Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 26, 1910, Page 6

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ORWICH BULLETIN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1910 # 0fi, The, orgauisa » tas h3@ its day. Respen “omes thie eslibkion of quiek action and wceeompumming ‘it is the siatemern hat the membership is larger thar ~ver befere. At the same time the so- siety poimts out taat it does mot seek much te establish itgelf in great uumbers as it does to train young peo- pie for effective service, possibly along liues outside of the societies. It expects, it say that its members will leave it, for it wishes to deal with young people, training them for service, and # points out that in most of the later movements Endeavorers have employ- ed kmowledge and enthusiasm gained fn Endeavor school.—Newark (N. J.) Evening News. g to ! 8ot Up a Standard. Palthfulness implies standards. No one can tell whether he is faithful or | not unless he knows what he is ex- pected to do. When a scholar has a lesson to get his fidelity is in getting that leason. If mo lesson were assign- ed he would have no measure of fidel- ity. Every successful worker sets standards for himself. This is the rea- =on for our Christian Endeavor pledge. It in the standard of faithfulness that we have set up for ourselves.—Amos R. Weils. Loyaity Its Keynote. The Christian Endeavor society stands for loyalty to the church and its secvices as no other organization in the chureh does. So strenuously does it belleve in this that 1t has put this matter of church attendance into the | heart of its pledge. It ineists on the Jdea as one of its cardinal principles and issues booklets and articles on the subject and in every way strives to promote it But it cannot be expected that one organisation of the church will what the whole church is hound to do or that one organization will connter- act all the other influences of the | churceh and comwmunity that make | against even churchgoing I have noticed that pastors who blame®their young peopie for not go- ing to church often y very little about the delinguencies of the older | eburch members iu this respect. do they not berate the older church members who do not go. or the mem- bers of the Sunday school who stay at home in the evening, or the members of the ladies” mis, sions brotherhood * o in the possessfon of the hunt- | says that the value of the pearls found But it will be “ilese organiza- | %% _”‘; Taen. wege SpiLas '!j“':““;\n‘ e nd ilts tributarie o it 7 ot afternoon before c ishing began last spring is tions do not req jembers to foe 'ofs the orth estimated at $500,000 or more. and | be faithful to the « ices."” on. They ere fou tv | Maiden Lane deals assert that the b the for them, | fined $10 and costs. Anpeal American pearls are sold as oriental for no organization s right in a | ~7 'hF ort of « non in ‘Paris and London. As a conze- 4 |4 s for appearan.e¢ ver 1 returning tourists re ragu- | ehurch that does not promote loyalty 2d with Le rd Main of 3 ing duties on Misslssippi river to the ehurc¢h and its services, In any | Stonington as surety - ch they buy abroad. The event, the purposs aud methods of the e this season for a Young People's Society of Christtan | . The Youna Men’s Republican club of ater pearl was $5.000— X Westerly will have its annual dinner uld seem, to add a great Endeavor in the future. as n the past, | ¥t ‘e Biven b o Tami ner | Himulus 0 the pearl-Ashing industes wiN always be to promete thoroughgo- nd just re dnner will elect | another year.—Manchester Union. g loyally te the church and all its for the ensuing ve Judge services.—Rev. Francis E. Clark, D, D. )i”[““m-‘,“ G has been selecte Another Problem. - e e ; If Mr. Stimson should be elected : : overnor of New York, would the cap- sln-pnr.lla‘n .|¢ a Junior Sacisty. al of the state be at Albany or at lome oue suic s will be boys. ter Bay?—Boston Globe. He forgot 10 add. “Bors will he men.” Whera to Buy 1 Weste esessesscssecsecsanasseranssne: rly INDUSTRIAL TRUST COMPANY Westerly Branch Capital Three Million Dollars Surplus Three Million Dollars Over Fifty Thousand Accounts. effi in enment Liberal, courieou: man; and ent 1 Hart Schatfner & Marx Clothes ARE SOLD BY I. B. CR. nov204d ANDALL CO. Westerly, R. I. Buy Your Shoes and Hosiery and get a coupon on the Piano to be given PURTILL’S ‘ON THE BRID on away at City Pharmacy Try our lce Cream, Soda and Col- luge ices while waiting for your car. 26 Canal St. Westerly R. L v, O VOR SALE Two seven-icom (olLtases, situated in the compact part of | 1ol having 60 foot both b can he sacured at purchaser de- fieat, elactric ‘inspection plumbl mk W. Coy Real Estate Co., Wenterly, R. DIAMONDS will pay you well to get our ~% on Diamonds, loose or mounted, ore purchasing. . CASTRITIUS, Leading Westerly Jeweler. "HEAVY AND LIGHT HARNESS MADE BY HMAND, Haad Mudc Werk is Our Speelalty. Whips d all Harn Sudp’u oar- ried in stock. Factery Made Harness N. H. SAUNDERS, in steck.at $12 ond up. Removed to 44 Test Broad Street. el e i SMITH'S GARAGE, 330 Wwin B, Westerly, Tt Oers g0 ramt. swer of_care; cem- Full ling of et Rt % do | Why | ry society, or the | ving vacant | WHAT IS INTERESTING WESTERLY Military Honors at Funeral of William Jordan—Hear- ing in Bliven Bankruptcy Case—Sunday Hunters Fined $10 and Costs Each—Local Mechanic Build- ing Airship—Plans For Republican Club’s Banquet. In the village of North Stonington |latter within fifty feet of the boundary. there will be a double wedding next | line. month that will be something out of | Contractor Louis Dotalo has brought the ordinary. On Saturday afternoon, |suit against the Pawcatuck Valley Nov, 5, at ck, Miss Grace Louise | Street Railway company, through Mr. and Mrs. Cal- | Clarence E. Roche, his attornzy. He snard R. Main will Is to recover $500 damages for in- Third Baptist church, | juries to horse and wagon which were Snyder, vin Sn be married in t of with eption at the bride’s home. At | struck by an electric car in Main street the same tim: the bride’s parents will | last Jul rve the twenty-fifth aun | The fair of St. Michael's parish Ma invitations | opened with a large attendance Thurs- | day evening. Local Laconics. A Westerly mechanic is building an Charles Leonard, employed at the C. B. Cottrell plant, was taken suddenly with an acute attack of indigestion | girship. Tuesday morning and his condition be- came serious. gan was sum-| Ppoliceman Frederick Manchester of { moned and Mr was conveved | New London, now on vacation, was in to his home in t in one of | Westerly Tuesday. the Cottrell automobiles, accompanied k I by three of his fellow workmen. His! A new granolithic walk is being built condition. seemed to improve @Quring|in front of property in West Broad | the day. street where a saloon is to be located | and is the only walk of the kind on the The funeral of William Jordam took | cast side of the street. place on Tuesday with & high mass of requiem in St. Michael's church, cele- | Several applicants for liquor licenses ')yratml by Rev. John 2 D. D. The |, pawcatuck are getting their places 0dy was escortsd to the church and | yeady for business. having evidenily to St. Michael's cemetery by the Fifth | received wireless information that they i ssterly, Capt. B. A. Bab- | 5ra to b granted licens: corps, Rhode Isl- 5 | ? Artillery i | e by <L"l'l|v(]‘&\l = ii"; PDF#":Xy applicant for 1 as serving his ment with | in Mystic objec the company. Warren Sheffiald, com- | i Myctic hjecis o any. Wa Sheffizld, com- | painted sign to designate his business pany bugler, blew taps at the grave. | pecause the saloon is to be located in The bearers were Artificer Abel Lou- e lower part of his residence. don and Privates Harry Merrill, John [ Ghent and Slement Shearn. In anticipation of Westerly voting in ruptcy case of R. G. Bliven & company [ ror saloons that are not liable to be ,'}‘{fa::”"‘:’(' r ':-g“”‘; “fl;w‘"*"" C g‘;::‘t‘.f”\}o- iffected by abutting property owners’ he Kingsto u clausz of the liquor laws of Rhode I rnoon. The creditors | and. by attorneys ar - ok I B ”‘ Residents of the Italian colony in | receiver when | Westerly declare that owing to the RRDEAE eagan equency of liquor raids they will tez of the. insc ote in favor of license at the election It is probable Y Heretoforz they have 7 abore st v license under the im- lateyisintn sale. T liquor could be sold in SRA16 Bids tor th the section without police interference. ceived the office = \' American Pearls. i Rle The extent to which the American L : o fresh water pearl industry | 1 oped in recent years is a bat S paratively | The Congreaation of Sharet Zedec o m.‘ situated .;L’T;n;flll:?A)nlil;|l‘ in_annual meeting cloc officers as | the fizures in the aggregate. A s: A. Leih rasident; A.| York de journal states that wast- Philip David-{ ern dealers “have been bringing to recording | M .ane some of the finest fresh ! tar rls ever seemn there. The tr n on the upper Missis- P nearing its close be Deputy Game Warden A. D. Hill of wpproach of cold weather, awcatuck arrested Irving Fowler and hermen, who have been rank E. Ewith for 1z the months, are \ws by hunting York the holiday “fficer found and New York Commercial And Have Plenty to Cook. is called “The Land of the Calm.” Cook must come | er | on and he regular.—Memphis | is the | Commercial- Appeal. f That despondency in women is a mental condition often traceable to some distinctly female ill! Women who are well do not have the blues, neither are they irritable and restles Derangement of the female organism breeds all kinds of miserable feelings such as back- ache, headache, and bearing-down feelings. Try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compcind. There is no doubt that it has made many remarkable cures of female ills after all other means had failed. There is hardly a day that sonie t this simple old medicine, woman does not write us th:t made only of ‘roots and herb:, has cured her of a severe | illness. { Here are two such letters — read them — they are genuine and reliable. Platea, Pa.—“"Vhen ¥ wrote to you first I was i itroubled with Tackache and was nervous g’tlml I would er- at the least noise, it would startie me so. i be; to take Lydia E.Pink- an fi 1 don’t have any more sleep sound and my catarrh is tter, thanks to your advice., Iwill recommend ‘your medicines {0 all sufferers.” —DMrs. Mary Halstead, Plates, Pa., Box 98, Walcott, N, I'ikota —“I had inflammation vhich caused p:.ins in my sides, and my back ached all the time. 1 was so blue that I felt like erying if any one even said ‘ How poorly you look to-day.” I wrote to you for advice and got it at once. 1 started to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, Blood Purifler and Liver Pills, and I began to feel better and looked better before I finished the fourth bottle of medicine.” —Mrs, Amelia Dahl, Wzalcott, N. Dakota. For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Cempound has been the standard remedy for female ills. No sick woman dces justice to herself who will not try this famous medicine. ‘Made exclusively fron roots and herbs, and has theusands of cures to its credit. ? Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women guided bam’s remedies. an jerying spell I i to write her for adviee. She has thousands to health free of charge. Address Brs. Finkham, Lynn; Mass. “TODAY IS FREE STAMP DAY $1.00 worth of Green Stamps Free with purchases of 10c or over. Double Stamps with purchases of $5.00 or over. Fall Suits Women and Misses A complete and beautiful display of all the Iatest Fall styles in all th: new and fav- ored materials and colorings. Exceptional values, Tailored Fall Suits. $15.00 Tailored Fall Suits, $18.50 Tailored Fall Suits, $25.00 Tailored Fail Suifs, $27.50 ’ Separate Coats, Dresses, Shirt Waists and Skirts are here in splendid variety. The Alanh The Leading Store in Eastern Connscticut devoted exclusively to Men’s, Women’s and Children’s Wearing Appare! i . And All the Judges Concur. rle tale ews When you get a good idea, keep it moving. Any campaign suggestion S AR about Judge Simeon E. Baldwin not j being up to date is disproved by his quickness in incorporating on Friday evening in his speech at New London East Norwalk.—According to ai re- ports, frost fish are still biting in good shers an idea which he heard put in oral Seymour.—Gen. Charles H. Pine of | language at the rally which he ad- Ansonia has given the Seymour public | dressed in this city the evening before. library $1,000. If he didnw't convert any voters, he certainly converted the idea—to his Suffield.— and Mrs. Dwight $.|own use. It had to do with that thorn Fuller celebrated thzir golden wed- |in the democratic flesh, Representative ding anvive: Monday George B. Chandler of Rocky Hill, of e whom Judge Baldwin s London democrats: i to the New Britaim—Good progress is being made with the construction of the new [ “If Mr. Chandler could have seen operating building at the hospital. that great man and taken a 20-foot A ¥ ladder, climbed to the top and stood _Southington.—Applications have been |y tigtoe on the {opmost rung he e twelve of the town's li-| wouldn't have seen into the cellar of censed saloons; also for three drug|Thomas Jefferson’s mind.” stores. On Thursday evening, at the Bald- i 1 wi @ y Rober! P, 3 S | ~ Hartford.—Building permits caliing | ¥TT, "“‘:_]"mf,“l:'j‘é“, O e o e | o Chandler: “Why, gentlemen, it ere JEsuet OnL g - : = handler had a ladder of mental- ing Inspector Fred J. Bill. s feet high, reared straight in- s.{to the and he stood New Haven.—Mrs. Sherwood {t r. a-tiptoe on PHGTLRT of £ ot entertained | the topmost round of the ladder, he | the D: G and Pat n't peek into the cell indows | ots of America ST 1C homas Jefferson’s brair Ju | | Baldwin, it is understood. afterwards | Old Saybrook.—Rev. Dr. Samuel|expressed his appreciation of Mr. But- { Hart of this place will preach the his- peech, of which he showed fur- torical seemon he 150th anniv appreciation by appropriating th 2 of St, Peter's church in Cheshire | idea mentitoned. Each speaker, it | on Nov. be seen, offered Mr. Chandler a ladc the only difference being in its length, Bridgeport.—The man who commit- | which Judge Baldwin marked down | ted suicide by shooting himself through | from Mr. Butler's extravagant length { the heari at Washington park Sunday | of sixty feet to twenty feet. In each night has been identified as Alex To- |case Mr. Chandler is supposed to stand lovlies, aged 25 who boarded with a |on tiptoe for the purpose of gazing in- | Hungarian family at 333 Pine street.[to the intellectual basement of Thom- as_Jefferson. Westville. —~At the writing contest To go still further back, the New which was held in the Orango street |1 ondon Telegraph recently had some- chool at the teachers’ convention Fri- | thing to say of Mr. Chandler, which y by the pupils of the different|wag quoted in the Hartftord Times in | schools. Miss Ada Smith’s room, No. | jte issue of the afternoon preceding {9 of the West school, took the|j\r. Butler's evening address at the | honors; Baldwin rally. The interesting part } | follows: | Waterbury—The Rev. A. R. Latz | “uryaddle, Mr. Chandler, twaddle! It Jpastaigior dhie Congregativnalighurel twaddle for vou to atlempt to be- {in Bloomfield, has bzen selected as am | )i, either the scholarship, the hi assistant to the Rev. Dr. Charles A.|iory, the statesmanship or the sincer- [uFmvie iecion ol sihe Bisrionane of Judge Simeon E. Baldwin. He gational church. He has graduated | .J';1uch overtops you in all these that from the Yale Divinity school and has | nothing but the stilts of your own con- received an A. M. from that universi- | ot 'couig gve you an 1dea that vou | can look inth the windows of his mind | T and see anything but the ceiling!” inning One’s Way. Mr. Butler appears to have discarded i well enough for people starting | the stilts and substituted a ladder, and ody for that | thes re other original ideas about whenever one can | his sion. including the substitution batter than anybody | of Mr. Jefferson’s brain for that of se « en one's fortune is | Judge Baldwin. Incidentally the idea e: that life has votion, ! ‘ooped the loop, Judge Baldw 2 | vancing it in the city from u Fleming, | cume to Hartford and the fe astron 1ore abouf | don Telegraph printing it again—this tars thar didn't know |iime in its news colomns—after it yihing them a few years ago, | had been Bu zed and Baldwinized. | —Hartford Cou s famous, has plenty to nt. work, and this L Had she flowers, birds, . apples, dr and became per have reached a e iyl Good Fishing. | An enthusiast was telling some hing, would templation. Columbus recently i ~hysiologs reteriology by one friend. ngton collezz, Kan: She i et 1 have read novels, played whi gone ‘Thousands of 'em,” replied the en- to dances, automobiled around. and | thusiast. scattered her talent among a Score of and then remained in the com- of humdrum till the end of but she didn’t. .In.the battle one must concentrate his pow- energy at some point if “Will they bite easily?’ asked an- other friend. “Will they?” said the enthusiast. “Why, they're absolutely vicious. A man has to hide behind a tree to bait a hook.”—St. Paul Dispatch. The Worst to Come. “I love you, dear, but I am green | and rattled, and 1 dow’t know how to propose.” “That's ali right, homey. You're (hrough with me. All you've got to do now is to ask papa.”’—Cleveland Leader. of life er, direct h he would win the battle—Ohio State Journal. Toned Him Down. “This photograph doesn’t look a bit like me,” said Snarley to the photog- rapher. “I know it,” said the photographer. “I was afraid to make it exactly like you for fear you wouldu't take it.”— Exchange. . " Yhe Age Limit. Now, Was It? friends about a proposed fishing t:rip. to a jake in Colorado he had in com- | “Are there any trout there?’ asked | b2 “Feel of th Sttt Once inside of one of our Fall Suits you’ll feel good all over, Sirl Not altcgether because we insure you a perfect fit, but because our clothes were designed and tailored in The World’s Best Tailored Shops You feel certain that the materials are right, that the style and the tailoring are perfect, ard that there is nothing wanting that goes to make a hand- some Suit of Clothes. $12, $15, $18 and $25. We guarantee every suit we sell; for any suit we cannot fully guarantee is not good enough for us to sell or for you to wear. Time for Heavy Underwear and Sweaters. Big assortment here. The F. A.WellsCo. “Weasel Words.” wis. Are there no “weasel words" in Mr. Rooseveit's own remarks about There was an unworthy touch of | o ertVa, S o Ctern friends regard originality in t's approv- | that as “retrogresive.” — Providence al of the New Hampshire republican | Journal platform on the ground that it con-| e iined no “weasal words.” Thne phrase Industries Hard Hit. s picturesque and suggestive, and Connecticut industries are receiving hardly requires the explanation that|yayq blows, these days. Since the be- it refers to words which “suck the| inning of the week, two large woolen meaning out of the word - front of | ¥ iy "Have been westroyed by fire in them.” Tt is a common political trick | Siago e ML “N " 0aay brings to qualify prog o = ,’3"‘"'jrhe news of a $150,000 loss in the de- ner as to render them nugatory. TRers | stryction of a hat factory and a glue are those w it 1 in the| jant in Danbury. While all of these Saratoga. Dl { which M. | Gestroyed industries may be rebuilt, Roosevelt now deciines the respon-|,nq probably will be, their loss just on sibility. ~ Being is his progressive|ije verge of winter is not particularly mood on Saturd as one urging the | 0 N8R0 7 the wage earners wha Flfction et e lie was bound 10} j,ve relied upon them for employment, approach more clos the doctrines | V% 5 oC centinel of Ossawatomie. He even referred to the democ i 1didate> for governor fi of Connecticut a etrogressive’—a | He—So she's a business woman? strange misunderstanding of the char- | What business is she interested in? acter and principles of Judge Bald- | She—Oh, everybody Chicago News. A FEW DOSES END ' KIDNEY TROUBLE Lame Back, Bladder Misery and Other Distress Caused by Out-of- Order Kidneys Vanish—Pape’'s Diuretic Will Make Yous Kidneys Act Fine and Healthy. A prompt cure awaits every man or{ Misery in the back, sides or loins rape's Diuretie for | Sick headache, nervousness, weakne: woman who takes Pape’s Diuretic for 3 O meIolmes waanees a lame back or Kidney or bladder| prostatic trouble. heart palpitations, trouble dizziness, leeplessness, inflamed or The moment vou suspect any kid- § puffy eyelids, bilious stomach, lack of ney or urinary disorder, or feel a dull, | energy and all symptoms caused b constant b ache or the urine is | sluggish, disordersd kidneys, sinyply thick, cloudy, offensive or full of sedi- | vanish. Uucontrollable urination (es- ment, irregular of passage or attended { pecially at night), smarting and d colored water and other bladder by a sensation of scalding. begin tak- | ¢ m ing Pape’s Diuretic as directed, with | ery ends. The time to cure kidne the knowladge that there is no other | trouble is while it is_only trouble remedy at any price made anywhera | bafort it settles into Dropsy, Gravel, else in the world which will effect so j Diabetes or Bright's Disease. thorough and prompt a cur { Your physician, pharmacist, banker Pape's Diuretic_acts directly upon \or any mercantile agency will vouch the kidneys, bladder and entire urin- | for the responsibility of Pape, Thomp- ary system cleanses, vitalizes and|son & Pape of Cincinnati, who pre- regulates these organs, ducts and| pare Pape's Diuretic — 50 cent treat- glands and completes the cure within | ment—sold by every druggist in the a few days. world. aEa A jolly good ale for all jolly good fellows. i e Its Quality i the andard of exciyllence:™ Rich, Ripe and Miellow. f— The James Hanley Brewing Co., Providence,R.L. Brewers of Ale and Porter. Clerk—Is this te he charged, madam? _ady—Oh. yes: yowll have to. My weband has just lest his position! Quick Lanch Waitreas——Haw do vew ik# your eggs. nir? Hardenmed Patron ~In their teens —Puck

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