Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 28, 1910, Page 4

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ORWICH BULLETIN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28, 191C Forwich Bulletin nnd Couried. 114 YEARS OLD. = S months Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, 1ze & week; 50c a on 00 u year. Balletin Business Office, 430, Bulletin Editorial Rooms, 35-8, Builetin Job Office, 85-6. Willlmantic Office, Room 2 Murray Builing. Telephone 210. Norwich, Friday, Oct. 28, 1910. The Circnlation of The Bulletin. The Bailetin the Inrgest efr- culation of xny paper in Eastern Cemmecticut, and from three to four times larger tham that of any im Norwich. It fu delivered to over 3,000 of the 4,053 houses ta Nor- wick, and read by mimety-three per cent. of the people. In Windham it in delivered to over 900 men, in Putsam and Daniclson to over 1,100, amd in all of these places It s considered the local dally. Eastern Comnecticut has forty- nime towns, one humdred and sixty- ce districts, and forty- tree delivery romtes. in Easterm Commecticut, CIRCULATION S— . --5.920 Week snding October 22 REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET. Election Tuesdny, Nov, Sth. For Governor. CHARLES A. GOODWIN of Hurtiord. For Licutenant Govers DENNIS A. BLAKESLEE of New Have For Secretary of MATTHEW . ROGERS of Bridgeport. For State Treasurew, COSTELLO LIPPITT of Norwick. Wor State Comptroller, FHOMAS D. BRADSTREET of Thomaston, r Attormey General, JOHN H. LIGHT of Norwalk, Congrevsmen. First District, E. STEVENS HENRY. of Vernon. Second Distriet, EW N. SHEPARD of Portland. Third District, WIN W. HIGGINS of Nerwich, Fourth District, EBENEZER J. HILL of Norwalk. For Representative- ge JOHN Q. TILSON of New Haven. Large Im Ci Semators. strict -Daniel M. Cronin of New London. ~John H. Davis of Preston. Angus Park of Sprague orgs A omas_O. K Hammond of Putnam. ott of Ponfret = ley B. Leonard of Rocikville, Judge of Probate. son J. Ayling of A. Brown, New ley, Killingly. Tolland—William B. Spragué, Andover. ¥or Reprementative: HENRY W. TIBBITS ALEERT J. BAIL IMPORTANT CITIZENS’ MEET- ING. AN the s chart m re of Norwich probably it isfon of will hold last meet- ssion of the mat- chambers in City for the purpose of ot citizens apon n. n changes proposed. The inqui ade by records of o ‘be kept one ith proper n 3 rd of each ale W ity secure { eeured thei 1d it be fair and pra tvide the city inte tw> or more districts whose rats of taxa o be adfusted equitably in proportion to benefits received? »ugh Mcials and em- 3 emoved for po ltival re 5 Is it desirable in city govern that the ens be able to place . bility on ind > n- duct of th nts 8 Woul ) rsons > > which you sh lieve capabie of takir ve work out of politics a a basis of non-par »—Would you favor a s by h the citizens should di by pelition and primary election nomi- v andidaies for office regardless y 5 ee does not expect to the discussion down to th but prefer to have suggestions and take an active in the weork they have in hand e citlsens can readily that it i tu thew v aid in this Lmport ant work. There should be & lar aitendancs Prices must be high in Germany, for a late cartoon in a German newspaper represents a buyer turned from the bugeher's {o the drugglst's as an in- dication that meats are soid by pre- scription, they are so deas THE CHARGES OF VENALITY. The republicans of eastern Connec- ticut are standing by their principles in spite of the open charges of venal- ity being made against members of their party by the opposition; and are behaving as republicans know how to do. There is only one thing that a true republican can do, and that is to forever put an end to the political eareer of every man, be he of the rank and file or ndidate, who has been caught in corrupt practices. The right procedure is to sustain princi- ple and at the same time to condemn open or secret rottenness wherever it is uncovered and proven. Rumors are flying about from the enemy that $15.000 was spent in the republican convention to change re- sults; that ten-dollar bills were cir- culating plentifully among the men who attended a republican caucus at Mansfield in Tolland county; ete. These may be false reports, or ex- aggerated reports, or true accounts of something that has really taken place; but every republican knows that his party is not for sale, and that the majority of its members in office and out are honest men, and that the republican record for progress is so patent that it needs no advocacy. The | principles it represents are right, and { the great enterprises it has in hand are worthy of support, and that any check put upon them will be a = taken public policy. The republicans have also made a permanent record for inteiligent ac- tion; and intelligent action will not mean the overthrow of all present pol- icies and the. embarrassment of the administration for four years to come. “Death to the corrupt and the cor- rupters!” is a worthy republican slo- gan; and a republican may be trusted to ce blow to correct tne wrong and to advance the right. The state may be rezarded as safe for Taft if some republican leacers, as al- leged, do deserve a scorching. s a THE LOSS BY FOREST FIRES. The great forest fires in Montana and Idaho have compelled the govern- ment to open for cutting the greaf sections of killed trees resulting from the burning over of 750,000 acres of forest lands in Idaho, and enough in Montana to make the area burned ver 100 miles long and 40 miles wide, billion and a auarter a th million estimated pr and board feet te loss is Ive years 000,000. at $15 tment of agriculture will srously to dispose of th nber. As with all other national-forest timber, it will be sold on the stump, to millmen, who will lumber the land, paying a set price per thousand feet the timber, and conforming to whate regulations are stipulated in the interest of the for Pending the disposal of ‘als fire-killed timber, future saies of green timber from the national for- ests which were badly burned last summer will probably be greatly re- stricted, not entirely suspended. Secretary Wilson does not regard it as e public policy to off the national-forest timber except when it is in reasonably good demand, for the country is sure to need the supply badly later on. But with the fire-kill- ed timber it is a case of now or never. Consequently there is an unusual opening for lumbermen who are ready to buy national-forest stumpage at n p It is believed that last summer's either burned up or killed be- { tween one and two per cent. of the | total stand of national-forest timber. the present rate of cutting from e | At ! the national x billion feet is rests, equal to twelve years’ supply; but it is less than one-sixth of & single s cut in the entire country, or enough to keep all our lumber mills busy for something under two months. REACH]NG AFTER VICE. Down in New London, frequenters of gambling pla are regarded in the eyes of the court as of about the > feather as the birds with whom Judge in the police court of that city, fined two men $100 each for conducting a gambling resort, and then sald to the prosecuting at- torney: “I take this occasion to state, Mr. Cronin, that a case of this character—not perhaps just this char- | acter—if in the future any gambling houses do exist and if the police do | have occasion to visit them to secure Coit, evid e, 1 think it would be well for you to instruct them not only to bring in the proprietors but the frequenters. | | It may be found then that the places | 1 not be so popular to frequent, u‘j the frequenters will find that the pen- | alty for frequenting is quite as much as for conducting them.” This plan, if carried out, would make gambling joints less pop than they ar Ansonia Ser n by Judge Coit | idable. Tt abso- to check the vice, and ed with effect to places | and other vices. All who es against the good morals and the good na held to stri these me of t ount- cutions The prosecu n Jud rned in its d the public called attention to of enforeing law, | to New Lomsdon n uliar not pe | & manner lone i EDITOHIAL NOTES The t ot w Chicag, to the dre defeate olation Cubs thrown and are its you are lik to It s th 1 agent who not infrequently buys the lemons other people are constantly passed to them. Speaking | McLean sz the fir very wad who after onom- use t horses. in ars ical than Dr. Crippen's future in its abbre- ne will-be nt for t It you i good has the | THE BULLETIN'S DAILY STORY f H _—————-—\ E SANG BASS “I see,” observed Mrs. Wagstaff, | “that Sallie Foxworthy is keeping com- pany with young Mr. Solong.” es, and a shame,” cried Mrs. Cumback. “I think it's somebody’s duty to go te Mrs. Foxworthy and tell her what that young man is like, but you know how she is. She'd be likely to show you the door and tell you to mind mind your own business. She's too independent and self-satisfied for anything. 1 went over to her house one day, in a neighborly way, to tell her that the milkman she was patron- izing had been arrested several times, charged with diluting his milk, and she looked at me in such a frozen way that the mercury went down a hun- dre degrees, and when I went out of the house I felt as though I had been caught pocketing the spoons. I learn- ed afterward that the milkman is her brother-in-law. But if_she is an old iceberg, her daughter Sallie is a nice sort of a girl, and deserves a better young man than Aleck Solong.” Why, I never heard a word against him, Mrs. Cumback. He appears to be quite a good young man.” “Oh, he's good enough in a general way, I suppose, but I'm sure if I had a daughter named Sallie I wouldn't let her go with him. If a young man is industrious and reasonably honest and parts his hair in the middle and| wears little patches of whiskers in front of his ears then everybody says he is a fine fellow, and some girl mar- es him, without ever considering his real character, particularly if she has a mother who reminds you of the 27th day of January in Spitzenbergen. You have to look deeper to find_a man's merits and blemishes, Mrs. Wagstaff. “Young girls are too frivolous to look deeper, so their mothers should do it for them. A young man may be industrious and honest and have little patches of whiskers in front of his _ears, and still be a poor husband. “You remember when my niece, | | | P R B S SO S e S e P L R R viated form must be very trying to his nerves. The noose in the offing hangs annoyingly low. Since King Manuel's Portuguese successor is the author of 150 books he ought to be able to annihi'ate him with a shower of quotations. The experts who were cocksure that the balloon America did not have gas enough to float so long are made in- expert by the balloon’s rec urd The Baptist denomination has pu itself on record as opposed to shoot- ing old ministers, for it has just be- stowed upon them a living pension. The New York state legislature has | made the number of birdskins that may be Worn on women's hats forty- ihree less, protecting even the blue- The Washington correspondents are giving the country notice that the | forthcoming message of Taft will fol- low the lines laid down by Roose- velt. From the way the Hartford Time is shouting against republican venal- ity, one is impressed that it must entirely have forgotten Barnum and | his barrel. i America votes and Dr. Crippen hangs on the same day. But as days run, the doctor is likely to be hanged sometime Dbefore the American ballot boxes are open. The will of the late Winslow Homer is so beautifully written that it has been pronounced a work of art. It would make a first class exhibit for a | business college. This state is not going to jump from the frying-pan into the fire on No- vember 8th. How loug has the dem- ocratic conscience ‘heen tender to venality Is its reccrd r? LETTERS TO THE EDITOR How Is the Wurker to Be Unburdened Mr. Editor: I have heard, or read, somewhere, some time, that when “the | nd lead the blind they will both | fall in the ditch.” I was forcibly reminded of this say- ng after reading Edward Perkins rk's letter in The Bulletin of recent date. Mr. Perkins is a candidate congress in strict. He tells us that the Central Labor union of Nor- wich has swallowed Robert Hunter, the candidate for governor on the so- t. I also read Mr. Hunt- s in The Olympie, October 7. Mr. Hunter told nothing but what man of ¢ mon sense knew or ought to have known at He says the doctrine of so- ialism is “fundamental.” It isn't ab- solutely necessary that a person de- clare himself a socialist to believe that and is entitled to the fruits produced labor produces all the wealth, This is nothing new. Any year | old schoolboy knows it. What the great j of wealth producers and must know, b eed, is, Why they o t they produ The: 0w uc by what process that so a portion is taken from them. proc is either natural or artificial. 1 is a natural proc then there can be no relief, and and trade unionists their lives If it tificial process, then there is hop: relief, and if the socialists and t s do not understand this pro- they are wasting their eff the 15t same. Mr. Hunter asserts that therc “class struggle.” He also says it is a “fundamental t- His definition of “class strug- is the differences between the working and the capitalist class Allow me to ask any socialist if it s the socialists themselves that endering this class strugs pose that the sa 1 wiping out c re mnoi be not, by wip talists, also yurden wealth labor 1ch of it. in But is or labor i E | tell the organized or unorganized | know you | to have made insurgency seem pale and sickly.—Den- ver Republican. A Texas woman has patented a | simple but effective lifter with which hot pans can be handlad without dan- ger of burning the user's fingers. Gladys, was visiting me? Well, one evening we had a little party at our house in her honor and Aleck Solong was there. Up to that night I had the greatest admiration and respect for that young man, but since then I have looked upon him with great dis- favor. “During the evening somebody ask- ed him to sing, and guess he had been waiting for the invitation with feverish impatience, for he leaped over & chair to get at the piano in a hurry, saying that he played his own accom- paniments. He thinks he has a won- derful bass voice. That’s a common afiliction_with young men, Mrs. Wag- staff, and if I had a son named Aleck and he got the idea that he could sing bass I'd lock him in the coal cellar, where he couldn't disturb people. “Well, voung Solong sat at that piano and pounded the keys as though he had a grudge against the manufac- turers, and began singing something about there being countless stores of the earth’s red 'gold a huncred fath- oms deep, and he growled and rumbled like a circus wagon going over a bridge for half an hour, and when he wuas done with the countless stores and the hundred fathoms he switched over to ‘The Sands of Dee and I never was so tired of anything as 1 was of hearing him repeating, over and over again, in a hoarse roar, that the waves creot round and round the sand and o'er and o'er the sand and up and_down the sand and across fthe sand in every direction, and really T don’t see anything to laugh at, Mrs. Wagstafr. “When he had sung about the sand till we could taste sand he began on ‘Rocked in the Cradle of the Deep, and I guess he’'d have hung to it all night only my husband, who was try- ing to read uptairs, called down that TI'd have to quit grinding coffee, as the noise disturbed him. So you see what sort of a young man that Aleck So- long is. hicago News. this burden, the first thing for labor to do is to find out where the 60 or 80 cents goes, and the second to find out how it goes. They must find out these two things, if they wish to re- tain this wealth for their own u What labor wants is more than on fifth or two-fifths of what they pro- duce. They want al that belongs to whether it is the whole or a “fair share,” and no one will contend that they are mot entitled to more than they are getting. The one thing the socialists do not bor is how to stop the taking a from them that which they produce. They tell us all about conditions, which about everyone knows, but how to stop it is where the socialists are “the blind leading the blind.” I should very much like to have Edward Per- kins Clark, or any other socialist, tell me what the first thing Mr. Qlark would do to relieve the laboring men from this burden, if he were elected to congress, and there was a possi- ng his remedy into law. | It is a good m teach others, “to not attempt to hing you do mnot | 3 C VALLETTE. | , Oct 6, 1910. North Fi Bob Must Envy Him. the Wisconsin outlaw, seems the La Follette brand of Dietz, A Tour of the Escurial. It requires about four days to maks an investigation of the Escurial, the great Spanish palace, there being such a multitude of rooms and apartments. To travel all the halls, chambers, cor- ridors, lengths and depths of the great palace would require a tour amount- ing to over a hundred miles. ‘Whist. The game of whist has been traced by curfous inquirers to the game of triumph or trumpH or trump, which was extensively played in the early days of the sixteenth century. A Curious Eating Custom. The Dyaks divide in pairs when the hour arrives for taking food, the fa- ther and mother at one platter, two sisters at one and still two brothers at another. When the family is not equally divided as to gex a brother and sister may eat together, but this must always be the youngest and oldest of the family. The Baby Walrus. At six .months & baby walrus will eat fifty pounds of codfish a day. The Skate Fish. The ray, or skate fish, has a mouth set transversely across its head, the Jjaws working with a rolling motion, like two hands set back to back. In the jaws are two rows of flat teeth, set llke a mosaic pavement, and be- tween these rolling jaws the fish crushes oysters and other mollusks like so many nuts. Age of Elephants. There are records of elephants that have lived for 200 years, and an age of 150 years is not regarded as so very old for an elephant. It takes 3 SHOWS DALY 2130, 7 AnD 8.45 .‘KEI THE KUMA Japanese Novelty $5.00 in gold will on 10 cents TH & PROCTOR'S VAUDEVILLE Direct from Kelth's, introducing Magic, FAMIL Act, Boston. Mystery and _Baquilibristic. e G i, NAUGHT & LANTRV! TRAINOR & WIXON R aAcrobats. The Boys from Broadway The LAMBERTI TRIO, presenting a Symphony at Home it adicd e ALl o D ot ) Bl bl e it be given at h m, Mark Twain and Aldrich. Privately Mark Twain enjoyed a frolic, liked a joke, liked to tell a good story and make good talk, loved better to listen to good stories and good talk. He pever could bear enough of the vivid wit, the swift turns of speech, of Thomas Bailey Aldrich—Tom Aldrich of beloved memory. Aldrich was al- ways playing tricks on him in talk, but Mark got even for everything by | once sending a beok to Aldrich with the inscription, ““To Thomas Bailey Al- drich from his oply friend, Mark Twaln.”—American Magazine. Easy Way of Measuring Melgnts. Anybody who knows how to take | the altitude of the sun or a star with | a sextant and wishes to take that of any distant hill, steeple or the like should put a tea tray on the ground, lll it with water and then retire from it until the top of the hill, steeple or what not is reflected in the liquid. Now take the sextant and make the image of the summit coincide with its reflection in the liquid. The angle of elevation will thus obviously have about a quarter of a century to get the elephant to full maturity, Healthy Trees. The time in the summer at which the leaves begin to turn is a tolerably sure indication of the sounduess of the tree. Some trees will keep thelr foliage green until September, while the leaves of unheaithy trees will begin to show sigrs of turning brown or yellow in August. A Queer Manx Law. According to Manx law, a child guilty of pulling a horse’s tall is Hable to be sedted for two hours on & wood- en horse and then whipped. Ye Olde Christmas Pye. A “Christmas pye” of the olden times was an imwmense apd expensive affair. At one time it was compound- | ed of fesh, fish and fewl, and the crust was celled a “cofin” in old English books, It Was Both. “What do yeu ibkink of old Uncle Peter devising all mongy fer the erection of a mauscleum gver his re mains?” said the firstmeddy relativ, “Awful!” replied the second. Just a willful waste.” “Huh! I call it a wasteful will.” Thare are only 11 periodic comets of which the return has been observed. STOMACH DISTRESS SIMPLY VANISHES Indigestion, Gas, Heartburn, Dyspepsia or a Stomach Headache Go and You Feel Fine in Five Mi is Always As there family who often some one in youry iffers an attack of Indi- gestion or some form of Stomach trouble, why don’t vou keep some Diapepsin in the house handy? s harmless ble anything you can slightest diszcomfort, sour, gassy after. Tell your pl digast \\l!h’)ul the overcome a | five minutes and Stomach macist to let you read | the formula plainly printed on these!} 50-cent cases of Pape's Diapepsin, then vou wlll readily see why it makes | Indigestion, Sour ~ Stomach, Heart- | burn and other distress go in five | minutes and relieves at once such mis- eries as Balching of Gas, Eructations of sour undigested food, Nausea, Head- achess, Dizziness, Constipation and other Stomach disorders. I nutes—Just a Little Diapepsin Effective. Some folks have tried so long to find relief from Indigestion and Dyspep- a or an out-of-order stomach with common every-day cures adver- | tised that they have about made up| | their minds that they have something else wrong, or believe theirs in a case of Nervousness, Gastritis, Catarrh of | tha Stomach or Cancer. This, no doubt, 3 is a serious mistake. Your real trouble r what you eat does not digest; instead, it ferments and , turns to acid, Gas and Stomach poison, swhich. putrefy in the digestive tract and intestines, and, besides, poi- son tha breath with nauseous odors. A hearty appetite, with thorough di- ion, and without the slightest dis- or misery of the Stomach, is T you as soon as you decide to try Pape’s Diapepsin. Lenox Soap speaks for itself. In size, shape, color, quality and price, Lenox Soap suits most women better soap. than any other Lenox Soap— 4 ‘Just fits the hand” The Famous UO Doe Don’t strain on mellow li order to live must p I have before r ping from a ne hich is duce wealth. ne as T write a ¢ spaper, the titl Facts Indicat the Intereste. D/ RHA cently the census bureau at Washin ton issued u set of ofcial r ; showing that the unnual production of the wage workers of the United States is worth about $2,500 for each worker, while the average annual in come of the wagZe rs is but 3300 Previous government statistics give The figures as the producer getting only only two-Afths of what he pro- duces, In other words, the producer gets only 40 cents for which tl sumer pa one dollar In the census burean report the producer gets only 20 cents for one dollar. which the consamar pays in erder for laber to lLift Lamp gi Th best ligh It has keep pol but no o Once Daslers Everywhers. circular o over one shoulder. izes the work of the eyes, such as the that is held firm and true. gives added . strength. brass and finished in nickel. Standard Oil Company s Not Strain the Eyes use a small, concentrated light fe puts an unequal your eyes. Use a diffused, soft, ght that cannot flicker, that equal- ayo ves, and avoid eye strain. e Rayo is designed to give the t, and it does. a strong, durable shade-holder A new burner Made of solid Easy to Friced, 1 ght at a Rayo User, Always One. If not at yours, wrize for dascriptive 10 the nearési agency of the ished. The Rayo is low ther lamp gives a bewer any price. (Incorporated) been measured double. Half of this will give the measurement required. LUMBER AND COAL. GOAL THE BEST TIME TO FISH | Amglers say that they don't bite so well when the wind is %n certain quarters or the sun is not right, but the en who bning home the big strings keep on fishing, regardless of wind or sun. Good Coal, good service year after year—the secrets of our large family Coal busines E. CHAPPELL CO. Central Wharf and 150 Main Street. Telephones. Lumber COAL Free Burning Kinds and Lehigh ALWAYS IN STOCK. A. D. LATHROP, Office—cor. Market and Shetucket Sts Telephone 168-12 oct29d CALAMITE COAL “It burns up clean.” Well Seasoned Wood C. H. HASKELL. 402 — 'Phones — 489 may24d COAL and LUMBER In the beautiful valiey of \Wyoming, in Penn., lies the beds of the finest An- thracite Coal in the v . We have secured a_supply of this Coul for this | season. Try it in your cooking stove and heater. ¥ We are Rzex Flintkote Roofing. on roofings known to the trad JOHN A. MORGAN & SON. lelephone 854. aprisd | Reserved ‘Seats 20 cents October POLI'S =55 SIX ALL STAR ACTS Mr. and Mrs. FERRELL BROS. YIOTd AIIATIN CLAUDE MOORE RANF and John R. YOUNG Gordon Co. Twice Daily 2.15—7.45 THE HAILE CLUB will give a DANCE at Miller’s Academy on Friday Evening, October 28th. Tickets 50 cents. Gentlemen's tickets for sale by club NrF=emEcre MO=XTRE0 < g i tickets for club members 1 be obtained at the office at ms, 0ct19WSTThF % FIFTH ANNUAL CONCERT YOUNG MBEN'S 1A CLASE. Audience Room, Methodist Church. Vocal Talent of High Order. Violinist of Rare kxcellence. Superior Impersonator Expert Accompanists ¥riday Evening, Oct. 28, 1910, at § o'clock. Admission, 25 cents. 0Ct26WF e Music. CHARLES D. GEER Teacher of Si 42 Broadway Regular hours after Oct. 1at. HELEN LATHROP PERKINS, TEACHER OF SINGING, sept29d 11 Huntington Place, NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teacher of Piano. Fletcher Music Method. 48 Central Building. oct1d F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect €t, Tel. 511. Norwich, Ca %. H. BALCOM, Teacher of Plamo. 29 Thames St. Lessons glves at my residence or aY the home of the pupll. Same method a8 used at Schawenka Conservatory, Ber= 1 —_——— PLUMBING AND GASFITTI JOHNSON & BENSON, 20 Central Avenue. SLATE ROOFING Metal Cornices and Skylights, Gutters | &and Conductors, and all kinds of Job- bing promptly attended to. Tel. 119. | ;The Vaughn Foundry Co.| IRON CASTINGS | furnished promiptly. Targe atock of vatterna. No. 11 to 2§ Ferry Strest | | S F GIBSON ‘ -1 Tin and Sheet Metal Worl\er, Agent for Richardson and BEoynton | Furnaces. 55 West Main Street, decd T. F. BURNS, Heating and Plumbing, 92 Franklin Streal, marbd Do It Now Have that oid-fushioned, unsanitary Norwich, Conn. plumbing replaced by new and rod- ero open plumbing the increase of | in h hea! | of docior's bi Overhauling and re- | Atting thoroughly done. Lei wme give | you & figure for lacing al! the oid | modern kind that sewer gas. Th and the price J. E. TOMPKINS, auglsd 6/ Wast Main Strest THERE a o ng medium in Eastarn Connect quai to The Bul AR ) It will repay you | and gaving | ifn. oct11d All X 1s of Fur Garments lnu:lP to orde: We also have ex facili- tios fob redying Depaitinl axd vemod. eling furs to ithe newest shapes at Prices reasonable, Winsted soon with a sample line of Coats and itch the date. | WILLIAMS, 38 Allyn St., Hartford, Ct. turing Fur Since 1874 id Room ehoards without a Sideboard without hang- h like a window unfinished and unsatisfactory. ks the toueh that gives the roem » home atmosphere, callection deboarde and is one of the Room Furniture ern Connecticut, and o ositively the lowest. SHEA & BURKE, Norwich and Taitville Trunks Bags Suit Cases variety at lowest prices, iring on all kinds of Trunks ther Goods done promptly and at in a large Rey and 1 At reasonable prices THE SHETUCKET HARNESS CO. { W BODE, Prop, 283 Main Street ' l:UNERAL ORDERS Artistically Arranged by HUNT + * The Florist, Tel. 130. Lafayette Strest

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