Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 3, 1910, Page 4

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Borwich Bulletin nud Gourier. 134 YEARS OLD. — = = Sl tion price, 1Z¢ » week; 50c & p—.-‘ year. — — Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Coun., as second-class matter. Telephome Calls: Builetin Business Office, 4 Bulletin Editorial Rooms, 35-3. Bulletin Job Office. 35-6. Willimantie Office, Hoom 3 Murray Telephone 210. N The Circulation ol The Bulletin. The Bullettn bas the largest efr- culation of amy paper in Eastern Counecticnt, innd from three to four tlmes larger thas that of amy in Norwich. It is dellvered to over 3,000 of the 4053 houses ia Nor- ov. 3, 1910 wich, and resd by cemt. of the peeple. In Windham it s delivere in Puinam = 1,100, and in all of these places It considered the loeal dafly. Eastern Conmecticut has forty- ome wural free delivery routes. The Bullet sold im every on & Eastern Conmecticut. routes fn CIRCULATION nverage 1901, 1965, sverage ... Week ending Ootihes 1 intend to show the voters his side of o il the case and convince them that Roosevelt is wrong. We are afraid the average voter is too busy and too THE PUBLIC UTILITIES CAM- |indifferent to apprecizte the fine PAIGN points of Judge Baldwix's letter. No man in controve! with Theodore Tes . 8, Commuect Roosevelt, up to this time, that we association ha can remember, has ever shown such P ety superiority over Roosevelt's aggres, gt sive nimbleness and genius for dem- it and impressed all can- | .. ,q. appeal—Waterbury American. at Mce that the time had oéme to go on record as 0} qp, pyjletin believes that Judge FOERER . e Jaldwin’s art is accomplishing more will be somewhat interesting aft- |, tpjg campaign than his innocence. or the battle of the ballots is over on | ypere can be no doubt as to his tact- Siber 5t what the effect | ¢, h.qs, or his ability by delicate flat- publi . 1 the candi- | .1y 1o please any kind of an audience, B e been marked | wpether composed principally of na- onsiderable frankness for and | norn voters or of naturalized cit- Rpaliat THe N ane not a little | i, s The judse is out for the gov- Ung. The candidates who have | ,io:snip, and his observing opponents enored the aesociation's Inquiries |paye no reasorf to adversely criticise e indeed been few : the campaign he is conducting. Re- There is a ng hope, doubtless, | Luyiican hope is not in his mistakes mewhe 1e president of this | ¢ j the virtue of republican policy sesstation rest after the election | 51,7 the loyMlty of the rank and fils s over and leave the biil to the tender | ;¢ the republican party to them. mercles of the promisin ajority A haBiadeh b it does not look as if Mr. Jones EDITORIAL NOTES. . ST Sy S A few men are worse than women meeting of the legis- | hen it come to a determination to on_upon this ®ill he [ po o L GO0 with his handful of | ¥ hat the members who | pogion thinks it high time that the e blue in act a8 well | jnrage “come back” vanished, or took a seat in the back ro Happy thought for today: The per | son who is looking for advice | finds lots of cheerful givers. bl | 2 B hn r The man who finds glee in telling As | everyone he mee “1 told you so,” is Ares every day since the cam- ed, and it gives promise of | toats 50 e 3% gty o »mplished [ — [ PRESIDENT WMELLEN'S CONTEN- TION. The af of President Mellen in e discussio f the 1 > utilitie th th tatives of ‘the | s =im vy t D ¥ mpted b a fesire to have the safest plan adopted | the pursuit of fair play for those | wvho contrel and those who patronize the raliroads Th such a plan as the ome devised shoul . ed out | by men fled education and | alning to do things a just and . ke way, needs no argument either does the statement that lack o ency under such circumstan- s may produ unsatisfactory re- salts for all eoncerned President Mellen appears to aceept | tur something must be by tt 1l assembly of 1911, anx s the leading repre ta L R orporation H he business | A t x onditions | 1 ' be, but tigatq e the pub -y | There is nothing his | we tha likely | « f making the ze suggested by President Mel- THE HMIGH PRICE OF LIVING. at the high s not | sns trade and employment over the governme as no control A seem strange (o hear this dem rat arping upon the burdens im- ¥ 1 by the tariff to which they have b o1 »pposed for many years; mpling to prove it about 3 ey made matiers a deal worse | tha hey had ever bLeen before. | Roosevalt, in touching up this matter | iffalo wudience the other eve- | this to sa n years ago I was Buf- | ng in the campaign for Mr. | aga Mr. Bryan and at ir opponents held the esponsible because prices.| Yo that | was the up to the | vears a pr Las ung by the fact that the cost e » low remember oniplaint wheat fourteen that Bryan's great would newer get mil. Now omplaint is Hen! sulte soly Leen cause have gune up ng has increased. As Mr. Stmson nted out the other night, there has on a world-wide movement towar higher prices during the past few | i 1 N ils essence a move eut that effects only this country. It| Ut ot \ffects olher countries just as it af fecis owrs. Neverineless, there are one or two artificial causes that in given cases in our country tend to make prices improperly hizh in ways that it is possible that we can cure.. “I have no question,” the Colonel continued, “but that sometimes bir combinations, big trusts, have raised prices. No man in this country has 1iken more effective action against those big trusts, during the same length of time, than Harry Stimson did while he was district attorney in New York. As a result every big finan- cial corporation of the type that we speak of as a trust is now doing all it can to back up Mr. Dix and to oppose Mr. Stimson. If Harry Stimson were not a menace to the big trust you would not find every big trust-con- trolled newspaper of New York city against him. If Mr. Dix was not want- ed;in office by the great corporations which have more effect in raising the prices of living than any other agency of purely national, as distinguished from international, significance, you would not find them supporting Mr. Dix as eagerly as they are supporting him in this campaign.’ A TACTFUL CANDIDATE. is one peculiar and charac- thing about Judge Baldwin's latest letter to Colonel Roosevelt. He appears to ba writing to Mr. Roose- veit and not for the public. He wants to show his opponent that he is wrong, rebuke him for intentional misrepre- sentation, and convince him that he ought to make a retraction and an apology. He is =0 intent on this prin- cipal purpose that he seems to forget that he is writing a campaign letter of very little use in accomplishing its ostensible object, but designed to af- fect the larger public who are to read it. Probably this effect is enhanced by the apparent uncomsclousness of the writer. Of course, Judge Baldwin is a shrewd lawyer, a disciplined de- bater, and a master of the art of put- ting one’s opponent in the wrong, and convincing the jury of one’s own right There teristic and sincerity in it. In writing to Roosevelt, therefore, he is not un- mindful of the public. He does not expect to convince the former or to get a retraction from him, but he does preparing for a real good time next What Mr. Foss fails to accomplish by his addresses in Massachusetts he onfidently expects his money to do for him. Attention Ameri lled to the fact that the ngman has reached an age when he does not light his pipe with $20 work Atlanta Constitution says: “It takes four eagles on as many silver to capture one good Thanks- giving turkey.” According to the St. Albans Messen- ger nt seeing better days than of ol is shows that she is right in the swim. The man who is not a candidate for | office doesn’t have anything to keep | him awake o' nights, unless there is an infant in the family. The socialist candidate for governor has $1,000 to put out in the interest { purer polilics in Connecticut, w is highly creditable to hi houghtlful an who rciples from disgustinever fee deed b English language enough to cover New York repo race in the air, The t votes | prejudice proud of it aft- done. his 1 Ihe elastic The plane h appears any new rs call A duel to be event. a bi- in the Chicago college that o woman likes to gossip because it gives shocks to her vaso- meter sy&tem, will have to show all Missourians The say professor who Only two of the fift Heroes are more than the Carnezie her arnegie came numerous, | award eigh to New England them to be S RS | wondering will look . The rell that about y night. meditative mind now how Conneetic Wednesda The s ut morni abou on next Bullet be able te "uesd ten o'cloc G. Bernard Shaw gives us not as the Idie Rich in this country than anywhere else on earth. He regard them “as a tale that is told.” There is an old-fashioned newspaper squabble on In Lowell, Mass., and the per referred to as The Evening ch has begun a libel suit. Bette > than to be denominated The Touch- Thanksgiving Thoughts. | wer up! If you recover from | Noseaiver §irst, perhaps youll survive | the comtly ordeal of s trusi-controlied Thanhsgiviug Just when sou are congratulating | yourssif that you have “made it” to| the Thanksgiviug turkey, you are re- juested to count the days till Christ mas A\nother g Thanksgiving prayer % “iLopd, make us thankful that we have lived in spite of the machina- tions of the devil and the trusts, Atlanta Censtitution, hero |7 In using paper patterns, keep each pattern piece straight on the goods, do not try to get a five-inch piece out of a four-inch pieca, or there will ever be an uncomfortable feeling. To wear a cluster of flowers or a single blossom on a tailor-made coat, sew a little loop of heavy braid un- derneath the collar lapal, with the ends sawed together at the outer edge, just under the buttonhole. In this way flowers can be attached without sticking a pin into delicate cloth just where it will show most. It is a plan adopted by men also for their bouton- nieres, and a useful one. ‘When a glove edge is torn or ripped. buttonhole it with a fine cotton thread of the.same color, using a_ small-size needle. Then whip these buttonroled edges together. Even kid gloves may Dbe mended in this way so that they will stand any amount of wear, as the cotton does not cut the glove. An interesting variation on the lin- gerie hat was seen recently. It con- sisted of a dark grayish blue felt in cloche shape, completely covered with linen embroidery In English eyelet (what the French call broderie an- glaise). The only trimming the hat possessed was two stiff bows of the eyelet, lined with panne velvet the col- or of the hat. Nut Bread. One cup of sugar, ona teaspoonful of salt, one egg, one and a quarter cups of milk, four heaping teaspoonfuls of baking powder, four level cups of flour, half pound of English walnuts, chop- ped. ~Mix and bake for 40 minutes in a bread pan. Dutch Buttermilk Soup. For two cups of buttermilk put into a kettle enough butter to fry brown three cupe of bread cut up quits small. When fried add the buttermilk, and. while waiting for it to boil, wet two scant tablespoonfuls of flour with a little sweet milk, beat an egg info it and, when_the soup boils, stir in_the mixture. When it boils up once thor- oughly, it is dome. Season with cin- namon and sweeten to taste. This is the genuine buttermilk soup made by a Dutch grandmother. Candied Figs. Wash but do not peel ripe figs, tak- ing care that they ars not so ripe as to break easily. Parboil and drain and lay on trays to dry for 24 hours. On the second day prepare a syrup as if for candy, in the proportion of four cups of sugar to one of water. Boil the figs in this syrup just long enough to heat them thoroughiy drain and lay on trays for 24 hour: Proceed in this way, using new syrup sach day, for four or five days, when the crystals will form a casing for the fruit and make a most wholesome and delectable confection. This formula will be found satisfactory for nearl all fruits. Apricots are excellent pre- pared in this way FADS AND FASHIONS. hats ars In gloves, black ites. Little girls’ quite plain. ones are the favor- There is a craze unusual for veiled effects. All coat and dress sleeves continue to be all Much_ gold and silver lace appears stockings. on a bit smaller than Shopping bags are 1ast season. Suit coats are generally short; sep- arate coats are long. Shaggy ®oods are the ordsr of the day for outdoo! With rtules for mourning becoming lass strict each vear, it is not surpris- ing that this year practically all the prevailing shapes and fancies of col- ored dresses are repeated in mourning fabries. The new veilings are indeed fasci- nating. Thsy are exceedingly fine: in fact, it would not be at all difficult to draw an entire bolt of some of the flimsy materials through one's finger ring. A little out of the ordinary are the moccasins made of doeskin or heavy white sued> instead of the chamois. They are embroidered elaborately on the front with beads in white and the soft green, yellow, pinks and blues. Silk Quilling. Quillings of taffata or soft Health and BY MRS. M silk are A. D. You ask for a recipe greaseless face cream that can be rde at home. 1 have had experience with a dozen formulas, but this is far the best of all d it positively does not en- courage a growth of hair: Get one ounce of almozoin from your druggist put in a fruit jar, add half o cold water and two teaspoonn glycerine; stir briskly utes, until the almoz night let stand o dy cream as vou You soon find it beautifies the complex- ion and keeps the skin moist. smooth and pliable. 1t is cleansing. healing and soothing, and there is nothing finer for removal of sunburn, tan and freckles If troubled with blackheads, sallow =kin or muddy complexion. use for mas saging. It takes out all pore-dirt ar makes the skin finer in texture, pre- venting return of blackheads. because large pores are reduced in sizc. Mrs. T. B.: Your clothes will not seem to fit properly nor will you be able to 100k vour best long as you ire so stout. You can readily zet rid of th too-fat” condition by dissolv ng 4 ounces of parnotis in ilp pints hot water his remedy is perfectly afe and harmiess, but has worked won ders in reducing the weight of many women who got (oo fleshy in sp their attempts to refain a stylish fi by exercising and dieting. Try this and you will find it an excellent remed “Yours Trul You confess to only years of age, and yet bewail appar. loss of your youthful complexion rour own fault if you do not look as well as you aid five or six years ago, You n” will ! ré o v 3 , er at e that clears and whitens the skir hout use of powder or cosmetic. Get from your druggist four ounces of rmax, put it in a half-piint_of hot er and add two teaspoonfuls of srine. Apply to hands. forearms face with the palm of tI na, rubbing until dry. it will make and oily skin fresh and ros: restoring and preserving girlish charm Its nnot be detected and it does 10t rub off the whole day long Winnie: Your need a ening tonic io _overcome inflammation. They would eusily from (e glare o stroug and lealily druggist one vuuce o soive it in one pint one or Lwo drovs in cach eye, wnd it relieve tired. dull, watery or in- flamed eyes. Iis conlinued use will sirengthen weak eyesight Do not wear spectacles until you have to; I think this torric will postpone that neceseity e veurs essee and socie and redness and e sun i from your crvstos und dis f cold water. Drop e clearness Mrs. H. M. R.: If veu the marks «f approashing old-age as wish to for a1l 1 1s possible, retain your youthful brightness of countenance—in, short, reiain_your good looks, vou must firsi keep your blood free from impurities and your liver active. Then vour com plexion need not worry vou. I use & good, homemade system ionic made s land one ounce kardene in 1alf pint | alcohol, then add hot water to make | prised quickly and satisfactoril this tonic ifies “the blood, removes sallowness, skin pimples, liver blotches | and restores lost appetite and energy | It is the best remedy I know of for that tired, run-down feeling. | = | S J: If you wish vour to look bright and glossy, vou s > ver | careful as to the kind of a shampoo | you use. " Let “dry shampoos” alone and never wash your hair with soap vade | Woman in Life and in the Kitchen Nl NEEDLEWORK NOTES. 3 . effective when used as a trim- ming on gowns. For outlining tunics or over-dresses, or for similar pur- poses on sleeves and cuffs, they give a tone to a garment often impossible with a more elaborate trimming. very Mourning Neckwear. Jabots of the black silk net trimmed with half-inch bands of crepe are ex- tremely stylish Slipper Buckles. If in doubt as to what will make an acceptable gift for the woman. who pays attention to her footwear, a pair of buckles for her pumps or slippers will pe most welcome. The assortment is latge—ths cost of the buckle vary- ing according to the material and work- manship. 5 The favorite shape is the oblong buckle. Some of the dull silver ones are given a bit of color by means of semi-precious stones with which they are set, or by designs wrought in en- amel. These buckles are made so they are easily adjusted. This makes it quite possible for a single pair to do duty on different footwear. The Bolero Agai Those who ought 'to know claim tHe |holero will be seen generally before the winter is gone. It will be made of velvet, as well as soft silk stuffs, For Afternoon Tea. Hot waffles are novelties for after- noon tes They are served with scraped maple sugar and rich cream or with hot maple syrup or cinnamon sugar. Baby Scrambled Eggs. Scramble eggs with a tablespoon- ful of milk to each egg and serve over toast trimmed and cut in diamond shapes, their corners dipped in melted butter and chopped parsley Dress with grated Parmesan cheese. With them use the edges you have cut from the slices by tossing in a little butter and fine parsley. Sprinkle these also with the cheese and pile on a hat plate. Don’t Crowd Rooms with Furniture. A little thinning out of furniture and ornaments would add greatly to the attractiveness of many drawing- rooms and conduce greatly also to the comfort of the family. The man who has passed his hood in such surroundings will us insist, when he has a home of h on_almost empty rooms. He wants a straight path to the din- ing room, with no “tables or gimcrack in the way.” When his wife happens to be a person of untrained tastes with an unrestrained passion for bar- gains, this is a blessing to all who en- boy- 1a own, her husbhand’'s relatives Accessories Count. After all is said, it is the attention to details, to the accessorfes, that makes or mars one’s appearance. Gloves are an important item about which many do not concern themselves sufficientl; A soiled glove looks as bad as a soiled collar, yet no one wo think of wearing the latter, whereas gloves that reek with dirt are worn with the greatest disregard for hygien Fastidious women find the chamo glove a delightful substitute for the regular kid, as it can be washed when soiled, wears as well as any other, and i& much more comfortable. Gloves should be mended the moment they begin to wea in fact, e v garment requires constant inspection to keen it in good conditlon and always ready for use. For the Sewer. When the sewing machine & comes too lose, do not cut it a few drops of castor oil on and re- volve rapidly a few scconds. The oil shrinks the machine belt. For Dining Table. Grape-fruit seeds, if planted in ex- tremely rich soil, well watered when needed, will vield a pretty foliage suitable for dining room table decora- | tion. Tt is interesting to watch the | growth of the plants To Even Skirt Edge. Finish the skirt at the top and put it on just as you would wear it. Ruh chalk on the edge of a table and, standing against it, turn around so the chalk mark will encircle the skirt. How to String Beads. In stringing any precious beads, and pearls 2specially, never use a needle. | Simpl wax the end of the wilk and pass t through the hole. The kno! ting is also an important po Beauty Aids TAE MARTYN under any circums as it will fade | and streak vour hair. You can alwa feel sure that yon are using the ver j best and safest shampoo by washing | Your hair with a teaspoonful of car throx dissolved in a cup of hot water, | then rinsing with cl water. This | shampoo makes a fine, cleansing lathe and dri ¥ quick]y without Gie dan ger of catchiug cold from Pooing rakes the hair soft | casy fo do up and relieves s i n. Try this shampoo, s it arly fir 1 1 hampooing colder months during L. M. 1 know you will be piecased at the change for the bet- vour hair if you use regularl nexpensive home-made quinine : Get from vour druggist one n. dissolve it in 1 pint | and add 12 p.nt of cold water. s (onic into your scalp and hair roots once or twice a week and it will happy in vent dandruff and stop your hair out and becoming thin 1t ng and keeps the scalp in i condition, thus promoting | growth of the hair. No woman ever bad long. fine and glossy hair unless ! | she took proper care of it. and vou | | must do the same if you, too, want to | t yours from becoming thin and D.: Nothing is simpler th he -emovAl of Superfiuous or wild airs on { the face if you o about it right. I do like the electric needle, and T have not prove satistacio Ge of delatone from your dru L Mfitde of It with sufcient | to make u paste, apply to the urtace from which vou wish to remove the disAguring Lairs, let it remain two or three minutes, then wipe off and wash the skin thoroughly with water. Do not be discouraged | hiafrs return after the first or | v | application. 1f they do come bac | will he light. thin and siraggly | rther app of delatona will ove them foreve Delatone costs a dsilar an ounce. but one ounce is all Lxau will ever need | must be large enough to hold the bead, but not large enough to show. Pearl stringers use an intricate knot of their own, and- that is why it is, on the whole, better to have very expensive jewels strung by a professional. When there Is a collarette or something or the sort to be made, this is absolutely necessary. Pumpkin Pie Recipes. Three eggs, three cups of sugar, one nutmeg, half cup of milk, two liberal spoonfuls of butter, two tablespoon- fuls of brandy. Peel the pumpkin, cut it up and cook it in_water. Strain through a colander. Beat eggs sep- arately and mix all together while warm. Then fill into your piecrust. Half pound of buiter, half pound of sugar, beat to a cream. One pound of pumpkin, stewed and pressed through a colander. Grated peel and juice of three lemons, one wineglassful wach of brandy and wine, teaspoonful of rosewater and teaspoonful of mixed spice. Picture Book of Old Favorites. Often you see in a magazine or old calendar pictures which you would like to keep. To ike2p such pictures where they can be seen always. and vet will not be in the way.‘ make a book of em- bossed linen—purple is the best shade to show off all kinds of coloring in the pictu Cut the leaves a little larger than the largest picture you are likely to covet and paste or sew a narow hem all around. Make covers of thin wood or leather or thick gray cardboard, such as is used for photo- graph mounts, and hold all together by punching evelets and stringing rib- bon through them. Then paste a pic- ture on each leaf in the center, using library paste. Of course, a leaf can be added each time vou see a picture you want to keep, for the embosse iinen is very inexpensive and can b bought in large quantities. To add still further to the attractive- nass of the book paste on the outer cover some especially pretty yet un- fading picture, or print its title in In- dia ink. HELPFUL HOUSE HINTS. When patching wall paper don’t for- get to preface operations by putting the new plece of paper In the sunshine to fade till it matches that on the wall, Oak trays which are badly marked should be well washed and rubbed with warm beer tifl the stains have disap- peared, when they may be polished as 1sual. To clean coat lars: The collars c dark cloth coats, which often show white inside after a little wear, may be cleaned with a spoonful of ammo- nia into which enough salt has been put to make a soft mixtt This is really an excellent cleaneer, handkerchiefs or oth- When buving ter the house. er linen goods, to find if they really But if she has artistic ideas and|are linen. m the of the fin- longs for beautiful things, she may | ger and pre: on them. If the wet be made to suffer for the bad taste of | pénetrates the handkerchief at once it is linen, but If cotton, it takes somz seconds to wet through the thread. Nov. 34,5 RALPH KITNER Musical Comedian HARRY & FLO. LAMONT Presenting Midnight on Broadway AUDITORIU Entire Change Mon. & Thurs. Chariotte Coate & Marguerite a Delightful Mixture of Comedy and Son LIONEL, SWIFT & CO. in a One Act Playst — Ambition This Friday Night the management to all. Cash prizes will be given to enter this contest will please send torium before 7 p. m. Friday Night. SPEGIAL NOTIGE offers, a Buck Dancing Contest, open the’ best dancers. Anyone wishing to or leave their names at the Audi- { THURSDAY The Home of Elite Vaudewille. FRIDAY POLP’S | SATURDAY Twice Daily: 2—7.45 p. m. SOMETHING DOING ALL THE TIME ¥he Bit Favorsts T SNODEN & BENHAN CHARLES F. SEAMON ‘Late Features with Follies 1910 The Narrow Felier — That's AllL/| Cohan & Harris PEARE T YOUNG! 20 L s _.Baby Grand Girl PROFESSIONAL TRY OUT NICHT EVERY WEDNESDAY WARD & RAYNOR Singing—Taiking BARROWS & 4 People—In LANCASTER “Buncced” 3—ALEX—3 | sensationai Acrobats $5.00 in Gold to the Pre KEEP YOUR EYES OPEN--BABY GONTEST FRIDAY AFTERNOON ttiest Baby in the theatre, Many Surpr Save your Letters given to you—they mean money to you. ises Coming. value receive You can't helo coming to POLI'S because you sce a Good Show and get d for your time. LYCEUM THEATRE ! NEW LONDON, CONN. WALTER T. MURPHY, Mgr. fadame I Little Damozel,” tter! “Ma and othe Producer of Queen of Viennese Operettas, ‘With the same splendid cast that gagement In Boston, and a N.B.—THE MERRY WIDOW e City foundry, hung in the cupola of tt hall at Salt Lake City, where it h remained ever since and become & object of historic distinction. Some- how it has disappeared, and lately two members of the fire department re arrested, charged with having lowered it to the ground, broke it with sled=e hammers, and sold it as junk. The stealing of a red hot stove is no longer the most wonderful thing in the rec- Seat Sale Opens Friday, November 4 Mommoth Bell Missing. Tn 1853 a bell weighin al thou- sand pounds was cast by a Mormon MONDAY, NOVEMBER - - AT 8.15 P. M. HENRY W. SAVAGE, “The Prince of Pilzen,” stage successes, dam_X.” noted The MERRY WIDOW FRANZ LEHAR, played a record breaking rus of Pennant Winners. By en- SAVAGE GRAND OPERA ORCHESTRA. will not be seen SPECIAL PRICES—25c, 50c, 75¢, $1.00 and $1.50. in Norwich this season. e Cars to Norwich after performance, Lyceum Theatre NEW LONDON, CONN. WALTER - MURPHY, Man. Friday and Saturtay, November 4 and 5. Special Matinee Saturday NEW OPERA CO. All Star st, including hristain Hansen (Tenor) Frances Hewitt Bowne (Soprano) et | and A Coincidence. ords of crime. | VOCLEZCA in “Dance of the Sou s e is io; vi- 1 Note: —Tw 12w Opera e e o ay wna| - PEUMBING AND/GASETTTING.T | o Sis We, Br, O % Thanksgiving day in the same meonth. z i compose: —Duluth New JOHNSON & BENSON, “Corsica,” Lyric Drama by Irence ~B d { Com 20 Central Avenue. Berge, conductor AMetropolitan Opera ount & oms. —~ | House., Some one is bound to say it, befors SLATE ROOFING | Love Laughs at Locksmiths, by J. long, so here goes. The Cubs have| e | C, Breil, composer ths Climax. T Ml o ¥ <. Ve | Metal Cornices and Skylights, Gutters B dnein s 0 aeholte—Ranias Oiy iar.edaC(\nducmrs, and eil kinds of Job- | Augmented Orchestra. St bing promptly attended to. PRICES = = = Tel. 119. Matinee 23c, 50c, 73c and $1.00, —y Ewvenli 2 0c, c, $1.00 and $1.50. i I | Sale opens Wednesday, November 3rd. Sore Throats || 1he yauehn Foundry Co. — ' are prevalent now. Protect g relicve soreness in the bron- chial tubes or vocal chords, with furnishea promptly. Large stock of | Benefit of ‘the Haile Chub. patterns. No. 11 to 25 Ferry Breet | ppnition and Sale of Magnificent | Hale’s « Honey Horehound & Tar A safe and effective remedy for sore throats, coughs and colds. Pleasant to take. Re- lieves throat irritations, then Seothes and Heals Druggists sell it Toothache Drops Cure in One Minute MISS M. C. ADLES, Hair, Scalp and Face Speciaist ELEGANT STYLES 1ave :n _brought by Miss Adles from New York establishment C ould miss seeing the beau- ngement devised by Miss to set off the Fall Milliner Make an early appointment. Miss Adles will be in Norwich this weok NORWICH—Wauregna House, NEW YORK—210 West 111th St. oct3IIMWE Pr.F. W. HOLMS, Dentist Room A. oct10d all Shannon Building Annex, T lephone S. E. GIBSON {Tin and Sheet Metal Worker i Agent for Richardson and Boynton | Furnaces. | 55 West Main Street, Nor: dec7d T. F. BURNS, H Heating and Flumbing, 92 Frankiin Stregt. ich, Conn. marba Have that old-fashioned, unsanitary plumbing repiaced by new and mod- ern open plumbiug. it wili repay you in the Increase cf hea!'h and saving of doctor's bils. - Overhaullng and re- fitting thoroughly done. Let me give you a figure for replacing all the old plumbing with the medern kind that will keep out the sewer gas. The work will be first-class and the price reasonable. J. E. TOMPKINS, 67 Wast Main Strest zuglsd WH) ness before { diim betie Specimen Chrysanthemums At GHLANBOUER, of Mrs. William Lanman, MONDAY and TUESDAY, Novmber 7 and 8, from 3 to 10 p. m tea, 25c. Residence Admissio! and MUsIC. CHARLES D. GEER Teacher of R I ll" ~‘ .‘:Y'w Oct. 1 octid NELLIE 5. HOWIE, Teacher of Piano Fletcher Music Room 48 - = - Central ildir F.c.(.‘s’&“fi TURER 122 Prospect St., Bit. Norwizh, Cu H. BALCOM, Teacker of Plnmo. 29 Thames St, Lessons glven at my residence or af the home of the pupil. Same method ag used at Schawenka Conservatory, Der= lin. oct1ld Tel.

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