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NORWICH BULLETIN, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1910 Eorwich Bulletin and Goufier. = 114 YEARS OLD. price, 13¢ & week; 50¢ @ wonthe: $8.00 o your. Ent ed at the P Coan., as wecond- Telephone Calls: Bulletin Businees Office, 4 Bulietin Editorial Rooms. Bulletin Job Office. Willmantle Office, BuSding. matter. 25- toffice at Norwich, Room 3 Murray Telephone 210. ———t fhe Circulation of The Bulletin. ich, Friday, Nov. 4, 1910. The Builetin hes the largest oir- cwiatto: of amy paper in Commecticut, and from three T Eastern four ttmes larger than that of mmy im Norwdch. It is deld 2000 of th wieh, and read by cen it ots del of the peeple. ered to over 900 howses, vered to over 4,053 howses In Nor- ety-three per » Wisndham m Puinam ssd Daalelson to over Eastern tne towas, five postotfice districts ome rueal free deMvery T Con 1,100, and im all of theso places it is considered the local daily. cctient has forty- undred and sixty- The Bulletin fs cold In every town = Week o October . atl of the M. ¥, D. tes tn Emstern Connesticut. CIRCULATION nding 29 5920 8,350 REASURER COSTELLO LIPPITT. in that court. He is narrow-minded, prejudiced and prone to carry to that bench the animesities of life. The governor thought he was doing a good thing in appointing him, but if the lawyers of the state could take a se- cret ballot as we are about to do, they wouldn't put h{m on the bench.” 1t should be borne in mind that this is a deliberate democratic opinion that did not grow out of the animosities of the present campaign. A FALSE CLAIM. There is a circular being distributed through the Third congressional dis- trict, presenting a sketch of the life of Candidate Raymond J. Jodoin as a self-made man, which gives him credit of being the “Father of the bill enacted into law, entitled ‘An Act Concern- ing Seats for the Use of Motormen of Connecticut on Cars,'” chapter 237, of the Public Acts of 1909, when, in fact, the credit for this piece of legislation belongs to no one man, but to the majority who made it a law. This un- signed circular, the purpose of which is to prompt republicans to vote the democratic ticket, should be truthful, but it gives credit where credit is not due. Mr. George B. Chandler, who was active in the last general assem- by, had this to say of Candidate Jod- loin in his address on Wednesday eve- ning: I am told that Rayr 1. Jodoin |is making his cany the Third Congregational district because he was the originator of the law securing te motormen the privilege of using stools on their runs. Mr. Jodoin was not a conspicuous member of the last gen- eral assembly. He did his duty, but that is about all. Mr. Jodoin intro- duced a bill in behalf of the motormen and spoke on that bill. The men them- seives were the best advocates of the bill. The bill Mr. Jodoin introduced was never passed.” The act mentioned in this Jodoin circula apter 237 of the Public Acts of 1909, George B. Chandler wrote, re- ported to the house, advocated on the floor, and saw to the finish. He called attention to the fact that the meas- ure was held up in the senate for some time, where an amendment was put on. After a conference the motormen got what they de: Mr. Chandler he was glad M man ved ght have added that Jodoin is a self-made the because i saves - effort being made in |an awful responsibility eh by friends of Mr. Cos AN T = ppitt ess of party af. EDITORIAL NOTS. it B B 1 a large compli- thought for today: It is not y vote ix 1o be commeaded. woman who can keep up with s Anniversary mayor of Norwich |the neighborhood gossip. be v state-wide reputation, ar 4 his success extends to| Congressman Higgins did not try to 4 boundarfes of the state. |dodge any issue. He voted for the neial stand@ing and his | tarift his party stands for. & service as a trustee of the Mid- 2 o town asylum he Is also widely and | The morning after election the dem- orably Known, as well as by his |ocratic party will be listening to ex- . + devoted member of .the | Planations how it happened. et Mptiloapnt SAOWh, Wront sl |« Bacoh has sosred 80 In pilse that it ts state reports are cOmIng |, ,gi¢ now to ve regarded as just th in of the imtemtion of his friends o |.;in. for an aeroplane lunch. e him e rousing vote, and the pros- | o5 ooy at he will lead his ticket, not f There ty bankers in the Leav- y srwich, but elsewhere le nd the government is Mr. Lippitt has the comsciousness of | i ori le fons at any time. ving been sought and asked to ac- | : d: pt the office for which he is well | Champ Clark regards the census a equipped, and which he will adminis- |a fraud. That is because the demo- r with the same ability that he has | cratic party did not make it, doubt. dtrected affairs of the bank with {] hieh he for so many years has been | ot onnected The South Dakota ballot is seven | teet long and fourteen in JUDGE BALDWIN'S DEFENCE. s only juat Judge Baldwin t nt his defence in the Hoxie e he states as follows The state of Connecticut has finder - written and unwritten, so sustained a ha s mastes ough the - servants lations o within nesiigence t employes tion can b by a servan r _personal in her territoria r t his s almost large enough to sheet a sin- | The October deficit in {amounted to five millions. T'ncle Sam does not like to see things runn that wa The long haul of t the postal authorities tionate the price is be press. e Bk, tn dneiding siis Game ] A mwrrm!»? aeroplane t from fore Bim. had no cholce but to foi- |Lno 906 of an acea R the law of the state as established. | e, o o frst-clas g daat Admitting this, The Bulletin would | =~ 00 attentio; » the fact that e late Some of the oters ¢ 0! parties ov. Geasge LMy went on record 88 |are Ivo the comn. wha Giet: oo z this fellow servant law, and |iwhere he was going, but felt sure he bile the last legislature took no wc- on his way n to repeal it, Charles A. Goodwin el the répudliean party have revived | Mrs. Belva Lockwood does not his isdue in the interest of the work- |to kesp her age secret. She is ¢ masses, a5 a stmple matter of jus- (and says that a woman's age i e; and its open condsmnation as be- | least consequence 2 ng unjust in the extreme belongs to | - — "e republicans and to them the homor | Out they do not think the insist], that it shall be removed | campaign can nd just right unless Sonh Al Satutg The GemaEtiic | GEuERiY Grosvenor comes Sut with ous party is net pledged to repeal this |Of his never-erring forecasts. aw: amd Candidate Baldwin has not S s = ompiatned « ts injustice to the| The time of the campaign liar is werkars, or given smy pledge that he ng narrowed down. In five days wifl urge upon the gemeral assembly | MOTe opportunity will have bidden him ts semoval from the statutes It | 8ood-bye, with an exhibit of fesults, workmen who are injured at their 7 RT3 % work want & better chance for the re- | Professor Lowell does not think that vt f demages, they have no al- ;Han‘\ s comet is traveling too fast to mative in this election except o § IAYE SSes " Erow upon it Perh: te for the party that recognizes its | WDiskers may be growing on it, too njustice and is pledged to make an | RGN S ~: R The workmen who is % he St. Louis judg who has decide Srum r this Girection ca gt that (lh. Lkens are not a Y‘;H:-V\«w n- - o voting the republicsn oy |der the law never owned a cabb a ¥ votng the republican tiek- | L ion that been invaded by a A DEMOCRATIC OPINION. | e e hiRe . G of Miltord \»" Professor James thinks that a col- gnized as a democratic ifl’ldr"J in " ¥ R i b g T Ssabile ”W» i Tiar know a good man It shoul ate, in 1893, when Judge Baldwin | hen discovered. as b0 0 be elevated to the bench, —_ —— ot ik The Pennsylvania scho Mr. Baldwin is at this time pro-|have decided to form a union. The the Yale law school and |pupils may be relied upon to strike neel for the New York amd New |in sympathy with them if thev de. Vnzland Railroad company. How he [mand a shorter day. oy serve the Lord and the = - ev#l ai the same time is beyond my | A Wearing Campaigr. mprehension A man's abllity as a Connecticut campaigns arc a little i s a criterion of his ability as |more strenuous than the canmpaigns of Read the supreme court re- | MOSt other states. because in 1o other rts as far back as vou want to go |S'ate. New York alone excepted, are ! ses Mow often you will ha im. |CANidates subjected to such ferce ai- o B o ' [tempts to create popul prejudice a his ¥ | The campaign asainst the late as a lawyer. Then as to his practice. | George L. Lilley was fierce and those ere are 75 cases on the Gocket in [hest posted know that the campaign ow Haven, and of these Mr. Baldwin | 4ainst Charles Goodwin has not has only eleven. T tell you he has lost | been less so. Never in the history of s touch with the people, and therein | thi8 State has a candidate been un- s the danger of his appointment, | 955, Stch subile, secret fire ; Wik ANRNBIS Nave You ' got whas yée .‘fi th t‘ll)‘[lA\‘ln is near its end, and it en you | finds the candidates of the wo lead- Ing a suit in the supreme court for |ing political partles freely expressing John Smith against the New York and | confidence in the intezrity of each New England road? I don't say that |other. There has never been a mo- 2 ment when there was justifiable o aldwin can be approached by a | Ire corporation t no man can t in a given iine for twenty-five rs and then find his mind unerys- ve find the (Greeks tis (lme (o ba eare sar duty not to help the to place s man of blased i on the beuch. When you take a sut of & corporation and place o the beuch, his whole mind is tnat corperation. The appotnt snt 12 undemoeratic. As a democrat am wmot enthusiastic over republicans rade stened t you hat ¥nes on rou on vaeatie rapublicans o Mr had lost the supreme Reardsiey It must weep when anv thowgh If Mr. Baldwi court bench hav ° u t n 1 cuse for as much as a whisper against necticut will vote is close at hand and the result can nOW De estimated with fair degree of accurecy. We shall all be relieved when it is over. We do not believe that either Judge Baldwin or Mr. Goedwin wenld spend one per- ny or consent that anybody else shoyld spend a penny for the purpose of correctiy influencing the uetion of don't expect L6 Wwin ANy more cases any voler in lhis or any alher cam- the honor and honesty of either Judge Baldwin or Charles A. Goodwin Differing temperamentally, one just three-score uud ten. the other just nalf thai age—both represent u high type of moral character and convle tion, und it is beyond dispute that all the persistent efforts of steuihs and | partisans to get something on Good win' have failed Ihe day when the citize THE BULLETIN'S DAILY STORY “ICI just be a waste of time to try to sell me any furniture polish” said Mrs. Curfew, emphatically. “Wae usad to have a piano, and an agent came ané sold me a bottle of furniture pol- ish, saying it had_sixteen ingredients —just as though it made any differ- ence how many ingredients a thing has when it costs 50 cents a bottle, and the bottle only holding o apoon- ul. “I put that furniture polish on the clock shelf along with some other bottles. My husband has rheumatism in his legs whenever fhe wind is in the southeast, and so he got up in the middle of tha night groaning horri- bly and hunted for his bottle of lini- ment, and, of course, he got that fur- niture polish by mistake and rubbed it all over his legs, and it dried on, and he had the awfullest time getting it off. He said he felt as though he had been tarred and feathered. His one ambition in this life is to get a fair shot at that agent. “So you e it's useless wasting your time trying to sell me furnitura polish. 1t might be different if we had a piano, but we haven't had one since my younger daughter left home. She teaches scheol In the country and boards with a ramily of ths of Sparks. They trreat her very indeed, only Mr. Sparks eats pie with | a knife and makes queer noises when “If you will give me a moment of vour time, madam.” said the stranger on the -doorstep, “I'd like to show you { REPULSED 3 RS s D TR e R | bishops say about soap, and I don’t suppose they know any more than T do, but I haven’t much faith in your washing powders. I suppose they're made of barks and leaves and buds and things, and I'm tired of things made of barks and leaves and buds. Only a few months ago I was visiting my marmed daughter, who is pestered by agents almost as much as [ am. We couldn't have a comfortable talk because of the agents: no soomer would we sit down than there'd be a rap at the door. and my daughter would have to listen to some long- winded agent who wanted to sell a powder to put in her shoes, or a com- bined rat trap and flour sifter, or a glove stretcher that might be used as a bootjack. “One day there came an old man with a long white beard. and he lean- ed on a cane, and said if he couldn't sell some of his washing powder he'd have to go to the poorhouse. and he wept like everythihg, and made such an uproar that my daughter bought x packages, and I who was old enough to know better, bought six more. Then he went away, and when he got down to the gate we saw him take off his long white beard, and he was just a young man, and my daugh- ter and I ran after him, calling for the police, but, of course, there were no police—there never are when you he swallows soup, and that is an- [ need them—and the mian got away, noying to my daughter, who has a|and hell come to a bad end yet, you fashionable—" | mark my words. o, my daughter and 1 walked back to the house, and we heard her little girl screaming as if the place was on G. H. Bradfo nomination for senator success of Mr. Park an ment by Mr. Bi speech said he could do do for the >ark his endol vho, in a brief was anything increase the ma- to | | | ! The quest cific shares were probably bought at a | much lowar price than the prevailing' quotation. On the other hand, sixty shares in the Roodeport Central Deeps, scheduled in the inventory at $150, and certain shares in a land company. val- 1ed at $500, may be taken to indicate the ‘humorist's own tendency to make investments with no other guide but | |his own imagination—New York | Times. Dynamite and Revolvers. It would seem that the time ought! [to be at hand for some progressive, state legislature to place effectual re- | strictions about the sale and carrying | of revolvers. When that is done sim- ilar barriers showld be put up against the free sale of dynamite. At present it Is as easy to buy dyna- | mite. "in most states, as sugar. No | marks are placed on the cariridges to indicate who_the seller and the pur- chaser are. No record is kept of the | sales and no effort is made to ascer- { tain the use for which it js intended Consequently, when some miscreant uses this mighty explosive as a cow- ardly means of obtaining revenge It is difficult to ferret him out. Fngland is much more advanced in such things than this country. In London no one is permitted to carry a revolver without tha comsent of Scot- | land Yard. A permit is given and the name of the person holding it adver- ised for a time in the newspapers. | The check is applied through thve deal- | ers, who are under strict regulation and can be watched easily. In Eng- | | land, also, the same precautions are are drugs. enforced regarding the sale of | ~Cleveland Leader. A Religious Movement. “Buddhism,” says a Berlin paper, “is rapidly spreading in Hurope. The number of converts is daily increasing, “ONE DOSE RE@ULATE’sfiTflE' STOMACH Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Gas, Heartburn or a Stomach-Headache Simply Vanish—A Little Diapepsin Makes Your Stomach taken as to the sale of dynamita that | Nov. 34,5 Entire Change Au D IToR I u M HMon. & Thurs. Charlotte Coate & Marguerite n a Delightful Mixture of Com. md_Son, LIONEL, SWIFT & CO. in 2 One Act Playet — Am! ———— RALPH KITNER Musical Comedian HARRY & FLO. LAMONT Presenting Midnight on Broadway SPEGIAL NOTICE This Friday Night the management offers a Buck Danciing Contest, open to all. Cash orizes will be given to the best dancers. Amyone wishing to enter this contest will please send Or leave their names at the Audi- torium before 7 p. m. Friday Night. FRIDAY POLPS Zz, SOMETHING DOING ALL THE TiME The Big Favorite I SNODEN & BENHAN CHARLES F. SEAMON Late Features with Follies The Narrow Feller — That's All. | Cohan & Harris PEARL YOUNG ... ......Baby Grand Girl PROFESSIONAL TRY OUT NIGHT EVERY WEDNESDAY WARD & RAYNOR ; BARROWS & LANCASTER 3—ALEX—3 Singing—Talking | 24 Pecpio—in “Buncosd”. | Sensationai Acrobats KEEP YOUR EYES OPEN--BABY CONTEST FRIDAY AFTERNGON $5.00 in Gold to the Prettiest Baby in the theatre. Save your Letters given to you—they mean money to you. Many Surprises Coming. THURSDAY The Home of Elite Vaudeville. 2-7.45 p. m. Twice Daily: 1910 You can’t hel coming to POLI'S because you sce a Good Show and get value receivesh for your time. The work done in training the for practical life is notabie.—M Herald. i/ Lyceum Theatre NEW LONDON, GONN. a new washing powder I'm introduc- | fire; she's a dear little girl and just| especially in Germany, England and | WALTER . MURPHY, Manaser. ing in this territory. nless you have | the image of me, only she’s always | Hungar Mind It? e e tried this washing powder you can't|getting into bumble bees' nests and| The influence of the higher religious | oy wmg:";t;‘m.s:hwm were bap- | Friday and Sadurday, November 4 and 5. realize the fact that housework may |stung up until vou wouldn't believe|trcught of the Orient was bound, in| When : s | Special Matinee Saturday Se made a diversion. It is a most as- | it. When we entered the houss there | these days of rapid travel and aroused | tized Dot wanted to be baptized also, | tamighing thing that women stil are | she was on_the fioor. rolling alndiimellm tual curiosity, to make itself and after earnest entreaties her pa- NEW OFPERA CO. buying and using soap. Soap is a|screaming. She had swallowed a lot | felt, and one of the signs of the times i tvi i | ARt el 0 the avk GEeA MmpTuclaors | of That. SashinG MOAte e Al e i The i AaTS b hnialit op dules | Xendn were prevalled UpOD: to glre thalk ,“w!s SLar ““" i ed of gross and unwholesome sub- | more like sedlitz powder than any- | epitomes of various phases of eastern | consent. s | bt Grener) stances, it is a menace to health. Have | thing else, and I kad to pile furni- | religious and philosophic thought, and | She was so small the minister stoop- nces e owne (Soprano) you read ~what Lombroso says of|turs on her to hold her down while my | also translations of the great religious | ed over ber as she descended the steps -and— He says that nearly all crimes | daughter ran for the doctor, and the | poems of the Orient. | into the baptistry VOCLEZCA in “Dance of the Soul.” ectly traceable to its use. Flave | doctor was there three times and| On this continent Vedantism, Theos- | 'tuy 0. . o Foa Note:—Two new Operas will be 1d what the archbishop of Can- | charged $8, which was an extortion- | ophy and esoteric Buddhism have be-| - Are you afraid, Dot?” he asked. Eisiere Bt R e says of soap? Have you——"|ate price. So I simply won't buy any | come fairly well known, and the work | With the brightest of smiles Dot | ¢ o0 o B I haven't read what any arch- ' washing powder today.—Chicago News. | of the new teachers is not seldom on | made prompt reply: “CoreickMuTivrle. D 2 | broad_humanitarian lines: especially | - wop, no, sir; 1 can swim.”—Lippin- | Berga condurin S Aforama, by ] | may be cited the —educational work | 9% 1o Bece ! Metropolitan aign, even if absolutely certain that | was invested indicates the value of a ! carried on at Point Loma in southern | COtt's. e . B i thiy oA dsterains the {sound financial adviser to a literary | California and in Cuba by the Univer- i '-“3;’,“ Laughs at Lecksmiths, by J. result as each candidate naturally {man. | sal Brotherhood and Theosovhical s As They Sing It. - Breil, composer’thz Climax. determined.—New Haven | It is said that the TUtah mining | ciety, in which ars enlisted men [Being a phonographic transcription of Augmented Orchestra. shares estimated by his executors to be | wealth and high business cupacity un- | , fetaurant contralto's “Killarney.] PRICES LEETE 2y worth mearly $81.000 were purchased | der the leadership of Katherine Ting- i ) e Matinee 30c, 76c and $1.00. Angus Park for Senator. | for about $10 a shore. His Union Pa- ' ley, a woman of great executive ability. | B;:fr:el&‘;fld’;;lzz‘;;nfifix';“;r‘hgfle'mq Fvening 50c, T3¢, $1.00 and $1.50. The good-natured rivalry in the e | Moantaln pa thsahn dwo0000d I'n dales, | Sale opens Wednesday, November $rd. Twentieth se district between T d Maim ree aiv aw fawn dleestrays. Boun chus nature love zahi lah 7, beauty han-de-her zal v'rywheah, Footprint sleave zahn many strahndz, Baht her hoo mee sholy theah Angelllz f00000ld th'r weeng zahn drest Een thah tEden am-awv thu West— Beauteeee's hoom, KKeel-aw-aw-2w-aws nee, FUJI-KO, LADY OF THE WISTARIAS. Under the ausplees of Faith Trimbull ine in Fi i Alv an fal-ah Keelawneee. ! Feel Fine in Five Minutes. —New York Mall. | Chapter, D. A. R. A unique evening's 1 s — ertainment, consisting of Japaness | n as to long you ara | gested food, Headaches, Dizziness or He Got Ancther Job. S Reciatians @ Dances, in Y | going to contiaue a sufferer from Indi- ick ’\,‘“‘mm.h' and beside: what you! “We make it a rule here,” said the ,\l: C Hall, Tuesday Ewening, Nov. | gestion, Dyspepsia or out-of-order : t will 1;‘!.: ferment ;.:‘m poison vOur | warden to the new prisoner, “to assign | Sti at 8 p.m stomach is merely « matter of how soop | breath with nauseous odors. All these R 5% Rl Thd Al vh ek iia ) MAests taking some Diapepsin. symptoms resulting from a sour out- Prisoners to the trades with which S % % f7 B O o pepe . . | of-order stomach and dyspepsia are | they are most familiar and will make | for sale by members of the Al | y vach is lacking in diges- | generally relieved five minutes after| no exception In your case. What is | 2nd at Bliss’ Jewelry Store novid | to do its Work, not with drastic drugs, | G te your druggist and get a 50- | JOUF occupation? T |but a reinforcement of digestive | .ent case of Pape's Diapepsin now, and | “I 4m an aeroplane chauffeur,” | s e S R ) at work | you will always go to the table with a | plied the new boarder, as he grinned | | in the stomach. | hearty appetite, and what you eat will| g grewsome grin.—Chicago New: | CHARLES D. GEER | | People with Stomachs should | taste good, because your stomach and | oot 5 take a little Diapepsin occasionally, | intestines will be clean and fresh, and = Teacher of Singing. GUS PARK jority for Park, he would do it As delegates we stand as a solid, unit- | ed district.” Angus Park's popular the | Twentietn district was expressed in | large vote he received in the c | ion and the nunanimity with which i opponents endorsed him and | ged their support In accepting | the nomination, he said If elected, | his constituents would find that he would Dbe straightforward and honest {in ail his doings and see to it that all possible » for those whom he i represent. He te delegates to < as agsressively his clection as they had done for pomination that victory might result He sta r o ever, ledge of republican form and deserves full port his part This ) re n yvear—the year the party | Sidney A. Brown for Sheriff. | Sidney A. Brown, thé candidate for re-election for sheriff of New Lon- don county, is a tested and experienced | officer and has made a good recor | since he succeeded the late Sheriff | George Jackson of Colchester. He is |a man of probity and honor and per- SIDNEY A. BROW. fol ns ali the duties of the office to the satisfaction of ‘the people and the cou He acts with despatch and is a check to lawlessness. Mr. Brown acts wi judgment and dignity and for the square way in which he deals with all men holds the re t ok t he arraigns a ell as of those port. His nomina was made { out opposition and his election b; increased majority hould be his ward for his’ faithful perforn his dutie | ¥ Phe greatest American humorist left ge fortune for w man of letters to | avcumulate, In his middle life, ev on th= threshold of old age, w | practically bankrupt. He died leaving | nzarty $550.000 in personal property ana $70,000 worth of real estate. Wise man- agement of his affairs, under good ad- vice, made him a comparatively rich man, rich enough, some folks will sa; for any man te be and much better off | than most of his -contemporaries 1n American literary life, perhaps than any of them. His royalties. in his later years, were large. to be sure, but the sagacily with which his sprplus money 1 there ill be no more Indigestion, | vou will know there are not going to! feeling like » lump of lead in the | be anvmore bad nights and miserable smach artburn. Sour risings, | days vou. They freshen vou ana as on lching of undi- ¢ make you feel like life is worth living. be clean, too. The water must be clean. is and you use ordinary intelligence and Lenox Soap, the clothes will If it Read—and follow—the direc- tions on the inside of the wrapper. Lenox Soap— “Just fits the hand” | in the Base of the awjo anges | fall through a chute i easily emptied. The This feature saves patented. One is an Ash Hod into which the ashes —all of them—and are other Hod is for Coal. lots of trouble and is Then there is the wonderful Single Damper (patented); slide the knob to “kindle,” “bake” or “check,” ke range docs the vest. The Oven has M. HOURIGA cup-joint heat flues that heat it all over alike. The Patented Grates save coal and trouble. Ask Agent and cular. the Crawford to show you write us for cir- Walker & Pratt Mig. Co. 31-35 Union St., Boston N, Norwich, Agent. { ‘Iin and Sheet Metal Worker 42 Broadw surs after ay. ot. 1st. Doubtful. | It was not very long ago We kicked about the coid, - -_— ——— And now it is tha summer heat Y P That makes us fan and scold. RELLIE S. HOWIE, Perhaps it will be cold enougn Teaohar of Pianb Where we shall cast our lot octld “letcher Music Method When done with carth, and then, again, Flet Tu ey 4"”""' Perhaps "twill be too hot Room 48 - - - Central Bullding. —Houston Post. F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect St, Tel. 511. Norwick, Ct Good Cembination. Dobbins—I hear that your neighbor, | Professor Fad, is quite an enthusiast in garden experimenting Wobbins—Well, I shouid say so! This | year he is golug to graft a strawberry | plant with a milkweed and expects to get strawberries and cream!—New York Telegraph. . B. BALCOM, Teacher of Plane. 29 Thamas St Lessons glver at my residence or at the home of the pupll. Same method as a Conservatory. Barw oct11d used at Schawen 1in. " PLUMEING AND GASFITTING. 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 Vauéhn Foundry Co. IRON CASTINGS 8 Gil Heaters Large g8%ock of 25 Ferry Street | There is no Oil Heater squal to ths | Perfection Oil Heater. We carry a New Model this year, only $3.50. Furnaces. company 55 West Main Street, Norwich, Conn.| 179 Main Streei, Norwich, Conn. decid T. F. BURNS, Heating and FPlumbing, “52 Franklin Street. Do It VNow Have that oid-fashioned, unsanitary furnished promptly. patterns. No. 11 to sanzzd ~ S.F.GIBSON novad o> Hear Vel mar | of doctor's blils. plumbing replaced by new and rod- ero open plumbiug. It will repay vou in the Increase of heal'h and saving Overbauling and re- fitting thoroughly done. Let me give 2 you s figure for replacing all the oid WE HANDLE GOOD LIQUORS. Plumbing with the modern kind that we never care to recommend poor, will keep out the sewer gas. Th8 .hoqp siuff. Fine liquors that please | work will be first-class and the price | {nc most particular are Here in any reasonahle quantit Something exceptionaliy 1. E. TOMPKINS good is our Mount Vernon Pure Ryo . I, i N), uglsd 67 Wast Main Strest JACOB STEIN, = ‘Phone 26-3. 83 West Main St oct26 | N\iSS EX (% ADLES, | Hair, Scalp and Face Specialist | FALL and WINTER Goods for ladies’ cloaks : i E‘LE?:‘NIL SRR UL REMNANTS e et from her New York estublishment. | St Of sl lkinds Dy Goo na No lady should g the bea . tiful hair arrangement devised by Mis MILL REMNANT STORE, adles to set of tb Milt JOHN BLOOM. Proprietor. Make an early aposintmant. 175 Waest Main St Miss Adles wil be i Norwich = A s week AUTOMOBILE STATION, NORWICH—Wuuregan House NEW YORK- 210 Weat 111¢h 8¢, | & T Coft, ¢ Otls Strest. Automodile Telephone. et31MAW 1| #Bd Bleyele Popairiug. General Ma= -_ —— — — 4 ey — echine work. Jotbinz ‘Phone Br.F. W. HOLMS, Dentist — Toput wour busi Shannon Building Annex, Room A. there s no m 5 Vigh the adverti Telephone 323 - g columns ol Fhe Bulletin % s