Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 2, 1910, Page 4

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‘ullelin ourier. . o= 134 YEAR Entered at the Postof Cons., As ssoond-ciass matter. \ Tetephone Calle: iletin Businees Offic llecin Editorial alieisa Job Office, Willhmantic O fee, Moom 2 Murray S OLD. e Battamg. Tolephone 210. 430, * Rooms, 35-3. [2 ¢ Norwich, FOOTBALL STILL FATAL. The football season, which is about over, has two fatalities to its credit under the new rules, with a chance foF sevemnl more in the next three Weeks. Ome of these was a member of the Wabash college team, which played nzainst St Louis university last Week . {he other was of Cornell uni- versity, who was injured in a practice serimmage. There is no reason why the game of football should run te violemce, what- ever the rules, and if the public was leas tolerant of an indefensible bru- tality which is put into the game by unprincipled c ‘hers and brutal piay- there would be few fatalities or serious accidents. A group of men KBow better than to fall with full weight upon a brilliant player, or to wilk his body or kick Him to npon, Norwich, Wednesday, Nov. 2, 1910, | "ake him unconseious in order to put REPUSLICAN RALLY THIS EVE- NING. out of the zame; and any ona or more of them who is kno®n to indulge 1 “roughnags” if held to responsibility the same as if The republieans of Norwich and vi- | the attack was maliious and person- cinity should bear 4n mind that the [ul they would all Ammediately show a rally in Town hall this evening will | reserye of seli-government. The game he of more tham ordinary interest. |is defensibie. At the cruelty of it is The two speaker of the evening @ Congressm. the Hor iR Consressman Pwin eargo B Hie «d to with pleasure whom he ean e e a much aboi his is %0 well-known for that ciatod that the Demt for fhe dis country to re whete e has a 1s ®omst and woweh 1o The aadress o piase his p »o g n ta reco fTatrs of the par d nat rer *e lunworthy of tolerance from civilized s and | Ludiences. ®hat fs needed is not new of Rocky % but new nien—men who are too ndl considerate of their fellows Tisten enjoy smph by their injury or constituents | geat bools up Bruulity on the gridiron is more maily, and | markéd than in the prize ring. Is it Here | wore honorable or tolerable? e to talk e B tively that be Gisturl a for he has his oppon THE LAST CONGRE ING In the talls, ®f the fact thst sative alone s no CONGRESS ze that it is ate » Washington, app nd t e IMMORAL PRIVILEGES. York Tribune of the 29th defended the attitude of Police misstoner Cropsey against the im- rivileges granted the small boy he standi x ¥ |on election night. The Tribune said: v | “With the mayors attitude toward o ia sure (Vlection night bonfires in the streets peals | BOWETEr. it is not so easy to agree, o nd many will prefer that of the may- o SN ©'s appoiitee, Mr. Cropsey. The fnay 4he Gecao- recently discouraged an appeal for the differ- |ine protibition of such fires, on the at oml¥ | ground that ‘it has been the imme- nstant- | morial privilege of the small doy to nifting of | burn barrels on election night, and we ay have | some difficulty in stopping 1| him’ But custom should not sunction of the | un uiruse. The evils of the bonfire prac- %0 serious and so cbvious as e part «Il imperatively for its suppres- precads the | s tiTactveness zrda The effect upon the boys is bad, for s 1 oara, them In law-breaking. - \ large part of their fuel is stolen, A WORK- ‘ of it being of considerable value, She bullding of the fires is a vio- T aw olerance of such do- age them to extend tory habits to other things boxes, and to break | me found a determined though secret | ive. Crime,” said the man in the smoking compartment of the sleeper, “crops out in_most unexpected quarters. If I wire to tell you, gentlemen, that the magazines of America, howling about graft and felicitating themselves upon their labors for virtue as they do, were engaged in a conspiracy of many rami- flcations to suppress reform, you would be astonished. Yet such is the sick- ening fact. T am a reformer myself. Some years ago 1 engaged in the laudable work of aholishing district schools, the plan be- ng to unite all the schools of a town- ship and have the children hauled to the central graded school. A deter- mined opposition came from some sa- cret source and frustrated my efforts. “Despairing of success in this line of endeavor, I sought to abolish deer hunting. ¥or that purpose I went to the England states, which have protacted deer more successfully than have any others, so successfully that deer eat up cornfields and hunters shoot .each other by mistake within thirty miles of Boston. “Deer nunting familiarizes the young 1 puts guns and pis- ‘where the hero skates away, swims away, tips four cords of wood off a bobsled and drives away, rune, climbs, digs away. But it couldn't have wolf stories if people didn't believe in ‘wolves. “I got into prison reform and when 1 ran Into the old opposition I could guess where it eame from. Our pro- ject to establish model reformatories and nearly eliminate penitentiaries, be- juning in the central west, failed. §Vhy? - There are elght monthly maga- zines in New York. How were they going to spring any more stories about men who had besén ten years in the penitentiary—faceg dead white, hearts burned out, sllanng!lun‘ jobs where nobody but the kind-hearted. guy who, tells the story is on to their records. and making good, winning the love of a girl who don't care, saving the mill or'the dam or the bridge, or exposing as a villain the hypocrite everybody had thought was a natural-born Sun- day school superintendent? You've got to have some basis of probability for your stories. At least you've got to hava penitentiaries to graduate your herces. A man from a reformatory isn’t strong enough. 3 “Well, so_we lost out on reforma- tories and I started a soclety ingen- jousiy devisel to promote and inculcate juvenile manliness, to run through the public schools.” This tima, when I ran into_opposition, I couldn't understand it. But I tracead it back to the maga- ines and then saw what it meant. If Wwe pretty generally got rid of sissyism, how could a magazine rtin ten stories a year where a fellow hegins as a sis- sy, a saphead, a conceited, general all- around booby and everybody cuts him, sends him to coventry, and then an emergency a: and he turns out the bravest chap that ever came down the pike and shames all the peopls who were sensible, brave, decent and mod- est in the beginning of the story? The moral effect is bad, for it inculcates the injurious beliaf that it is the sen- sible, modest people who are curs and that the curs will always prove wise and noble in an emerxency. ‘Why do the magazines have these storias written at so much a word? They could have prescription clerks put ‘em up.’ “I suspect, sir” said the man who had fifteen copies of 15-cent magazines in his lap, “that you are a disappointed tols r ha braeding truculence and lawlessness. Tt is also cruel to the deer. After the hunting season is over eyeiess, broken- légged. rib-smashed deer hobble all over the cultured manufacturing states that encourage this sport and then pro- tect the deer so thoroughly that when on n IS over not a wounded animal may be despatched. Again, T and the devotzd men associated with opposition. “T found—as a sort of backfire, it seemed to me—a movement on foot to protect wolves, giving them a _five years' closed season. A member of the Vermont lezislature introduced a bill to protect panthers—or ‘painters’ as he called them—which under a natural misapprehension got to third reading before an etymologist made out that he meant net artisans but savage felines. The Bill failed by four votes, or maybe The welf-protection bill passed aine and New Hampshire. Then it was that I discovered what was back of all this. It was, sirs, a certaln popular juvenile periodical. which saw with the abolition of ths district school the passing of those familiar tales where the boys start to throw out the new teacher and he wallops them. Algo for manv decades every few weeks the paper had pub- Hished an escaped-from-wolves Story, in T deny am a disappointed News. it categorically. T reader."—Chicago dren of the middie west have moved on to settle new countries and run for office where the competition is not so great. In the next ten vears the mid- dle west will strike its gait again and there may besa different story to tell in 1820.—Atchison (Kan.) Globe. 1y an unlimited amount of money, and to ‘deflect and conceal bank loans so as to allay suspicions, can_sometimes do with the stock market.—Wall Street Journal. B e oo | other than " that dwitket S The Labor Issue in Ohio. e "he following | boatires. The practice is a nuisance | There is a certaln compensation for f e matun. tacg, S04 508 & peril to he pubiic, makite e | ... . 0 Woed tw Fif tha Cons. the Harmon cause in the Harding nom- e o per o h . Long ago. on an occasion when the | jation in that both men are likely to for lenged republican | § o e streets in some cases POSi- | uiook market showed signs of manipu- | pa; it i - Ovely sasafé X . have some trouble with organized la. ocise ‘ - lation in an advance defying all the | por® Tarmon has been compeiled to S or o b Niaya ot Nobeeich, ‘At Shor (HRCTIALS | i o Tehere aiua The altsiballell ot Loy fo et Ceigmbes at ior - | bovs of Norwich, anc - - [ writars on stocks he descr the street car strike—hence m v, of all New England cities, are un- | it a8 “buoyant.” The adjective did not g:x‘;cry from professional lbor agita- 5 Mew Mexion | Worthy of endorsement. It is not lke- | fatisty him. and he modified ' 10| tors. But Harding has always vun a hat cight or ten tweeks of barrel | fambuoyant” This did not quite ex- | non union printing shop so the hon- tealing 1 press the peculiar condition, and he|org on that issue seem about even.— establis of x stealing, in addition to the | a5 reduced to inventing a word. The | $10, o0 Rni'T oot wees oguery and thefts and | word was “flimflambuoyant” The ad- i ~ 8w P » gardens and fences, make | jective is herawith presented to the 3 B Sibaraw 5 s 10} ing men or citizens of them | public as a fairly good description of | Meriden.—Thres thousand umbrellas A g er in life. The fact i,s of late years | What a limited number of people ablefound on trains are being stored at the oue of $30,000,000 | o 4x" who engage in the semg. |for a short time to command practical-/| local station. 5 of sdebtedness to com- | Work invade celiars and break epen st Mmation projncis | barns without any apparent realiza- ng the emtry of the sur- | © enormity of the offence, Tace lands |a for the good nature and tol- a e to consider the sufferers they would ecomorgles 1o administration of serious trouble for themselves the fedtra govorrmes |and their parents. What reason is Providies a new ‘tari system for | there for a Christian community giv- the Phlippine istand | ing its Sunday school pupils immoral aitimately fs ex- | privileges, anyhow? X to cine bition t —— S — S Bliont EDITORIAL NOTES. Providing for pu of ©am- | There is no doubt that Horace Vose vagm con s | has the presidential turkey picked out Creafing a irire . {and stufing; even at this early date. Bxtending e | = e tapf® board and app s A definit of Roosevelt's phrase: 000 Wor its us. Weasel words Words that suek the Becking 1o b on of traf- | meaning out of the words in front of fic m “white s " 5 A b 1 (ne 1og oF Bée 2 @ioe mnd aise repocts. Congressman| Foss is making six speeches . dsy Mifwine acted with his perts for the |in Mussachusetts, and an exchange acocmplfhmen: of ese thin awns and sa Six days more of sUPERloR ena was a lo . Foss the progresg « . 3 e re tstration He | the| The suburban mail service will all Seht’ eliterprises rssive | be done by automobile before many ssues of the go t. s loyal ear It is being introduced into a gy e Taf setration | few cities today % saved fiftes mik enr. and its | o R > B to i nae wherever | Tt is predicted that Governor Dra- Bt Vossivte. ‘,.y will receive about as large a plu- A vote fer republican congressmen | rality this year in Massachusetts ai i this state is a vote my und [ he recoived in 1909 Er . , | The farmer who likes to take a THE NOM-POLITICAL PROBATE |Pandsome bonus is cozening his, tur- | keys and getting them ready to take ' | The Bulletin prizes. - | — - . It was the re t that Great Britain l!’ 4ave been | was in the market of the world look- Youwmmake fllem dam o t}ing for a loan of 50,000,000 that 101, . d f it and delicious; but more, you o e ersrd «| 1t boys would take naturally to-the i T , x| iaevanus o2 Mumany. ‘an. a7 it will know what goes into your o sd | Hallowe'en night deviltry, they might 42 e | el i e b food—that it is pure,wholesome x5 ' o ew London would net be so fool- i R 7 PPty o ol ol and contains no poisonous alum, e ¢ | of ner maybr with the state. No ~ - fartiord. | man ever yet Tode two horses well gin o 3 - | A hanaful of tribesmen are breaking B n the Philippines and getting an- - < Jated instead of being parleyed et o i \. They prefer Spanish methods - oy - - Mo it is news when Japan says Korea e 1w ~ g e just enjoying mnnexation; hut It ’ ""* - t b the truth if Korea had sufM- ® .‘ - ~ "" '» . v lea 1o say that she was not! B4 idans & York city over 35,000 a day, Sun. . $oe" Neaino takes the | oo ot excepted. rounding up twe sieht view of ze and | ns & year-for the laxpayers o % d8 dn agu gt n " Take a cake of Lenox Soap, cut it into small BB Shtie. ™o not sl Fi s M Trale w1 A pieces and dissolve these in three quarts of - - S f woman to range through Massa- boiling water. Keep at boiling point until a ’ isctts ag a political speaker. She | solution is formed. how . ©ced in the | will draw large and respectful audi- | 7 i % netiler This solution will do hetter work than soap ot i 0 & . inday Tunters n the western | S ithout Sy wase voters w how e state who swap shots with 03 3 B yor ¢ . s warden' are not the Mipd, of Rab the soap salgtion on the sciled pats, B eolt & v giving | men to license to hunt game in Con- fold and roll each piece separately, pack in The Post shrinkaze p The fact that be reduced i p 15t of Decer mats of re will | cade hut they haven't had to populate o less In the sp: \homa, the Panhaudle couniry of R the R indian agency in | e ine automoblle 13 now in | & Dekote and a dozen or more e dream ot men who thinik yust | Other tracts of grester area tham s reams o 3 Jle tats in New England. While the shead of the majority. o pulatitig the middle west a pr- e g0, this section grew out Happy though: for today The | Jwortion to the east. and we credofous man iz aiways sn ea Jrobabl about it. just as the } Zist 18 now crowing because the chil- him an incressed majority to be one thousand feet engt now projected and is to be making a {rip mcross.the. or two, in less than The Course of Empire. tern towns have SrOWD miOre raD- 1 western (0wiiy in {he Jast de let stand a tub, cover with warm soapy water, over night, and in the morning you will find that the really hard work of washing—the rubbing on the washboard—is not half as hard as usual. We give out Hair Pins Tonight. Come and get one. The Annual Fall Notion Sale Begins This Morning Needles and Pins—Needles and Pins, when our Notion Sale starts off, the fun begins. Th Notion Sale of our career, which is by a good substantial majority the best to say, the best Notion Sale ever attempted in Norwich. Bear in mind this sale not made up of short weight, short count, short width goods bought for “Special 8elling,” but good, standard, fufl count merchandise such as you find in our department the year round. Come and help yourself to these little needfuls—buy all the notions and knick-knacks you need for six months to come. “ |Extra Special Women's ‘Wood Skirt Hangers, adjustable, with one motion— Cnly 10¢ each Extra Special 100-yard Spool Silk— 3¢ a spool or 33c a doz. Biack Sewing Common Pins on papers, 400 count value Ge—Sale price 2 papers Sc. Hooks and Eyes Hooks and Eyes, black and white, two dozen on card—Sale price 3¢ a card. English Pins on papers, 10c quality— | Finest quality Brass Hooks and Sale price 7c a paper. value 10c—Sale price 7c a card. Belt Pin Books, 5c quality — Sale| Hook and Eye Tape. black and white, price 3c a paper. value 25c—Sale price 17c a yard. Black and White Belt Pins in boxes— Sale price 1c. Kirby Beard Cols Black aquality—Sale price 7. Pearl Buttons Pin Cubes, assorted sizes, 10¢ quality | White Pear! Buttons, all sizes, two —Sale price 5c. four hole—Sale price 4c a dozen English make' Japanned Wire Hair | Pins—Sale price 2c a paper. | Pins, 10c White Pearl Buttons, 12 to 30 value 10c—Sale price 7c each. line, White Pear] Buttons, in sizes for shirt waist, plain and fancy patterns, value 15¢c—Sale price 10c a dozen. Clinton Safety value 5 Pins, black and nickel, to Tc—Sale price 4c a paper Nickel Safety Pins, thrae sizes, value | 5c—Sale price 2 for 5o. Shell Hair Pins in three shapes, v 15c—Sale price 11c a package. wn| Miscellaneous | Articles Roberts’ Parabola Needles, value se—Sale price 4. all Grand Skirt Marker, made on . - square nickel base with hinged post, Tapes and Bindings | "0 e neiding ensi ‘and adjustable gauge complete—no sep- es to lose — value 50c — 250, | The Thrae-yard White Roll three-quarter inch in Tape, up to| width—8ale arate p Sale p THE BANKS BREAZEALE DUO ; In a Musical Storiette Dainty, Beautifal, Speetacular, Speclal Scenery. OCTAVIA NEAL, ‘Comedienne. R. P. Murphy & Blanche Andrews, Classy Entertainers. _ —Added Attraction— HARRY BOOKER, Accompanied by JOHN M'MAHON Nature’s Own Comedian, presenting THE DELEGATE. ENTIRE SHOW CHANGED THURSDAY. LYCEUM THEATRE NEW Lonoow, WALTER T. MURPHY, Manager. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2. at 815§ America’s Greatest Comedy Hit ‘WM. A. BRADY announces THOMAS A. WISE In a GENTLEMAN MISS.SSI PPI —From —— By Harrison Rhodes and Mr. Wise. And the entire New York Production, a brilliant cast. You will laugh till your ribs tickle your sides and then some. “IT'S A CORKER”—Col. Roosevelt. Prices 25c, 50c, 75¢, $1.00 and $1.50. PLUMBING AND GASFITTING. price 16 a roll. loid Thimblzs, 1u all colors, Gc—Sale price 3¢ each. | et value | Assorted widths White Tape, in pack- age, value Ge—Sale price two for 5c. 1pe Measure, Sale price 3¢ each. 60-inch, cloth, value 24 rd rolls White Twilled Tape, | value 150—Sale price 10c a roll. | Spring Tape Measures in nickel handy for pocket value Sale price 10c. Bias Seam Tape, 12-yard pieces 15c—Sale price 9o a pisce. 180 value use, Featherstitch White Finishing Braid, value 10c—Sale price 6c a piece. ’ of Pocket and Pointed Se ard pieces finest quality Taf ing; Felmors, valug. S50 Snles ool feta Binding, value 17c—Sale price| '°° 1ic a piece. rset Laces in mercerized and linet 7-8-inch Double Serge Belting. black | fa 5 and 8-yard, value 16c¢ Se! ana white, 10-yard pieces, vaiue 31| Price 9c. —Sale price 85 a pisce. : 1 g C. M. C. Hose Supporters, black an % | white — Infants’, value 12%c, 88! price 10 — Children's, value 15 Threads Sale price 12c—Misses’, value 1% Sale price 15c. Diadem Supporters, white, with removable c value 10c—Sale price 6c a set. Collar blac Thread, in black and white — Sale price 6 spools for 27c. 200-yard Willimantic six-cord Machine | | n 500-yard White Basting Thread, our S quality—Sale price 3 spools for Qe 100-vard spools Black Sewing Silk- Sew-Well,” value 10c—Sale price 5¢ | a spool. Dress £h three c—Sale price 10c a pair. 1ds, | | Ironing Wax with wooden Sale price 6 for Sc. | Black Tubular Shoe Lacas, in 4-5 Merrick's 45 yards Darning Cotton, e | 6 quarter length, value 10c—8a black, white and tans—only 2c a ball | price 5c a dozen. HESGBOHOaHE We Recover Furniture and do E-M-F Automobiles Four cars delivered iast week. Some of the near agents are giving premiums for E-M-F’s, New York Branch 60 cars behind their orders. WHY SO POPULAR? Factory Qutput 75 daily. 20 of these ears have been delivered in this territory within tie past six monihs. Call at lmpel‘ial Garage <4 FOR DEMONSTRATION Carpet Laying Dr. F. W. HOLMS, Den:ist Shannons Building Annex, Telephone 3u' MME. TAFT, PALMIST AND CLAIRVOYANT, now Jocated at 68 Washingion St,, cors I ner Tilley St, New London, ivsd Roem A, ovtldd ' Hair, Scalp and Face Specialist | { tias for redving, repairing and remod- Mon. 6 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. Seats on sale Monda; October 31st, at 9 a. m., at Box Office. Tues. ML STAR Cars to Norwich after performance. Wed. A8 SPECIAL hd The Vaughn Foundry Co. (s . g | B8 m @ IRON CASTINGS |f§::: £ it furnishea promptly. Large stock ot x; & gisd gi p.mm.'; No. 11 to 25 Ferry Btreet < ; n{‘ ,;g: Ig : | B Bt : 3% S.F. GIBSON [§35 2 fauwd . Tin and Sheet Metal Worker |8~ KRISTOFFY ° Agent for Richardson and Boynton | Furnaces. | 55 West Main Street, Norwich, Conn.’ dec7d | T. F. BURNS, Heating and Plumbing, 92 Franklin Street. marbd Do It Now Have that old-fashioned, unsanitary plumbing replaced by new and mod- era_open plumbing. It will repay you TRIO in GRAND OPERA Professional Try-out Night Wednesday | { 5 AOTS FROM NEW YORK | 'Lyceum Theatre NEW LONDON, CONN. WALTER T. MURPHY, Manager, Friday and Saturday, November 4 and 5, Special Matinee Saturday NEW OPERA CO. All Star Cast, in the increase ©¢f health a: incinding of doctor’s bills. Overhaull Christain Hansen (Tenor) fitting thoroughly done. Let Frances Hewltt Bowne (Soprano) you's Bgure for replacing all the ol g (ith the ‘modern” Kind that D eE, Tout the "sewer gas. The | VOCLEZCA in “Dance of the Soul” work will be first-class and the price Note:—Two new Operas will be reasonable. given each conducted by their own J. E. TOMPKINS, Aootelinr amis Decinus ve Aok bl Berge, conductor Metropolitan Opera aug1sa 67 Wast Main Street. | Houer. ik ! ——————————————————— | Love Laughs at Locksmiths, by J. Breil, composer th> Climax. Augmented Orchestra. PRICES 23¢, 50c, 7o¢ and $1.00. $1.00 and $1.50, November 3rd. fatinee vening 25¢, 5 sale opens Wed novad REPUBLIGAN RALLY Wednesday Evening, Nov. 2, 1910, at 8 o'ciock. TOWN HALL The Speakers will be Hon. Edwin W. Higgins of Norwich tlon. Geo. B. Chandler of Rocky Hill Everybody invited PARADE at 7.30 Gold Dust makes clean, healthy homes esday, GOLD DUST acts like magic on dirty floors, doors and woodwork. You do not have to bend until your poor back is nearly breaking in an effort to scourand scrub away the dirt. Add a heaping tea- spoonful of GOLD DUST to a'pail of water and the GOLD DUST TWINS will do the rest. GOL D DUST i makes floors and doors spotlessly white. It searches out dirt, germs and impurities from every crack and crevice. GOLD DUST makes home—‘‘sweet home.” Save your strength by calling GOLD DUST to your aid. GOLD DUST is sold in BC size and large pack- ages. The large package offers ‘Let the GOLD DUST TWINS do your work"* Vli\\ISS M. C. ADLES, TUBBS BAND ELEGANT STYLES ool D Sk ARLES D. GEER No lady should miss Tenol a5, | tful hair arrangen ey Asgiag. Make an early appointment: Rezular hours after Oct. 1st. octid NORWICH~Wauregan House. NELLIE §. HOWIE NEW YORK—210 Went 11101 St. | Teacher of Piane. Telephone. 0ctIIMWE | Fletch . nod Room 45 - - Building. I :‘ S : F. C. GEER B TUNER E H 122 Prosvect Bt TO ORDER [ Tel 611 Norwich Cn All kinds of Fur Garmenis made to ” 0 order. We also have excellent facili L. H. BALCOM, eling furs to the newest shapes at Keahei 46 RS, short notice. Prices reasonable. | 1. Thame By el ol b Winted Socn iun o | o evses Sires st Y Ceeoncs, o2 o8 arge new sample line of Coats anc . g P °g, Hets. Watch the date. ill:d at Schawenka Cons nr\um:z‘" - WILLIAMS, 38 Allyn St., Hartford, Ct, ~ Manufacturing Furrier Since 1874, 001207 v ertising m [ Bastern Connsetiout squal to iabin fur business resulis

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