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¥ .ci:i Sulletin and Couvied. 114 YEARS OLD. p A CLEAN CAMPAIGN. that the speakers in the present cam- paign are not disposed to throw mud. Mr. Frank Butterworth of New Ha- ven said in an address for Goodwin, the other day, “Nothing is to be made |, o/ T8y seem to grow away Gedi | 0 Tejo acter, his fitness for the governor- ship, because it requires of republi- cans the best that fs in them of merit and of work to deserve and 1o gain Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, | victory wecond. Cona., .. Telephone Cnilu: Business Offios. Fuu- itorial Rooms, ulletin Job Office, 35 Willkmantlc Office, Room 2 Murray | tack sudge Baldwir Building. Telephone of Murttord. i Feor Lieutenant Governor, DENNIS A. BLAKFSLEB . of New Haven. Fer Sceretary of State, MATTHEW H. ROGERS of Bridgeport. For Stage Trea: COSTRLLO LIPPITT 5 ot Norwich. Per State Comptroller, THOMAS D. BRADSTREET ! of Thomasto: Wer Attorney General, JOHN H. LIGHT of Norwalk. Congr First Distric ®. STBVENS HENRY of Verno: Second Distriet, ANDREW N. SHEPARD of Norwich, Fourth District, EBENBZER J of Norwalk. Few Represcatariv JOHN Q. TILSON of New Haven Represe HENRY " ALBERT DENIES THE FIGURES. And Robert liunter, the socialist ponent: These men see that there is nothing t lent force to an argument. The meetings have repudi- Who were not true to the it the prima ated the n elfare of the people. The republican party is making a fight for cleaner politics and it is going to win. The party that condemns its own Wrong- port of the people. THE TOUGHEST MAN. The newspapers have tried in vain lo! these many years to locate the an man, and 1o one today after rs of vigilance can tell where he and now they are in quest of ighest man, and it is doubtful if an ever locate him. The best examples of tough men are furnished California and Maryland. For in- 1 At Hagerstown, Md., there is a man reported to live who was struck by an automobile going at the rate of forty miles an hour, and he still capers, and smilc in California there is a man who t to sleep on a railroad track and was struck by a fast train, who es- | caped with only a headache. New York claims to have a man who three stories and only broke his sliar-button. Amd Pennsylvania asserts that a risburg man fell from a point 100 «t up a church steeple and ofily 1 ve lives Senator Bulkeler disputes the figures | broiie a clothesfline. ©f the Hariford Courant with respect | These are fine examples of the tough- wtate up to date ator with hime attitude of the senators tives who bave he general An interviewer from | f the New Haven Register mot the sen- { tin's inoredulity. The writers of these that city on Thursda ported the foliowing in this appenstance: and re- conversation and{ ness which défies Fate, but like patent dicine testimoni they concern which mark life too ar from home; hence The Bull phs were perhaps tougher than | their subjects. The scnator was he con-4 EDITORIAL NOTES. widered &: stand and prowptly an y thought for today: It is bet- - “Pime! How else could it be?""| > 2 friend than to need one. ol that the Hariford Cour- | : tone ant had figured out 4 considera- { Vice President Sherman is a mil- ble majority for the | lionaire, but that is not equal to be- ted of the gemeral assembls ing Theodore Roosevelt you say that Lean’s = Wgures as sbown Hartford | The democratic party of Massachu- Courant are not just as they should Yol 1 think the vevelea, red in aver of.MeRéan. “Floverso the fguros” said the sena- | million tor, “and 4then you b sult” “Then you fesl that you so nfn" +“1 knew I am shead.” “These have been twen tors nominated, 4 that I have cightsen Rors to geven on the other side.” . o 1s mot o Lot eounty and Windham mie,” gatd the senator. “I know that the repre mommv.u are for me in “It has been sald, Senator snd yoyr old frl #peak 8 you pass along I have notMing against Georg THE CAUSE OF LABOR. Should the Congregationa America Le Bedy in the worl positively in the Intoresis of 48 lkely to win a popular has fallen to the nomination. A despat. following Congregat wentiments are Ik By oh fonal before the conventic Voiced by H. M mayor of Kansan ( of the Congregation substantially as fo “We deem it the du tian peopie to.« rectly with certa problems “For the right ¢ portunity for sel “For the principle of ‘cc wrbitration in industrial “For the prote ®rom dange tonal dissase, injuries > For the abolition of chik labc figures should be Senator Bulkeley ve the real re ~five sena- rmation of the sena- ounty | es 0, endor=ed the church | neern them ) the 0p- sctts feels confident it can find out where it is at by mail o policeman, who has seen f service, has a third of a, feels able to retire, A Ch forty years Jac rnished the first black + are | frost with ice three-fourths of an inch | thick. He is getting sensational A suit of unpaid-for clothes gives a man an air of prosperity, and only his talior knows that it is not genuine. tour of 9950 miles to see Georgia's good roads orgia has dome well. )sts may come and frosts may go, the office fly still remains, show- ing no diminution of activity or feroc- ity | The physician w ho tells a patient nat En't sick loses his fee, but loesn’'t win the regard of his pa- 1t is something newspaper cer should pa urprise to the ribes that a Salome dan- s 18 trunks through the hoid the business so enthusiasti- Niagara Falls that he was killed while scouting To make a Graham-White sandwich, the Boston Record says, a on meet 5| should e placed betweey graham | and white bread sices Bost i Americ vays salute lag when it passe | This littie exercise lends a dignified patriotic appearance to the force. | An Ohio judge has @ecided that an | | engaged woman has a right to go with | a third party, and that her fiance has no right to assault him. He can sue B Buich, reg e zreat loss of life from forest tlons of toil for | ta ¢ itiention to suard physi A of Pinchot, who'says ©f the comm {t rests sh be better guarded “For the suppression of the s ] nst fire. whop system | E S “For the gradual and reasonabio re- itzerland was the first country @uction of the hours the | 1o recognize Portugal as a sister re- '"7;:: 5r: “n"«l“' rv""‘l"*"“‘ B s i Switzerland did not gaze at BT Seves. R " offee-grounds 1o see if recogni- “For a living wags a | tion was politic @very industy, and e B TR Wape that euch LETTERS TO THE EDITOR “For suitakle pros 1 AR 5. B 5r the Wothors Let the Churches Pray for Rain capacitated by injur 1r litor: Under existing efreu “For the mbatement of poverts nces 1 Jt not be well for the “We urge upon S IN P y hurches n all atates of the union | Norwich Ot 1aik 1pt0. A TR #hat they will unitedly work to secure s the passage by the legislature of their Use for Charred Trees. respective states z"!commm e At last some use has been found law prepaved by ti the great areas in the far West, form legislation of the | e fires in times past have assoctation.” | 1 them a truck of blackened And It is certainly time for the Christian rred trees. 145 been found that church to fake a positive stand for |'h° slight burning makes the tr the protectfon of the pcopl | stumularly well adapted for serv can be no real moral uplift € | (he Sante Fo rallread have dete as this great religious force is silent the oppression and | With t in the face of degradation of the people. s Which makes }ite harder for the masses | ©7 burned cedar While th makes them more incredulous and I susceptible to the true principles life taught by this great body. Cotonel Bryan says that the dem ed to give the i s p: ntracted for 1 a thorou; se in view they )0 picces from a > furnisi- in this order will be used entirely s said thut later on th 5 supporters for tele graph wires in places ere the color would be no ohjec 1on Lhis eXperiiient resulls wel, s cratic pasty has been Preachiug tue [and 10 is Leing closel; watched all over mew natiomalism for the past 14 years | e country The republiean party proposes o pric- Cice 1L Fight away. Massachusstts is mixtp state in the and first In @ 0 the vast areas of burnt-over forest lands throughout Northwest will take on an added value and aside from ihe mere value he timher removed the clearing of 1 will open the way for a new on dand now covered with Tt is a pleasure to mote the fack by attacking the democratic candidate | tenderest and most biess for governor. Good men ought ratherlor age fre those of motherhood in ‘e at the strengih of his ehar- | man's ‘most dependent state: and the 3 Hacen Journal-Courier, to’cor- | boy scout took | THE MAN WHO TALKS their mothers, but they nevv%‘jo emories debi—a debt of Eratitude—which the greatest mem of earth have acknowl- edged agheing due to mother, to whom they Afelt they owed - everything, /| but ich we must all acknowledge IS B Senerai debt, is the debt that can. never liquidated and the only ndidate, wrote in a letier to The |dedt that strengthens maternal affec. tion in -the humah heart. It is hard rect a tisstatement: “I did not at- [ to think that there may be gomewhere < integrity or rep- | & MeMOry of a mother which Is like & utaZion. * I do not desire to “pmg";é ‘but that is the great ex- wake personal attacks upon my op- . for most of us endorse the sentiment of the poet: “The loving face of mother is the dearest face I see, The gentle voice of mother has to be gained by abuse. Caiumny never | the sweetest sound to me:” “ire way to lose the state of Connec- | How slow we are to come to a real- ticut is to attempt (o run a campaign b el B thf?b:):'etrel‘?:‘: ‘sr::.y:m;; of misrepresentation The issues arel o cong in the most of us and a great mportant—the principles involved are | deal that's bad in the best of us—that vital. The country-wide demand 1S | God really has not made the pure saint at the man with the ballot must be | or the irredecmable devil a possibility siven a square deal The republicans | to mortal life. The worst boys—boys whoSe juvenile career just foreshad- owed debasement and evil—have be- come the most successful men and fa- mous public benefactors. If there is ene place above another where ghe Weakness of man’s judgment is made clear it is when he forecasts the end doers is worthy the interest and sup-{ of a boy's carcer or hands out an es- timate of his fellowman. If there is one thing above another we should be thankful for it is that the judg- ments of man are not the judgment ot Goa, The key to right behaviour is right thought. It doesn’t make any differ- ence how a man prays or what he professes if his mind entertains evil. Jealousy and hate and prejudice do ot help clear spiritual vision. they never vet luminated a right path. Te do right a man must think right. This is the irrevocable law and there is no getting away from it. Some peo- ple who think crooked pride them- selves upon the straightness of their daily, walk and their pride is their worst stumbling block. A true man canuot think of doing evil to his en- emies without injuring himself. Many a man who has the devil in him thanks God every day that he is numbered among the redeemed, and he isn’t and never will be until the devil is routed out! The habit of finding fault is one of the easlest cultivated habits peculiar to man; and it leads to the most irra- tional results. Perhaps you may have noticed that the man who complains loudest because the church is closed and the minister is on his vacation Is not the one who is most faithful in at- tendance at meeting the other eleven monthis of the year. The man who com- plalns most because a town votes “wet” is among the most thirsty when it has gone “dry.” The man who talks with most confidence about man’s future home is often discovered to be enter- taining most doubt. The average man tries to be rational and consistent, but | the habit of complaining leads right| away from the tableland of consisten- | £ oM s wiser to be sllent than to let fault-finding get control of the tongue. | have noticed, and doubtless oth- ers have .done so, that some dahlias do not make seed, and while I cannot tell why, I did not think that it might be the effect of a floral discord. After many seasong in the dahlia patch and the cultivation of seedpods, I have at last been forced to conclude that the reason the finest cactus double flow- ers do not make seeds is because they have been disconcerted by the work of the hybridizers—they have been put out of harafony with themselves. T have exndined many cactus seedpods this yzGr, and have found where the Deds “were soft and empty after the shomy petals were dead, but still un- deépped, that the fertilizing florets fad never opened, but remained shut and perished without having _fulfilled their function. Having noted this fact no doubt is left in my mind ower was crippled by cross fertilization, for regular composite| flowers mature in an orderly and seed- ]p#rf\‘\'tihg wa; There are few butterflies that are| constant to a dahlia patch, but the| Monarch butterfly has been a continu- ous daily visitor for weeks, and there ms to be no doubt that he finds| plenty of liquid refreshment. The! Grapta tribe of butterflies are around the lot, the showy Red Admiral being in_greatest humbers, feeding princi- pally upon the juices of the Sekel and’ Shelden pears upon the ground, and it is not infrequently that a wasp nd a putterfly have a battle royal to etermine which shall have the fruit; and sometimes a butterfly triumphg over wasp or bee. Since the cool days e. the Plusia. moths visit the dah- jas just at nightfall, and they find }#00d ‘on all varieties; but none of the { | insects get para at their work like the bees; and it seems to me as it they are the victims of small spiders instead of stupe! es from the| plants, ng juf The voice of the robin is rarely heard morning and evening now, and their total disappearance is remarked by many people. They have not all | left their 0l haunts, but they keep | more to the low shrubbery and the | warm corners of the ficlds by day and | roost in the close, thick-follaged ce- dars at night. The mulched dahiia is a favorite spot with the worm- hunting robins and several times a day T notice them turning up the lawn cuttings and discovering fat worms benesth them. They are well posted as to the habits of their prey, and whether conditions for the attraction of insects are nature-made or man- made, they recognize the lure and their opportunity. The cats and the robins iprear to understand each other very well_and not a_dead bird have I seen on the place this year. Well fed cats are not hunters. When well supplied with food they come to regard rats and mice as playthings, and will not Kill them, preferring them alive to caper with, Not a few young fellows =zet a mo- tion in the teens that the night «cy is the ker to success: and if thy become confirmed in this view of it they continue on until at times they cannot find the keyhole when they zet home, and cannot tell the ni Key from a sixpenny nail. Let say right here that T & heen miliar with the nigh know mostsof its possibilities. On oc- casion it is the most difficult thing to find \that ever was carried in a man’s pocket. I have known late night key s to mistake it for a mateh, try ht thelr piy th it and boarder gets in late, steps heavily on | the stairs, stumbles in the hall and caught ‘in bed in the morning with his boots on. The night-key is not the key of success, voung man, but may bécome the key to convivial ex- cesses, or something worse, perhaps, It was Rose Fay who wrote of the garden us an album of friendship, the place i which nearly ever flower loviug friend hgd left an ograph in plant or shrub or tree. When the annuais are dying and the gardens are fading they “o not e this feature in | ie bardy porders. ln tiis way Mrs. i Theodore Thomes pointed out a few yof her garden memorials: “This lit- te chimp of ox naturalized 30 the was gather Invely day merr in an expedil Noteh. That group of lady’s came from the woods of a dear friend lippors l ENERGY VERSUS GOOD LUCK ] (Written for The Bulletin.) “The longer I live the less’I believi in luck. We often hear the expres- sion, “He is in luck” or “Just my luck!” ~After all, do we not cause our own luck? When we succeed, or have “g0od luck,” as we call it, we can us- ually trace our success to forethought on our part, and failure is generally acountad for by lack of care and thought. We may not always be con- scious of the previous effort or over- sight, but when the.results come, we can often see why they bring satis- faction or regret to us. We remem- ber then the days of careful and preparation, or the opportunity overlooked, which if improved would have made faflure less Again when we have carefully plan- ned for our work, using our best judg- ment, we should not repine if the re- sults are not what we desire. Those of us who believe that the world is govermed by a wisdom greater than our own, must admit that our fail- ures may be .used as another's suc- broader plan of caring for Why should we expect that our individual wishes should alyays be the best arrangement for the entire com- munity? And none of us know how far our influence extends in its ef- fects on others. ‘Throw a pebble into a smooth stretch of water, and watch the wid- ening circles ripple over the surface. The pebble is lost to sight immedi- ately, but its influence is felt to the water’s edge. So every action of ours has its effect on those about us. Therefore we may be the cause of their good or bad luck as well as that of our own. James Rumford was a firm believer in luck. He was an en- ergetic man, but in_spite of all hls efforts, his affairs did not turn out at all times as he expected, and he felt that luck was against him. ‘T et Jack Blair in the village today, Mil- lie,” said he to his wife, as he joined her on the kitchen porch after putting out his team. “He's a smart man, is Jack. 1 wish I had his luck. He makes me fez] that life on a’ farm is pretty slow. It's nothing but work, hard work, from early till late, and nothing to’ show for it. I sometimes wish I had taken the offer he made me twe years ago to join him In hie railroad enterprise, even if the old Plage had to be sold to furnish capi- tal.” “Sell the old home!” exclaimed Mil- lie. “How can you give it a thought? Your own birthplacé and that of your father and of his father; and we have bean_so happy here. Everyone says, too0, that you have improved the farm, and it is so lovely here. You weuld miss the independent life of a farmer, if you were to live in a crowded city as Jack Blair does.” “That is all very true, Millia” re- sponded the husband, “but I'd like to give you the fne clothes that Sarah Blair wears, and see vou with less care and work than you have now. As I said before, I wish I had Jack's £00d Iuck.” “Never you mind about me,” laugh- ed Millie. “When I am overworked I'll let you know; and as for clothes, don't 1 in mine? We are happier is cozy, little home and with our healthy, active children than the Blairs in their stylish city mansion. Sarah Blair is not a contented wom- an, if T read faces aright, and she al- the house to prepare thair evening meal. “Well, Millie, perhaps you are right” pondered James Rumford when ways looks at our little ones with such & wistful gtance. You know they lost the only child they ever had. I'll back my Jim's energy inst Jacic Blairs good luck any y in the week.” - And with a loving pat on her husband's shoulder Miille turned into he was left to himself. “Any man do_his best for such a wife as mine. ‘We are .happy here, and I should hate to sell the place, but I'd llke to make money faster.” As time went on, Jack Blair's visits to his old friends became less fre- quent, though rumors of his .increas- ity now and then reached them. He was known as a shrewd business man, daring in his financial ventures and apparently successful in them all. Meanwhile James Rumford had steadily advanced in his standing in the community. ~His progressive methods had added valu2 to his farm, while his judgment was often consult ed by those who knew him. Still he brooded over Jack Blair's good luck, and the big dividends from those rail- roads, of which Blair kept him in- formed by frequent offers to invest any funds Rumford might furnish. At last came an offer so’ tempting that Rumford decided to accept it and obtain a loan on the farm to furnish the desired capital. “I'll not tell Mil- lie” he planmed, “till I can surprise her with my success. Then the loan can be rapaid, and we shall have a snug little sum laid by for a rainy day. The needful sum was readily ob- taimed, for James Rumford's word was as good as his bond; the necessary letter was written to Blair to be de- spatched _ the- following morning, and Rumford already chuckled over Millie's _surprise and delight. Not a Httle of his satisfaction came from feeling that Millie must now acknowl- edge that he was right after all. Imagine his consternatoon as a eighbor passing by called out: ‘Heard about Jack Blair?” “No,” responded Rumford, “what is % 23 “Tha papers eay he has gone to smash. He's cleared out. too, nobody knows where, and taken all the money he comld get with him. 1 pity & ones he has drasged into his schemes. never gei their money back. e not concerned. I hope.” 0,” responded, “I'm not.” But as he turned away he shuddered to think of his narrow escape. “Thank God the news came bafore that letter was sent,” he reflected. As Millie met him that night. he told her of Jack's down- , and added, “You were right, Mil- energy and honest dealing are the best capital a man can have. With- out them even shrewdness will not bring good luck” which I am sure is the right conclusion. However much we may admire an- it than craftiness and sharp dealing. These may bring an appearance of prosperity for a time, but in the long run, the old ying holds good: Grip is a good dog, but Holdfast is better.” AN IDLER. in Vermont. THere are moss roses from a magnificent rose garden in Massachusetts and these are seedlings from the home of Longfellow, and wil- lows rooted from cuttings that were brought by a friend from the Ssouth. We all have autographs in our gar- dens, and our autograph is to be found in other gardens expressed by plants sent out. SUNDAY MORNING TALK THE PRESENT UNREST. Unrest in politics, in business, in society, in the churches. Unrest in the Occident and the Orient. TUnrest among the poor and the rich, the edu~ cated and the ignorant. A general dissatistaction with things that are, a reaching out for sométhing better, a cutting loose from old moorings, the severing of long-tima party amlis- tions, a general call for this or that or the other thing from this, that or the other fellow or institution. Men are throwing overboard old allegiances, they are forming new compacts and alliances. Naver in the history of the world was there such a universal fer- ment. Everything is being thrown in- to the melting pot. What shall the outcome be? Disquieting indeed to persons of a conservative temperament is this wide- spread unrest. ey see in it a grow- ng tendency on the part of the peo- ple away from substantial and endur- ing things and toward superficial in- terests. They are appreheneive of the outcome. They would rather have the world stand pat than move forward toward uncertain and undefined goals. I respect this attitude, but I do not sympathize with it. Stagnation s the thing I dread far more than unrast. Who really wants to sce China now that it is once awakened from its sleep of centuries, turn over and take another long nap? Who favors, the return- to the sultanate of Turkey of Abdul Hamid, “The Damned?® Does any sane leader in the field of re- liglous thought wish to have the hide- bound Calvinism that for years held men in the grip of fear, again domi- nat> Scotlamd or old England or New Fngland? Unrest iy the sure sign of life. When the patient begins to stir after the operation it means at least a fighting chance for life. When the hepatica and the violet in spring push their tender blades above the ground we see in thelr emergence the sure prophecy of waving harvestsand barns filled with plenty. These are glorious days in which to be living, simply be- cause things are changing, and chang- ing swiftly, so that the heretic of yes- terday becomes the saint of tomorrow, so that the political doctrine and the social order which when first formu- lated on paper by venturesome spirlts alarmed tha pubilc speedily become every-day and commonplace beliefs. But there is a kind of unrest that does not make for progress and that harms him who cherishes it. Leaving the 0ld anchorage does not necessarily maks & man a successful voyager. Hasty and unreasonable revulsion from the party in power or {rom tha faith of the fathers is a purely destructive e a path to the golden age. Just now the country ezems to be full of people who move and does not of itself bl are out of sorts with the existing situ- ation, but who hardly know what they want, or who if they do know exactly what' they want, have not quietly and patiently considered how the end of their desires may be best attained. Moreover, that kind of dissatisfaction with the present order which falls to see the importanca of the individual's contribution to the common welfare is also a symptom of weakness rather than a guarantee of progress. Too se to put it up to some institution or even to the government, when we ought to stand manfully at our post of duty and solve our own problems. Let our diseatisfaction begin with ourselves. many of us want somebody ROYAL BAKING Ny of modern time helps to perfect cooking. Makes Biscuit, Cake, Pastries, Crusts, Light, Delicious, Wholesome. Best families, world over, use it POWDER X TLet us repent, firet of all. of our weak- extravagances, timidity, irreso- pride, seifishmess. way to be rid of inward restlessness is to rest calmly in God and in his sure and gracious designs for men. OCTOBER 17. 18, 19 Let us learn that THE PARSON. LUMBER AND COAL. Vaudevill 12 CHARACTERS TREBREH \The Man with_the Musical Dining AUDITORIUM SINONDS & SHIELDS Present CAFE De L’BOWERY t L hi Act. ® Grestest Laughing Act: 1) CHARACTERS CLAYTON & RENNIE Eccentric Comedy Duo. GOAL ONE OTHER BIG FEATURE ADMISSION 10c. “Dnst to Dust,” Ashes to Ashes,” Thus Saith the Preacher. ‘Chappell's Coal doesn’t have Qust and doesn’t have many ashes. You ought to buy it this Fall. E. CHAPPELL Wharf and 150 Main Street. Telephenes. Lumber As_presented for an en nal N. Y. Scenic_Praduction. bisolutely’ and Posi Thrilling Play ever wri PRICES 25c, 50c, 75c, $1.00 and $1.50 14th, at Box Office. Sale opens Friday, Octobel Cars to Norwich after performance. Telephone orders and mail orders containing LYCEUMTHEATR WALTER T. MURPHY, Manager. MONDAY, OCTOBER 17ih, S8AM 8. & LEE SHUBERT (ing.) Presents AND GREATEST PLAY THE GITY e year at the tthe. COAL Free Burning Kinds and Lebigh ALWAYS IN BTOCK. A. D. LATHROP, Office—cor. Market and Shetucket Sta Telephone 168-12. CALAMITE GOAL “It burns up clean.” Well Seasoned Wood C. H. HASKELL. 402 — 'Phones — 489 COAL and LUMBER M. HOURIGA COMPLETE HOME FURNISHER. Funeral Director and Embalmer. In the beautiful valley ot Wyomlng, in Penn., lies the beds of the finest An- thracite Coal in the world. secured a supply of this Coal fur this tin your eooking stove We are the agents for Rex Flintkote Roofing, one of thp Lezt roofings known to the trade. JOHN A. MORGAN & SON. other's success, rest assured there must be a more stable foundation for Telephone 884. Gymnasium Goods Running Pants .... ; ... 25¢ to $1.25 w3y s vies R .. 65¢ to $1.50 .$1.50 to $6.00 iLLING_EU(&R Co. Wholesale—191 Main St.—Retail Athletic Shirts Punching Bags Ammunition Shot Guns 1f t's Made of Rubber We Hava It Football Goods . 85c to $6.00 . $150 ... $1.25 $3.50 75¢ to $3.00 . 50¢ Khaki Clothing Paints Perfection Oil Heaters Welsbach Mantles Electric Fixtures Tungsten Lamps Visit our new enlarged re- tail store on the second floor. EATON CHASE Company 9 Main Stree!, Norwich, Conn. Sherwin Williams||OUR BRIDGES HELP YOU OVER: TROUBLES) King Dental Parlors, Frank in Square. JACKSON, octild FUNERAL ORDERS Artistically Arranged by HUNT .. ** The Florist, Lafayette Street. HAVE YOUR Watches and Clocks Repaired by FRISWELL, 25-27 Franklin Street. JOSEPH BRADFORD, Book Binder. Blank Books Mada and Rulsd to Ordw: 108 BROADWAY. Telephons 268 THE PLANK Headquarters for Be: Ales, Lagers, . there is 1 JAMES O'CONNELL, Propristor. ough the advertis- | dium beiter than thr Telephone 607, ing columns oi The Builetin. WE ARE NOW READY to take care of all your Carriage and Wagon Repairing and Painting. Carriage and Automobile Trimming and Upholstering The Sconk Clark ~ LDRPOBATION, 607-515 North Main Stres!, EVENINGS, Reserved Seats 20c.: NEW LONDON, CLYDE FITCH'S . LAST Theatre, New York. Metropolitan Cast. Sensational check promptly CHARLES D. G Teacher of Sinzing. 42 Broadway. Regular hours after Oct. 1st. HELEN LATHROP PERKINS TEACHER OF SINGING, 11 Huntington Plaer NELLIE S, HOWIE, Teacher of Piano. Fletcher Music F. 0. GEER TURMER 122 Prospect St Norwieh, & A. W. JARVIS IS THE LEADING TUNER IN EASTERN CONNECTICUT. 15 Clairmount Ava | ‘Fhone 5185, %. H. BALCOM, Teacher of Plamo. 29 Thamos St. ive= at my residence or upil. Same method used at Schawenka Conrervatory, Bene The Norwich Hicke! & Brass fa, Tableware, Chandeliers, Yacht Trimmings and such things Refini €9 to 87 Chestnut St. Nerwi Schoal Supplies Composition Ink, Mucilage, Paints, Crayong Erasers, Strapa Knives, Lunch Boxes MRS, EDWIN FAY. Franklin Squara and Baskets, Maple Syrop and o Pancake Flour Have just arrived. Just the thing for We have also delicions COFFEE PEOPLE’S MARKET, € Franklin St. ‘High ‘éréd‘; PIANOS Latest Sheet Music AND NEW STYLES ; PAPER WALL Yerrington's 49 Main Street MME. TAFT, AND CLAIRVOYANT, located at 68 Washington St —— WHAT'S THE PALACE CAFE Step in £nd see us. K WATSON & co, 78 Franklin Street AMERICAN HOUSE, Furrell & Samderson, Props. SPECIAL RATES to Theatre Troupes, Traveling Men. sto. Livery counected, HEILCREY ST B AL e AN Three Decade: Foley's Honey and Tar has been & coughs, colds, ts of the throat, chest and Contains. no NEW s 1 busis me- — 3 1< 00 Advertsing medium im astern Connecticut egual to The Bul Jelin {or Busingss. results,