Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 25, 1910, Page 4

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THE RIGHT TO KILL DEER. A Dbill has been intreduced into the legisiature of Vermont giving farm- ers the right to shoot deer which are dlscovered on their land doing dam- aga to fruit trees and crops; but, con- sidering the weakness of man and the falsity of his claims, the St. Albans Messenger advises a proviso that the dead deer does not become the prop- erty of the farmer. but the property of the state and must be delivered to the game warden to be sold for the benefit of the state. The Messenger is right Sorwich gullelm el guurlct’-'. R 114 YEARS OLD Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, | wheri it says: Conn., as wecond-class matter. “The only way to guard against the Telephone Caulls: abuse of this right is to compel any- Bulletin Business Office. 480, one killing a deer under such circum- Bulleti fal Ro $5-3. S atcle, jny Eulletin Job Office, 366, stances to turn the carcass over to a | for b A Willimantic Office, Room 3 Murray |game warden to be sold for the ben- s Dbeating nis efit of the state. Omit such 2 pro- vision under penalty, and the deer that will be slaughtered in the closed sea- Bulding. Telophone 210. Norwich, Tundly. OeL 25, 1910. = [son under pretence that they are a |She was lazy and shiftless and whin- nuisance will soon begin to compare | ing and had a temper like a pack of o - in numbers with the deer that are fi;flnrmkf‘; av‘l)t:ld;‘::;l tmnm:-‘x;:: \‘m’u‘ifi The Cll‘flllflhflfl 0‘ Killed when the regular hunting Sea- | ;o 4oy j4q been thousands of miles son is open. away from her. As fast as they got Th It is right that the farmer should |6)q enough they lit out from the | e Bulletin. 'R Hght o protect mn Broperty | Shact Tuat vt Thoi havhs hemme ang| « = gh he s e S 2 started i o 1ak hing iserable culation of amy paper im Eastern || T, 0 o and false pretences Otto was the youngest and he al- Comnecticut, and from three to four o b ld take advantage of | WaYS had been a si creature from | times larger tham that of amy im | [OF &N who would take ¢ . | babyhood. When he was 14 he looked It is delivered to ever | | the 1aw for their own selfish purposes. cent. THE BULLETIN'S DAILY STORY R . T e HE GOT FAT “I never see a fat man,” { said the|you to jail for cruelty and culpable fourth man at the table after they had watched the rolling departure of a stout patron from the cafe, “that does not make me think of Otto Borgus at home! “The Borguses were a family kept the town interested If Dad Borgus was not in the little jail for hilarious drinking or somebody’s and _othery around the the time. making things lvely ily ly blame him for beating his wife, be- cause if anybody homestead. wife Nobody the 4058 houses im Nor | |If Such a measure should come before | o¢ the women in town wich, and sead by mimety-three per [|our own legislature the coming winter [ with Mrs. Borgu of the people. Im Windham || this proviso may well be kept in mind. | streaks down needed that in them all chickens he o fam- could actual- remonstrated | but she only cried it she er grimy face and did. {like a picked and starved robin. Some said becaise passed a lot of time ther: neglect!” “Everybody has some pet bughear {and jail was Mrs. Borgus’, probably S0 many It was the only thing that spelled special ostra- cism threw o i she did mot have to go into long p! a for in & to her, so the,judge's sentence her into a panic. She set to ork at once to feed Otto. Everybody 1 town knew about the situation, so lanations when she oors with tearful whinings, begging provisions. She worked hard go- ng around gathering up food, and she ot a lot because people in small towns appeared at back are alway free-handad. She didin’t a2y, to do any more washing. for she said it took all her time to comply with the law and stuff Otto. h fe so w wa h: a h A h W “Well, Otto began to pick up so fas hat his clothes split and dropped o im. His mother collected new clothes or him somewhere. Soon he showed much fat on bones that ouldn’t have %known the boy He sn't exactly good looking, becaus is eyes were too little and shifty nd h chin too sioping, but at least e began to resemble a human being t the end of the three months, when e went before t judge again, he ighed 122 pounds. See that vou keep it up!” the judge | peitiie. Stk the world was hardona poor woman | told his mother, sternly, "t delivered to over D09 houses, || E FIRST. whose husband had gone angd left her— | “Well, she had sort of got thz hab: mon to over || HOE 5 : for Dad Borgus had departed some|and so had Otto. You never coul 1,100, and = all of these places it Since the little Swiss rex?ub_hr Was | tirne before to parts unknown. His | get him to run errands or do odd job. is comwidered the local daily. the first to recognize the republie of | going really made no financial differ- | because he said he was afraid of tak Eastern Conmmecticut has forty- | | Portugal, the hope has been cherished | ence to the family, for when he was|ing down his weight. He insisted on aime towns, one humdred mnd sixty- | | that this country might find its way |t home he did no more than steal | this even when he added flesh at the | five postotiice districts, and tory- || clear to at least be second to take a | dimes from his wife to get drunic on.|rate a fen pounds a month. When ome rural free delivery routes. | aiMdent sister republic by the hand; e did washing spasmodically when | Otto was 16 he could have travels e she could wheedle no more help out of | with a circus and made big money The Bulletin is wold im every }| put it looks now as if American ca- | the charitably inclined. She was so he kept right on growing fatte town and om all of the R. F. D.||tion and diplomacy were going to re- |gnirtless and hopeless that she worried he did w sit around and eat routes im Easters Comnecticut. sult in making a tagger of the great- | the women nearly to death who tried didn’t wa —he rolled. His eyes | est republic on earth. where it should | to help her. | had disappeared into little creases and ClRCULA“oN | have proud to have appeared as a Finaily Otto’s condition got so pit- | nose was a mere dot. People {1cader. Great Britain has taken the |iable that the town couldn’t stand it d to chip in to buy his clothes, be- rasgt = & an, h he a s mother were drag- | cause, as his mother said. she was 2 1001, mverage .... > ecarapd o ff"l “,l‘.‘i" e e |ged into court one day. The judge | poor woman and couldn't afford to pro- 5.920 | that all the world-powers shall DAY | took a look at the boy, who was just | vide all the cloth it took for a suit for 1905, average . 0 | their respects to the mew republic at}; human sca: and then at his| him, and nobody’s old clothes came | the same time. America is a world- | mother, who. in spite of her poverty | within miles of fitting him. He ker ks 8 I87 | power, but it would look so much |seemed pretty well fed and healthy. | on growing, t0o, and got so fat that he ook on: er ta in a class its His eves snapped. 1 suppose he was | couldn’t work if he had want o. better to be in a class by itself in oy pD! ppose he was | cou k if_he had wanted to. October 22........ f | this affair, rather than to fall to the | thinking of the baskets of food his|The town acepted him patiently as a place of “and others,” that it will be | Wife had sent down to the Borguses. |burden it had only itself to hlams for. 2 = |~ *“‘See here’ he sald. leaning over his |Some people felt hard toward the judze — = EE== ====|a disappointment to the people 10 see | gogy and addressing Mrs. Borgus, ‘how | but he had been elacted to congress REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET. G t Britain leading where it own | much does that boy weigh? i | and was out of it and didn't are.” s magnates could have most becomingly “Of course, she didin’t know. so they | “What became of Otto?” the second Election Tuesday, Nov. Sth. borne the first part. Caution is to be |took Otto out and weighed him and | man at the tabla asked 5> commended unless it is of the kind |found that he weighed 86 pounds. “Otto? Oh. when he was 22 he mar- ""_'Q gy RO T AT et - Bl Seariten. Wit It Well’ ‘said the judge, ‘that's|ried a girl down the flats an CHARLES A. GOO s AL, op L st Uncle | 2bout 30 pounds too little! I'll give | brought her home and now she does of Hurtford. an % ”“‘,,‘.fi,, e ‘l‘w‘vlv;hi) e | you three months, Mrs. Borgus, to get | washing seven days a week and feeds For lleutemant Govermor, o R e s g vt 3 Otto’s weight up to 120. After that | Otto and his mother. She's as thin as DRSS A B ATRSay st real thrill of joy to the Portu-|pell be weighed once a month to see | a lath herself. but she is sinfully proud e el ey guese heart that his weight is kept there! Other- | of Otto because he's so fat.”—Chicago 2 e il wise I shall be compelled to commit | News. Bor Seoretary of State, TAG-DAY REVELATION MATTHEW H. ROGERS Norwich has never had a tag-day, | _ il R e B of Bridgeport. but 1t may vet have one as a novelty, | Ments t put out more than for re- [{f we ]vi.\L sac us ‘ham‘n Fer State Treasures, o it may be well for The Builetin |1€ioN Bl b e o COSTELLO LIPPITT readers to.be informed what st e ki 1< | senti i G R MR Torse iy R o e b s e Dr. Crippen’s plea of innocence falls ents being a thing that 3 of day revealed to “one of the taggers” | o ears in the English court, | Tumber of the apdience would not tol- For State Comptretien, as told in the Chicago New | sxfe g i a ; {erate. n the evening came, the THOMAS D. BRADSTREET “Of course we had lots of refusals ‘;‘”‘""f)"‘_ ;;’"F:"L ‘“"rz able to tell what {14l was filled. There were many very of Thomaston, but mearly always the curt answers 5 % X g S e e R R reans SAASeEis caie T the wells ) —_— great politic:! lea Harry M. Call For Attormey General, hudaeels e wel The republican who has resolved to | of Philadelphia, a zreat social leader; JOHN H, LIGHT boeciost i s U P, 5 something naughty because the | George Bancroft. the historian; Mrs. of Nerwalk. TR e S of “fi‘d:l‘_-'”» stories fellow has, shows that he never | Kuhn, John Quincy Adams’ grand e ahout bateg outior “:Hl(ix ’flhfln;k,n(‘vvf E el Sl daughter !,\r‘rxk.f“‘lhgn\\ rd Howe he ors and motormen on the Center ave- L self. A regan singing B STRVENS HEARY niie line ‘are a fine. set of men. e | eople who live near the railroads Audience arose. and the cftect of by i | had one conductor and two mo- | Intensely patriotic hymn was be of Vernom. coal is burned in the I co- belle er For my own ¢ that never have I feeling of the words I was part I ca AWAY GOES ALL S No Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Gas of her family had | vou | than I did then. The chorus was tak- en up with indescribable enthusiasm, and it seemred to me by every person in the audience. Contrary to the pre- diction, not a person left the room. Mrs. Howe, who chanced to be in the front row, listened with tears in her eyes, 1 feel convineed that many a wavering soul was strngthened in loy- alty that night.”—Lowell Courier-Citi- zen. * Immune to Bad Luck. Can't ride; yet his horses never throw him. Can’t shoot; vet he killed mors things than any one else. ~ Never fousht a battle; yet he was elected to office because of a battle in which he did not take part. Never “clinched a srook:” yet he has scared them all into “coughing up” lberally whenever the hat was passed around. Never made a mistake without having somebody up- on whom to place the blame. Refused to be shelved as vice president, but found it the open door to the presiden- cy. Wouldn't eat dinner with Lorirr, but is friendly with Cox. Told all sorts of stories about the representative men of the south, but is everywhere greeted . crazy demonstrations in the south. | equently had a bad throat, but it| always gets well enouzh for him to| speak. Never went up in the air be- | | and then landed ‘safely Would | like to stay up an hour, If he only had the time; but must go to the next| stand. It is a most remarkable thing | that something doesn’t happen to him; | Richmond (Va.) Times- The Mills and Columbus Day. | The operatives in Fall River decided | | o work on Columbus day, and they Pt THe men refused to shut n, but as the help as a rule staved here was little doing. This con- £ of.opinion about the observance cof new holiday is thought likely to to a different policy on the part| manuf urers another year. 4?" the great majority of the| hands want to take a day off it is wise {to let them have their way. Here in | Lowell the mills ran, but probably | there was little trouble for those who ed to stay out to get permission. hat is the local mill policy on occa- sions of public or semi-public inierest. ! Some of the Fall River papers criticise | the manutacturers for disregarding le- | gal holidays—having Columbus day in mind—but this isn't quite fair. The help would be pretty sure to compiain if they found the mill gates closed on | Washington’s birthday, for examplei— | Lowell Courier-Citizen. | | i o v Bostor’s Government. s to be feared that the bile of | partizanship is embittering Gov. Dra- { per’s soul and blinding his judgment. | possibly account for the statement at- tributed to that the present ad- | ministration of the city of Boston is “the wc t we ever had”? It seems that the governor can think so > civil-service commission, | has absoul dictated the ap- nearly all the present department in the Boston nd passing strange that he opinion of his finance h may fairly be con- | g made some impress upon municipal affairs. His pointme 1 these bodies must be ave produced such a work.—Boston Post. Not Blame Him., Baldwin’s reference to inability to look Into Thomas Jefferson's nding on a ladder, er blame Mr. Chand to Jndge Baldwin cut of his whiskers.— American. mr disap- | Shall the mind | | | i { 10 Heartburn or a Stomach-Head- | ache Five Minutes After Taking a Little Diapepsin—Prompt Relief Awaits Many Readers of The Bulletin. ! TS, B | It you had some Diapepsin or heavy feeling in the and ‘would take a little now Debilitating Head- stomach ¢ or Tndigestion or Intestinal gripin: vanish in five minutes and you g0, and, besides, there feel fine zested food left over in | TS T AL . to_poison your breath| a s sut-of-order stomach n ertain cure you realize it der stom hecause it | It your meals tempt you, or | prevents fermentation and takes hold | wh ttie 1 t seems t yor food and digests it just the | ea stomach wasn't there. You know the symptoms. coated tongue, dizziness .brought on this condition, go t Take a dose to- To- ght. of this paper. DR. Schenck’s I‘uandmkc Piils orro We will mail you a FREE SA Irug store wait- | . : { s cases cor 10! th to thoroughly of Dyspepsia, | stomach dis- dache, sallow complexion, Never mind what st and get a box of bowels. feel like another person. if you send us the name Philadelph; W you w HENCK & SON, Pa. Sotend B e dy-or-w;- us. T have no doubt | motives realize that it is a bad habit Sy ® they had good reason { for loco ves to s ANDREW N. SHEPARD | bt i 3 > { for locomotives to smoke. | of Portiand. We received no contributions from i - e 1 P 3 the policemen. T presume they have| Vice President Sherman finds that ;,‘,’v",':“\",";;;‘&‘;ws lots of calls that we I nothing | there are in the political field “dem- e u" Woweriel s about. ats drugged with their own con- s 1s0 contributions from young » They must be stupid fellows. | Fourth Distriet, ladies with ela te hair dressing. ——— | EBENEZER J. HILL We concluded that the price of halr | Just think of a leader like General of Norwalk. goods was the reason for that. Coxey assuming that his fdeas have | For Representative. e ¢ “One very well .dressed woman ask- | made both Bryan and Roosevelt. He | . . k ed me to change a dollar and then |doesn't know enough to keep off the | JOEN Q. TILSON gave me five cents. I heard of a |8&rass. | af ‘S Sven. | woman in a fine electric who called = | = | one of the ‘taggers’ on Michigan ave- | FHow much American women owe the Semators. | nue and gave her a nickel -J,‘_l;.{...pse‘lihlmeg:‘ dl ha:; hrd:sn,d y.,.x.! “We ha ot o agir sold a million pounds of human hair Fonis. of Maw LonSsn: | ‘We had lots of children contribute = oy e oy Lendon. | enny each, all they had. One lit- |1ast year. What isn't there under the M»?;:S:P-“ l,‘ of ?‘,.u‘.“,‘. | tie fellow offered to ‘peddie some’ for | Pi& hats? | Parley B. Laonard of Rockvi | . “Our day's receipts were a little over | WaS [t a Norwieh man s P R LRy 567 the three of us—mostly in 5- | Sonnectcut R A i i Norwigh District_Nelson J Asling of | cent and i0-cent contribution e "'j",“}‘”\_ el et e o L [ “Our day's experience m they both get there? The “Good win” | ety A { more of the work stain e e Loadon I’fl"“'i well dressed people, especiall he quan Wl Jias. A stomech Windham—Preston B. S ¥ Syt an come back is not half gratef Tolland—William B. Spragu g to be asharhed of her | €R0U8h. When he discovers that v‘.: *:t‘ep-a'-vh:u‘f“Tf,. L et M morwich “Ghouls ove ave s | 22 ,;\1‘ ]Qx back he has little ety Banas {tag day, let us hope the well dressed |° o 2 @ »ple and automobilers will make a he most obstreperous republicans i ord a vod as t »f the trolle should go round to the reception on POLITICAL MISREPRESENTATION | cmpio Wednesday, for it does a man good to e Bulletin wan somewhat sur- | meet even those he may feel preju- to find such a false statement| S/X POSTAL SAVINGS BANKS. ‘mv&u] against s made in the New Haven Jour- | The trustees the postal savings nal-Courier, which in the e { bank scheme have decided to go slow First Sang the Battle Hymn. resents the In itions of Roo: | as evidenced by their determiation to It was Miss ¥ ¥ Reed of this city ag Judge iwin, which were far | try the experiment at first in one small | —and. one must add, of Paris—who from being as rank as this untruth |town of each of the six New England | first sang the late Julia Ward Ho t our congressman, Ed W. | stat Hattlo Hymn of the Republic in publ Higgins. The Journal-Courier say: In Massachusetts the town selec lle _occastom wWas at a conce £in ; na r says . i 4 in Newport in the earily day Over In ird district, for ex- |is° Norwood. We do not remember x 2hpnighon 5 to raise money for the wo 1 e ipal argument md- | whether the town was named for a|anq Mrs. Howe's inspiring song ed f ection of Con- |popular novel or the novel named for | be the finale of the programmic. gressman Higg that he hag se- |2 Dreviously unheard of place on | Reed thus describes the scen. ursed so many postoffice buildingsand | map of that state. This is what the | Reminiscences: > soprotristionitor i Slakee jetisll Hepublican = hae* to During our rehearsals with ¢ n the First district Congressman | the place and its selection: and orchestra we Were infor v is understood to be a valuable | ‘“The postal savings bank scheme | e ° e tobacco interest: but |does not start off very ambitiously t broad questions of public policy | Small towns, one in each state, are 1l be advanced by his re-election?” |t0 serve initially as the dogs to try This statement against Congress- |it on. Norwood is the selectin from i Heiiy Iy 2 untrue and ab. | Massachusetts—a little manufacturing d town .of Norfolk county set off from It may be well to bear in mind that | Walpole and Dedham some years ago. gressman Higgins has the honor | What dictated he choice—whether being one the you ¢ men ever | MOTe neopie are thought to live around to congress to represent the | there than anywhere else who will not ird district; and that he has to |!TUSC their money to the state savings siand comparison w e and - | banks—this is not known. Possibly iyt 5. Ml:qm:'_:‘?_lt PP | the trustees of the system at Wash- disparagement to the motable careers | ington merely shut their eves and of the Hon. John T. Wait and the |Pointed a yencil at the map n: Mas= Hoh. Charles A Bussell it oiay Dbe §Eacichswith the restit noted. 'Dec Tuly sl it B W worthy (0 }‘fl,”l posits of savings at 2 per cent. in where they stood, and is held by the |the postoffice at Norwood—as against major portion of his constituents in |3 1-2 and 4 per cent. obtainable at any he same esteem and respect. He, like | State savings bank in that region— Wait and Rossell, has put his consti- | Will be noted with much genuine in- tuents under o tic t0 him for | terest tae public measures and private bills | == has succ d in getting through EDITORIAL NOTES. congress; and he h pon natiomal | Happy thought for today: Many a smmittees served his country and his n who advises others not to wor- onstitnents as well and faithfully as | ry is not immune himself the The voters of the Third district wre not asked to vote for Congress- | The Toledo Blade predicts that the n Higglns simply because of what | prohibitionists will not car one Ohio he has done for his distriet, but for | county in the approaching ‘electiof his loyalty to his party and his abil- ity to accomplish what he undertakes.| The price of codfish indicates that 1at It would be folly to change him|the codfish-ball may soon become a for a man without experience must he | juxury. The codfish has no way to spparent to & great majority of the |pejy if. ers of the Third congressional dis- e e R T . If balloons are going to et lost with R s 3 all’ hands in the wilderness the pros- It 1s not probable that Theodore | pect is not good for regular passen- Roosevelt has been making up any- | ger traffic. ng frem whole cloth about Judge ik Baldwin. the democratic nominee in| mne .Portuguese soldiers on a four this siate. A poor memory is not & | yonths' furlough with full pay have refutation of & Sistement. evidences ihat repuplics are grateful AR R LR for a little biL ihe taxpayer who Dames his wife = P in November because lie forgot to go The Euglish people expend over for- lieforn the assessors in November, 18 | tv-five millions a year for sport in the not %o rare a bird as one might think. epen &ir. Ior sport and entertain- OCTOBER 24, 25, 26 THE KUMA FAMILY, PAGE & MORENCY.............. MR. PHILIP GEAN BARNARD. The occupant of the Lucky Seat will AUDITORIUM >G5 Japanesz Novelty, Introducing Magic, Mystery and Eqailibristics. 3 —— CYCLING COGSWELLS — 3 Direct from Keit Boston. «....... Musical Artists .The Man in White receive $5.00 in gold at each matines ADMISSION 10c. EVENINGS, Reserved Seats 20c. POLI’S October 24th, 25th, 26th 2.15 and 7.45 p. m. JESSE LLASKY Presents THE PIANOPHIERD MINSTRELS 9—PEBPLE -9 The Greatest Piano Act in Vaudeville THE FOUR FLOODE CARBREY BROTHERS TOM DEMPSEY ““ WISE PMIKE " BETH TATE PICTURE PLAYS Always a Good Show at Poli’s LUMEER AND COAL. AL Indian Summer Was Made For The Late Coal Buyers A few days of grace, as it were, be- fore the days of snow and blow and freezing. An opportunity for one rzason or another, the winter'’s Coal. The price is still cheap. E. CHAPPELL CG. Wharf and 150 Main Street. Telephones. Lumber Sdaw COAL Free Burning Kinds and Lehigh | _ ALWAYS IN STOCK. A. D. LATHROP, those who, have not put in Central oct25 | Office—cor. Market and Shetucket 5ts Telephone 163-12 oct29a ‘CALAMITE COAL “It burns up clean” Well Seasoned Wood C. H. HASKELL. 402 — 'Phones — 489 24d Hd COAL and LUMBER In the beautiful valley ot Wyoming. in Penn.. lles the beds of the finest A thracite Coal in the world. We have secured a_supply of this Coal for this season. Try it your cooking stove and heater. We are the azents for Re Roofing. one of thp Lest roo, to the trade. JOHN A. MORGAN & SON. aprisd F B85 felephone $84. PLUMBING AND GASFITTING. JOHNSON & BENSON, 20 Central Avenue. SLATE ROOFING Meta: Cornices and Skylights, Gutters &nd Comductors, and all kinds of Job- bing promptly attended to. Tel. 119 The Vaughn F“undry Cu IRON CASTINGS Large atock o Ferry Strest furnished promptly. patterns. No. 11 to nzza S. F. GIBSO Tin and Sheet Agent for Richar n and Boynton Furnaces. 55 West Main Strest, Norwich, Conn dec7d T. F. BURNS, Heaiing and Flumbing, 92 Frankiin Stresl marbd Do Et Now Have that vic unsanitary plumbing repl. 2nd mod- in the inc and .saving of doctor's bu 0\~‘ hauling andé re. fitting thoroughly done. Lef 'me give you a figure for replacing all the oid plumbing with the modern kind that will keep out the sewer gas. The work will be first-class and the price ressonable. e J. E. TOMPKINS Ny, auglsd 67 Weast Main Strest. HaveYuuHetumed hzm Ve will pleased tho Fanning Studios Wali Papers is the finest ever. Draperies he to et vou at Also Lace Gurtains, and We are ne NARROGANSETT BANQUET 216 Family rads supplied at 60¢ par doz C. B Wright § Cove St. Tel oct30d iintkote | w | “cla} \‘/()r'ncr_ Upholstery _|THE HAILE CLUB will give a ~ DANCE at Miller's Academy on Friday Evening, Octdber 28th. Tickets 50 cents, Gentlemen's tickets for sale by club members. Ladies’ tickets for club members y, can be obtained at the office at h rooms. | oct1sWSTTHF i Now Ol;en~Wm;ld in Wax. 41 BROADWAY. Tor & short time only scientific exhibition that avery man should not fail to visit, showiig you Chamber of Horrors and the Mu= seum of Anatomy, Open dally from 16 a. m p. m; 15 cents admitting parts. This week o The most until 10.30 you to all octid Mustc. CHARLES D. GEER | Teacher of Singing. 42 Broadway. hours after Oct. 1st. HELEN LATHROP PERKINS, TEACHER OF SINGING, Regular sept29d 11 Huntington Pla | I NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teacher of Piano. Fletcher Music Method. { Room 48 - - - Central Bullding. P. C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect 8k, 511, Norwish, Cu 1 | x. B. BALCOM, ‘ Teacher of Plano %9 Thames St Lessons giyven at my residence or al the home of the unsed at Schawen lin. pupll. Same method a8 a Conservatory, Dere oct1ld FURS TO ORDFR kinds of Fur Garments made to r. We also excellent facili- tias for redying, repairing and remod- .| eling furs to ihe newest shapes at short notice. Prices reasonable. ! ill be In Winsted soon with a 2 ' sample line of Coats and | Sets. Watch the date. WILLIAMS, 38 Allyn St., Hartford, Ct. { Manufacty Furrier Since 18 | t20d }A Din t a Sideboard h without 1 s unsatisfactory. |t »me atmosphere, | Dining Room Furniture is one of the our prices positively the lowest SHEA & BURKE, ! Norwich and Taltville DO YOU WANT good digestion which makes for fine heaith, good spirits, clear brains and energy—those qual- ities which speli SUCCESS? THEN HAVE YOUR TEETH PERFECT! testh ones — though digestion, Bad while good artificial — promote good the fountain head of success beget- ting fitness. Km«r Deatal Parlors JACKSON antagonize, Mgr ct Square, Norwich, wane to put your busl- the public, thers is no mes dinn than through the adverties ing columns of The Sulletim.

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