of lighter welght than was formerly tol- erated. 1If this proves to be the case, the game will be distincily the gainer thereby, even if the picturesque giants of the old battlefields lose something of their former popularity. Football as an_intercollegiate game is on probation. It is to be shown that under the new rules it is free from its former dangers, well and good, but if it be found that the new rules ac- complish nothing, and that the old risks and dangers remain, many of the colleges and universities will place the sport under the ban—New Orleans Picayune. Little Sins. Franklin Clarkin _makes the bald statement in Everybody's Magazine hat some 300,000 women have been smuggling goods into the United States every vear. He cites some in- teresting specific_cases, one of a well known Philadelphia society woman; another of the daughters of a_Chicago clergyman, who, unknown to him, had a quilted lounging jacket of his lined with valuable lace. They prided them- selves upon their cleverness, and de- clared that “a little smuggling like that couldn’t have embarrassed the government much.” Such is the way of certain good women. They—many of them—would be incapable of any overt breach of the peace or the commission of a sin that would fracture any plank in the decalogue; and yet with demuro attitude they deliberately cheat a con- ductor of a fare or rob the custom house. That these are regarded as venial sins by many and not included in the catalogue of larger crime does not change the fact that sins they are, all the same, and direct infractions of the law. Their commission has an ulte- rior meaning also; they pervert the normal sense and establish the va- lidity of the trite axiom that one sin leads on to another. — Philadelphia Press. Money in Flowers. The system of intensive gardening carried on in France vlelds especlally notable results in its application to floriculture. For the Nice district,for ex- ample, the Syndicat des Horticulteurs is quoted in a consular report as giv- ing the production of flowers last year as 7,550 tons, valued at $5,790,000, the industry _employing 18,600 persons. These flowers, the report goes on to say, are transported daily by special trains to the north, mostly to Paris, London, Berlin, and St. Petersburg. They are packed in light willow bask- ets and are forwarded by parcels post. The varieties embraced are chiefly carnations, violets and anemones. For orange blossoms, tuberoses and jass- mine a local market is afforded by the perfume factories. Male workers in the flower gardens earn 60 cents a day, women 40 cents and girls 20 to 25 cenis. So remunerative is the flower industry that farming is neglected in the Nice district, and, consequently, there is a large importation of dairy and farm products. Considering the gains that are to be harvested in this fleld the opportunities which the American_market affords, it is singu- jar that the pursuit of floriculture in this country remains within its pres- ent narrow limits—Pittsburg Chroni- «cle-Telegraph. The Rivals of Reading. Let not Irving Bacheller, who has written helpful and wholesome books, be too cynical because the distractions of city life seem to have destroyed the reading habit. The author has many new rivals, he says, in a whim- sical interview with The New York Sun reporter. There is the automobile, the power boat, the aeroulane, the golf tourna- ment, the whist parf the theater. “Eweryone ig on the move. Our homes are almost deserted and we rarely see the light of our rsading lamps. Min- isters complain of empty churchieks. Men who used to lkneel at the altar may be seen on the road of a Sun- day lying humbly on their backs in the sand, praying to a new god and trying to soften his heart with oil or open the gates of mercy with a monkey wrench.” So Mr, Bacheller will continue to write for the simple folk who live in the country, who, “content with the old simplicity and decency and_the love of honor, call us back to those things which alone are safe and sane.” —Boston Globe. Chicago’s “Half Widows.” Out west a woman has applied for a divorce because she is tired of be- ing a “half widow.” She complains that her husband works nights and Mistakes MayHappen to you,—as they do to everyone. If you eat too fast, do not masticate properly, or take food that does not agree with you, digestive de- rangements are almost sureto come, and indigestion generally leads to very serious physical troubles. BEECHAM’S PILLS relieve and cure indigestion. They have a quick and tonic action on the stomach and its nerves, and so they give direct aid to digestion. They carry away also the indi- gestible matter. With their use dyspepsia, hiccoughs, bad taste, unpleasant breath and flatulence disappear. You should be careful and remember Beecham’s Pills Will Right The Wrong Sold everywhere. lin convenient boxes 10c. and 25c. SEPT. 26, 27, 9O vau WHITELY & BELL Comedy Entertainers » AUDITORIUI —SPECIAL FOR THE WEEK 9 ——JOLLY JUVENILES——9 PRETTY — ORIGINAL — SPECTACULAR deville’s Greatest Aggregation of Dancing Girls I Added Attraction LITZ TWELVE PERFORMING DOGS—Dogs That Do Everything but Talk. SEPI. 26, 27. 28 9 WILLIAMS & STEVENS - In an Original Comedy Sketch “A Partner Wanted” We Have Cauliflower, Small White Onions, Green Tomatoes, Red Cabbage, and many other things for Pick- ling — also the Mixed Spices. PEOPLE’S MARKET, 6 Franklin St. JUSTIN HOLDEN, Prop. sept23a Yankee Mending Tissue will mend your clothes, will mend any HAVE YOUR Watches and Clocks Repaired by FRISWELL, juni7daw 25-27 Franklin Street. rip or tear in goods much neater than you can sew it. White, black and brown in each package. 10c package. DUNN'S PHARMACY, 50 Main Street. to handle a democratic congress, we have one.—Boston Globe. Prefers the Housetops. Anyway, Colonel having worn gum Courier-Journal. drive a palr of unbroken Missouri mules down Pennsylvania avenue than it Roosevelt's worst enemy cannot charge him with ever shoes.—Louisville sept22: DENTIST DR. E. J. JONES Suite 46, Shannon Building Take elevator Shetucket street en- trance. 'Phone. POLI’S Norwich’s Leading Temple of Amusement Best Vaudeville. Latest Pictures. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Sept. 26, 21, 28 CONLIN, STEELE & CARR. Farnum & Delmar. Tom Barry & Co. 4 De Wolfs. Lynch & Zeller. Matinees at 2.15. Evenings at 8.15. 10c-20c. 10c-20c-30c. Special Nights. Tuesday, Sept. 27, Taftville night. Wednesday, Sept. 28, Odd Fellows night. Thursday, Sept. 20, Reld & Hughes Co. night, Friday, Sept, 30, Porteous & Mitchell night. Music. NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teacher of Piano. Fletcher Music Method. 45 Central Building. Room L A CAROLINE H. THOMPSON Teacher of Music 46 Washington Street. F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect St . B11. Norwish, Cu comes home and goes to sleep at 7 oclock in the morning. He sleops | nearly all day and then gets up and goes back to work. Thousands of Chicago’s “half wid- ows” can sympathize with the trou- bles of this discouraged wife. Many of the city’s night workers are com- pelled to live so far from their place of employment that they have prati- cally no enjoyment of their home life. The long trip back and forth con- sumes all the leisure that remains be- tween periods of work and sieep. No one can blame the woman who finds that marrried life under these circumstances is not all sweetness and light. That so many of them endure it uncomplainingly is a. testimonial to the unselfishness of the sex.—Chicago Journal. Nothing in a Name. While Hoke Smith is the biggest man in the biggest family, Bryan is | not_suggesting for 1912 anybody who stands a ghost of a show.—Washing- ton Post. | Would Run Away With Congressman Washburn is not far |out of the way when he says that | Champ Clark may find it easler to That is pretty good evidence of a woman’s qualifications as a housekeeper. It shows that she values. knows For it is a fact that Lenox Soap is good value—it is cheap AND good. Lenox Soap— [11 Just fits the hand” TWO SPECIALS IN RUBBER GOODS Through an especially favorable purchase we are able to offer this week two Rubber Specialties at Bargain Prices. No. 1 Special Ladies’ FAVORITE House- hold Rubber Gloves, regular 75 cent quality, special at 49 cenls No. 2 Special A two - quart Seamless FOUNTAIN Syringe, regu- lar $1.00 value, special at 79 eents These two specials will go fast, so If you cannot get in we will accept mall orders subject of course to our 1t ordering by mail having goods in stock. add 4 cents for postage. We have un ewpeciaily fine stock of Rubber Sundries, which are thor- oughly guaranteed by us. whather you buy or not. THE LEE & Retail Depariment We are always glad to show these 0SG00D Co. Norwi goods, Conn. \ NYONE "and everyonercan af- ford to buy-and’wear the ROYAL WORCESTER— the greatesf cor- set value at a me- dium price.” Every 573 BA STYLE{353 Eoum PRICE *2 Wear a I( NAI stylish’ corset—on fore } '"from# 1,033, ‘have the’ fer, or_se! Royal Worccser_Carsu,C&.S Satisfaction RoyaL : WoRCESTER is7an original concep- tion, designed upon, correct linesy made from the best materials:in'the finesti corset factory-in the world, - and , WORCESTER Guaranteed AVE on other garments, but buya good?sensible, € that iscorsetiperfec- tion in its entirety. Rovar WogcesTer corsets (either ba- tiste or*coutil) are ‘made in innumera- blestylesand shapes| Y‘eryfifygeiof,fig- ‘ure at prices ranging: tter: -—Aask ifor the ROYAL "WORCESTER. | X/ { STYLE™460 BATISTE] PRICE '] éimod:l]:leglr;fiwe;wifl_direcl, nd postgaid on-recelprof price.. . Makers Also of ,_ WORCESTER, MASS. § BON TON Corsets *31}15. El ! ADJUSTO Corsets *3ana’5 A. W. JARVIS IS THE LEADING TUNER IN EASTERN CONNECTICUT. ‘Fhone 518-5. 15 Clairmount Ava sept22a 1. H. BALCOM, Teacher of Plano. 29 Thames St. Lessons glven at my residence or at the home of the pupil. Same method as used at Schawenka Conservatory, Ber- 1in. octi1a Individuality Is What Counts In Photography. Bringing out the real personality, the fine joints In character, the littia traits that make us what we ars. Toned down by the natural spirit of ;n artist Into perfect accor: Not a thing of paper and pasteboard with a ready-made look. If you want a photo of your reag self, or what your friends see to love and admire, call on LAIGHTON The Photographer, Norwich Savings oppostte 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 CORPORATION, 507-515 North Main Streat. NOTICE Dr. Louise Franklin Miner Is now locatsd in her mew ofice, Breed Hall Rovm 1 Office hours, 1 to 4 p. m. Telsphone 660. aug17a —— WHAT'S NEW = THE PALACE CAFE Step in znd see us. NK WATSON & CO., 78 Franklin Strest, 1647 Adam’s Tavern 1861 offer to the public the finest standard brands of Beer of Europe and America, Bohemian, Pilsner, Culmbach Bavarian Beer, Bass' Pale and Burton, Mueirs Scotch_Ale, Guinness' Dublin _Stout, C. & C. Imported Ginger Ale, Bunker Hill P. B, Ale, Frank Jones' Mourish~ ing Ale, Sterling Bitter Ale, Anheusers Budwelser, Schlita ana Pabat. A. A. ADAM., Norwich Town. Telephone 447-3 5 iya2a LOUIS H. BRUNELLE BAKERY We amre confident our Ples, Cake and Bread canuot be excslled. Give us & trial order, movid 20 Falrmount Streat THERE 1s no advertising medium | Eastern Connecticut equal to The B letin for business results.

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