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Horwich Zulletin and ounfief. . = 114 YEARS OLD. tion price. 1Ze & week; 50c a .00 & year. Sul months; Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Conn., ‘as second-class matter. Telephone Calls: Bulletin Businers Offic: Bulletin Editorial Roo: Bulletin Job Office, 25-6. Willimantle Office, Room 3 Mureay Building. Telephone 210. = e Norwich, Wednesday, Nov. 23, 1910. e THANKSGIVING DAY. Preolamation Tssued by- the Governor of Connesticut. Govergror Frank B. Weeks has issued his proclamation for the observance of Tha ving, Nevember 34, as a day of ving in this state, as fol- tows: State of Comnectiout. By His Excellency Frank B. Gevernor. A Preclamatiom. For nearly thres centuries In our comamonwealth there has besn set apart =2 day in year to the end that our t fittingly render tnanks to ’A’gml: #hly =5 Weeks, God for his manifold bles- ® Following this wise and honored eus- tom, I hereby appoint Thursday, the 24th of g(nvtm’bsr. as a Day of Th ving and upon that day in our homes and es of worskip lot us raverently expvess our gratituds to our Creakor, asikc contingance of Jiis favor upon our state and netion, not for to make glad the bearts of the and atricted by deeds of charfty and kindness. dven woder my hand and seal of the k #state, at the Capiicl in Hart foi this tfi%m day of No- Yyember, fn t . one thousand mine hun- and t and the inde- he one hundred and tirty: 8fth. 8 year of our (Seal) Lord, dred g ence of the United Siate: B. Command: . ROGERS, snc Secretary. AN ASSURED PUBLIC. Following the sxoitement of Mon- &ay the peeple of Norwich were as- syred through the columns of The Bulletin that there iz plemty of water in sight not 6t to drink, and that the supply is really exhaustiess—a supply of impure water from three separate | wonrces. ‘With due regard for these assur- ances presented by Superintendent Corkery, it is surpriging that there is nothing more for the people than a Ppassage from potable water umendors- able dpon examination by the state chemist to river water which our own | phyniclans have herewofore conderaned | w8 too foul to ke sprinkled upon the | streets because it would be a menace | 1o the pudlic heaith. The present condition is indefensible because Norwish has gone right on in the fmce of the unanimows epimion of | half a dozen expert enginsers who warned her of this denger ten years ago, apd M3 paid mo heed to the com- plaints of citizens from that day to this. A republican court of cemnmon cown- o]l several years age appbinted & cem- mittes to see ¥ river water could dbe used to water the streets to lessen the draught upon Fairview reservoir and the physicians of Norwich protested, 1 HONORABLY ACKNOWLEDGED. The Bulletin was amused to find the following statement in the Bridgeport Standard of Monday evenin; “Judge A. McC. Mathewson of New Haven #s having his new charter overhauled bygthe committees of the, various associations in that city, eg- pecially of the chamher of commewrce and board of aldermen, and the wulti- mate disposition of it is still in doubt. Meantime the officials of the city of Norwich sent for a copy of the docu- ment and were furnished it by the judge. On Thursday he received a copy of the proposed Norwich charter as agreed upon by the officials of that city, and ‘the writers apologized to the judge for basing practically thetr entire charter on the one drawn by him. On looking ever the Norwich draft Judge Mathewson found that most of it was copied word for wor The judge is net without honer in h own eity, but he has found the promptest recognition outside. It ought to be a pointer for New Ha- ven.” The committee entrusted with this work for Norwich knew a good thing | when they saw it, and make no pre- tense that their work is original. In fact, they told the people that the proposed charter was largely adopted from the New Haven charter, and it is probable the parts used were taken word for word from it. Since imita- tion is the most sincere flattery, New Haven has no reason to be other than pleased with the evidence of her wis- dom and ability which arises from the fact that it is commended %0 Norwich as the desiraple thing and Nerwich may OXK. it THE WARNING TO THE PEOPLE. The warning ef the authorities to the people mot io drink the germ-iaden water which present necessity forces upon them for ceoking purpeses, is not likely to be universally h"ded"rhat Ra Sater ohth o bad, | There are o many persons who are | [T (96, YRS 00 (RS Riace A% bl deat to wise counsel and disregard |the mixture, which cost like every- rules that there iy sure to be addl- | thing, the agent saying that it had tional sickness in consequence of such | over forty ingredients, and then I sup- heedlessnoss. : An owmce of ypreveation I8 worth more than & pound of cure. It is often much easter to prevent disease | than to cure it, and this leads up to the oft-repeated injunetion to beil all water for drinking purposes. The last | Mr. Editer: The hour is at hand.; number of the ILancet-Clinic says: | With the needs of the immediate future | Incidental te the high weather temper.- )flmth}‘ us in the face, let us not waste | ature is a drying of the earth and | pre conplilesins. iorhar mahes, have | jlowering of the natural water Sup- . Tet uy try to forget that, though the | plies. Because of these comditions |water famine has been there comes a danger of eontamina- | many months past to be ineviteble, no | tion with both amimal and vegeteble | curtailment of the use of water has| waste, To rsmedy this, there should | bren rigidly enforced by the ity of-| be established a general habit among “I did hope,” said Mrs. Curfew, in- | dignantly, “that one morning would | {pass without any agents coming to the door, but here you are, with your va- lise full of sample nutmeg graters or egg beaters. 1 declare, there's no peace in this world for a poor hard- working woman, and there won't be until the supreme court passes a law that will put all agents in jafl. “My daughter’s coming in from the country this evening, to spend a cou- ple of days with me, and I'm trying to Zet the house fixed up so she won't be ashamed of it, for she moves in high | society. being a graduate of a female | seminary, though at the present time she’s teaching sehool for $40 a month and boarding with a family of the name of Sparks, and while they do their best to please her, Mr. Sparks has certain ways and customs which are annoying to a lady with a fash- lonable education. “He drinks his coffee from a saucer | and persists in singing ‘The Old Oalken Bucket’ to the tune of “The Star Span- gled Banner, and when he has fin- ished eating at the table he always fills his mouth with fine-cut chewing tobacco. But it can be said to his credit that he is terribly set against | agents, ever since a stranger came to his house one day in the summer and talked a long rigmarole about the | germs in well water which cause ty- phoid fever and spinal meningitis and s lumpy jaw and I don’t know what else. | The stranger had some sort of fluid | that was compounded, he said, by the royal chemist at Berlin, and if vou poured a pint of the fluid into a well the germs would all be kiiled, and the | water would be so pureand wholesomsa | that anyone drinking it would never | be sick, and would live forever, un- less somebody shot him or a brick fell on him, or something like that. “Mr. Sparks wasn't feeling well at | the time, and somebody had told him LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Alderman Ely Expresses His Views. ; i known for | ( TOOK HIM IN P | something frightful to witness, and | puckered up that all his features were | use for your patent ironing board that | by pressing a knob at the back of the BOTHWELL SISTERS ELONA The Squaw Girl MEYAKO TWINS pose the royal chemist had to have his rakel-ofl, a!t:eu as the;I agegt, 1;; Befined Sin; gu's' c 3 Japanese that’; ways e way. T. ar) : po?lr:d aé.u;luar‘tl ‘of it into the wel‘l’, t:e and WINK & DAVIS Wonders ent tellin, m he mustn't il . . :\g.t:r for ag hour afterward, t:iet bef Dancers Ecmtrle('&medlms mg, of course to give the agent time to get out of range of the family shot- gun, for agents are sly, and I don't doubt that If you sold me a fire ex- tinguisher you’'d act the same way, fearing that it would explode and set the house afire before you got around the corner. - “Well, what was T saying, anyhow? Oh, yes. Mr. Sparks waited an hour before using the water and then he drank a good big cupful, and my daughter says his contortions were e e e e e e e et o e e e _ SPECIAL THANKSGIVING DAY—3 Appolos—World's Finest Gymnasts e e s e e e R e - e EVENINGS, RESER VED SEAT 20e. ADMISSION, 10c. ALL srar Bill —The Craze of Vaudeville— HAINES AND ViDOCQ Some Lauaghing Act First Half of Week —Extra Attraction— ELLA CAMERON & CO. In the “Nutt " . A Scream the language he used was simply rid- iculous for the father of a family. “That water tasted as though there was an alum mine at the bottom of the well, and Mr. Sparks’ face was so WHO IS THE MOST POPULAR LADY IN NORWICH ? 3 You will find out soon at Poli’s Theatre. vn t ther, an h t drawn togethe d when he tried to BUFFY AND EDWARDS pick his teeth he found he was prod- ding his ear, and he had to open his mouth with a glove stretcher when he wanted to take a chew of tobacco, and it was a week before his ears slid back ; to their proper places, and his eves got far enough apart to let him use his spectacles. And the worst of it is that the water is just as bad now as it was when the stuff was first put into | it, and Mr. Sparks has to carry water from a well a mile away, and my ! HUGHES AND TIFFANY Singing and Talking. An act full Comedy Bar Act. of nonsense and then some Full of Hard Bumps. A LIVE BABY GIVEN AWAY FRIDAY AFTERNOON REGEPTION TGO MR. AND MR3. DAN MURPHY WEDNESDAY KIGHT BREED THEATRE |rrfrnames CHAS. McNULTY, Lessee MATINEES daughter gays it's most distressing to | i 230 be compelled to listen to his remarks % Feature Picture, . 7.30 at such times. ! Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. * “T_ean sympsthize with Mr. Sparks, c “THE SAGE, THE CHERUB, and THE wigow.”| 8.45 for I have suffered at the hands of | 4 is Wood, S P.M. agents, so that whenever I see one at . Miss Doris Wood, Soprano. the door I feel like a martyr; so you | can see for yourself that I have no | may be converted into a calf weaner Thanksgiving Dances, Clympic Hall Afternoon 2.30 to 5.30 Evening 8.30 to 11.30 A B:autiful Lcdies’ Hat Given Away. LADIES 15 cents GENTLEMEN 25¢ rinkty-doedle.” “I am not an agent,” said the stran- ger. “I just stopped to tell you that your cow seems to be choking to death back of the house.”—Chicago News. ceats to endorse Pease brook unless aill sources had been considered, and it} was found to be the most ari\‘anla:eAl music. CHARLES D. GEER not prevented by thoss im authority backed by law. It conditions become umbearable, those of us who are able will move our families away temporarily. But there {feials. Let us forget that livery sta- | the people of bofling all water that is {bles, garages and private citizens are a point on some stream, be it Pease, used for potable purposes. After boil- ;:;l] washing carriages and automo- es with ruuning water; that eleva- ' than the elevation of Fairview, and di- ing, it shomld be strained through any |tors consuming enough water at each 'verting freshet water into Fairview { clean linem or cotton goods. This is all that is necessary to make water 1‘509!172 to gupply & person with drinking quring the winter months, when many sufficiently wholesome for use. The 1 water for several months, continned to ' millions of gallons run to waste daily. time of bolling sheul be twenty min- | [0%d locomotives are still using city | dred and fifty million gallons (only one T am told by engineers that one hun- | 1ded 1 ave come lunatic, provoked the ast istrate to remark: to a fine v might have gone violently any time.” The in ent ought to direct att ag- | X b ® ous. ! ST “;flgm‘:’]‘;:t! 12y Let's hoe for dough for Gardner's Tencher of Singing. ~ | Lake. 42 Broadway. ff,"._d“m NBau;the uye. off DoluLal W Re | Lol RSTINE MORE WATER. Regular hours after Oct. 1st. octld As to a permanent supply, what pos- {s T oo NOV- 2, 1910 1 sible reason have we for building an- | A Dangerous Laxity | NELLIE S. HOWIE, other reservolr, when we have an ade- | 5 { g . i quate and very expensive one at pres- _ The disc ! Teacher of Piano. ent. We do not need a new reservoi :rux:'kd G | Fletcher Music Method. What we do need is water to put in it. arme : * & I would suggest running a. nip’; line to bearing a card from a det § Room/ (A8 (- o/l Oeptenl LAUNAIng cy asking the police to * 1 every | ~ Stony or Gardner Lake brook, higher ' Courtesy to bearer.” w 1RG0 F. . GEER TUNER 122 Prospect 8¢, Tel. B11. Norwish, Cu operate until quite recently; that rail- % {water: that at least one church organ . million gallons per twenty-four hodurs, utes. The habltual uee of this Very |ywas'rin by water motor last Sunday £ simple procedure on the part of the | Tet us not forzet that, as yet, no e people will certainly prevent typhoid |ficient effort has en made to locate and other enteric disorders. #nd stop the unwarranted consumption These warnings are not te alarm the | 9f water in the early morning hours, public, but to save the peeple from |22d that factories are still using city | the sickness, distress and expense, and Let perhaps from {atalities, which may { water for manufacturing purpos ius forget that we would not now be result from carelessness in this direc- tion. (Without water except for a certain in- }junction, and that the city meeting to | { discuss the water situation has been postponed for many weeks for the al- ! | leged investigation of various sites, al- - ; .o | TERAY fully covered by written reports ‘.& Boston sentiment: metmen have | o experts made Some years ago and spines as well as shopgirls. Do your |pcw on file, Christmas mailing early. | Lot us also forget that since the ‘me the present conditions were first Lenox is in a state of alarm just kuncwn to be mevitable, there has been EDITORIAL NOTES. becauss the water was toe impure for this purpese even if it should be taken | hotel there for persons o from the channel of the Shetucket or | the Thames river There are not only diseass germs | in these riwers but poisess which have } SPontaneous explosions are very un- made them '$atal to ish and the fish- | ing industry and native oyster raking | in the Thames river became unprofit- | able and had to be abandoned. While | bolllng the water will destroy d(seané germe, there is mo clahn made that it ] will antidote the poisons there or make it §t for potable purposes | This is a neful spe which | promises to increase diseace and add | to the death rate from what is regard- «d 8@ an aconpmioal way throug eur! present mmnicipal distress and embar- ragssment. The purest water obtaina- ble, whatever the cest, should be the | demand of the citizens amd the en- deavor of those in suthority. Water frem the Yantic river above the mills might be foursd to be belter than eith- or the water of Mohegan lake or the water of the Shetucket, which is said by river men to be se poisenous that a person falfing into it and belmg par- tially drowmed cannot be resuscitated. | It is up to the ciiimens ef Norwich to regulate the matter; and the whole responsibifty 1 be theirs if thay do not see that the purest water to umped into the mains of | tem, regardless of the | RYTHER’'S PLAN. If Mr. O. E. Ryther, our former townsman, has a plan by which Nor- wich can procure in sixty days the fnest water at a low cost, it is worth ¢he while of the authorities to find out what this feasible pian is. Im his let- ter to The Record he said: “If the proper authorities will call a city meeting at the earliest possible now because it is propesed to build a 2 le time to lay pipe to some running e eolar. { water supply in the surrounding coun- e tr Let us forget these unfortunate | 11 The Russ! ‘bounded lov s. { The immediate future demands our | attention. That no provision is under- | way, so far as is known at this wri ing, for a further suitable suppl when Mohegan lake is drained two or three weeks hence, is rather astonish- ing. It might be said that we have the much talked of artesian weils. The | writer voted against driving these wells when the matter was brought be- fore the common council, on the ground that the supply. if any, from that | source would come too late to avert a ! crisis and would be a negligible quan- | tity for the amount of money expended jas compared with other sources of s ! ply, and because three wells were dri en in 1899, in the same cinity, and later abandoned. The way in which the | driving of these wells has been spas- modically carried on and the results far have caused me no qualms of enice over my stand regarding s say that Tolstoi's un- burst his heart. Such common. If people was sure their way was best before they fought for it in this world, matters would average some- what better. A Philadeiphia giri fiying with Gra- heme-White did not pale when the eylinder-head blew out in mid-zir, but Mr. White did. The Boston Transcript thinks it would be more kindly te pat the sleek hides of the deer than te put bullet- holes in them. If there is another citizen !n Russia | who is & bigger man than the czar |tPel : it is time for him to show up, now |, o S pemailstan 5 |as Oy eans ge that Tolstol has gone. {here and let him explain it. Perhaps ST e | the common council has some solution The women returning from Paris are o If so, T have not heard f the problem. f it, as I am not on the executive ommittee. There is now nothing ahead but to reported as =aying that the hats worn | in this countiry at present are a fright | instead of the fashion. | oL P NPy | pump water from the rivers. J Granted that this method will pre- 3 toda 2 - B - Happy thought for today: No com- | from being entirely pwithout munity with its eyes wide open can find any excuse for jumping from the | frying pan into the fire. so long as the sewers dnd fac- continue to drain into the rivers Jer the quality of this water sup- S e LA o { ply. Some of us are ignerant. Some of The mint crop of Missouri ran a jus are lazy. This river water will be ! and | drunk by many, and the resuits can be Lit over three tons last year, . 28 e this gives assurance that the mint}““a'gm"d without description. In the julep is still popular there meantime our papers come forth with arge headlines announcing that plent] ful supply of water is assurel, while | {in small type it is modestly suggested | that ‘we curtail the consumpticn of wa- |ter. Good intelligent housewives are doing this, and will continue to do so. In the meantime consumption of wa- | ter far less necessary than that of the Since Vermont turkeys are coming into the market tagged 35 cents a pound, it is to be expected that Con- necticut turkeys will fly a little high- er. date it can be done legally, I will come to the meetin d outline a plan that | will end Norwich's troubles on the water question for a century to come. The plan will furnish a great abund- anee of the finest water, at pr a far lower cost than any other possi- ble plan, and, what is of special inte: est just in this emerge it can be 1Y, put into operation im a very short time—in 60 days at most, probably in half that tline, on a pinch. I have said nothing hefore, bec I belleved Nerwich would not move in this mat- ter until actually compelled to do so. I bhave no axe to ind, simply & desire to help where I >w 1 can be of service.” The interest excited by this letter | prompted the cir ion of a petition to the mayor, requesting him to call a meeting for the purpose of having the scheme laild before the citizens, and there appears to be no reason why such a petition in a crisis like the present should not prompt the author- ities to action. Those who know Mr. Ryther have no idea that he has a speculative scheme up his sleeve, and nan who can help rwich out of ent distress in s given a royal weleome. Will the yditions of Mr, Ryther's propesition met? @ Mr. Louis D. Brandeis’ statement be- fore the interstate commerce commis- on Monday that the railroads of the country couid save a million a day, Inoks as 4f it was a hard knock, wheth- er true or not. ¥ (“goa has ordered three naval ves- sels totalling 2,460 tons. This will put tho island empire into the swim with the ether fighting nations, {9 a. m., so that the people can go to ty days ought | The Thanksgiving e at Bev- homes continues. Why? Because it is | erly, Mass, has been moved back to | deal, ase with which arms conferred upon W In this cas Tum inma tion to the authority are irresponsible persons. happened to be an was running at large. it might have been any ecriminal that was set u tor of life and prop laxity which pern calls for a reform for a period of five months preceding May first) added to our regular supply, would leave Fairview full on May 1st, and that Fairview full on May 1st would be ample supply for a city much larger than we are at present. When this freshet supply is outgrown we can then build our dam and buy¥ our flow- age for our new reservoir, on the same siream, and continue to use the same pipe line. The proposed Pease brook reservoir would doubtless give us a prodigious amount of water, and, it is claimed, at an exceedingly low cost per million gallons. But would one consider it economy to purchase twenty non-trans- | fer: e meal tickets a day e five cents each, rather than thre fifty cents each? Next comes Thanks- giving and feasting |LET US HAVE YOUR ORDERS. They will be weill attended to. ion and PEOPLE;S_ MARKET, € Franklin St. JUSTIN WHAT IS BETTER FOR i ooats SaaBl e cotatiion » 5u ) CHARY'S TENDER SKiN/ manent and ample water supply for| this city. but let us not lose our heads and supply water in such unnecessary abundance as ‘to raise the cf debt and taxrate to such an extent that people will not eare to live here and! novi8d HOLDEN, Pr Rose Bowlinz Alleys, LUCAS HALL, Because of its delicate, sanative, emollient properti united with | the purest ‘of cleansing ingred- pay for ients and most refreshing « GROSVENOR ELY. | flow dors, Cuticura soap is the | Norwich, Nov. 22, 1910, taweniodons Cticurs aep Bl 43 Shatucket Strast | mother’s favorite for preserving | s 2 Lals Moad o Bt {and promoting skin and hair b3 € EDONK, ; By i e Ll i health of infants and children. | s QUALITY in work should always be considered, especlally when it costs no more than the inferior kind. Skilled men are employed by us. Our pricea tell the ! whole storz. STETSON & YOUNG. may3id In the treatment of distressing, | disfiguring eruptions, from in-! fancy to age, no other method so pure, so sweet, so speedily Mr. Editor: While the water question is before us, I wish to add another sug- gestion to the many. Tt isa well known fact that if Fairview is full on the first of May that there is no danger of 2 famine for that yea Then why onmaect with some source of sup Gardner’s Lake seems the most ) and have our present res. on the above date, and then ly so as not to inte: s on the Yantic river. ege ought not to cost a great for I doubt if all the water in| i iew when full would run the Falls | ef fective as warm baths with Cuti- cura soap and gentle applicatior of Cuticura ointment. No othe costs «so little and does so much. | Thanksgiving Novellies Turkeys, Ducks, Chickens, Fruit Candy Boxes, Baskets, Post Cards, Novelty Cards, Favors, Etc., LUMBER AND CCAL. COAL An Old-Fashioned Winter | can e done either Stony brook, provid- ed the elevation is high enough; but at Gardner's Lake we don't need to take any picture. or dig any test pits, build a d der the water: move any . or clean the in, for 5 »iis: the water is there. A-Coming. for Thanksgiving. When a city meeting is called, as 1 . | understand it, the only proposition to Here's Some Old-Fashioned Coal. | Yoz come before it will be Pease brook. The water board unanimously (?) re ommended Pease brook and the con men couneil seven to six endorsed the recommendation, his honor casting the deciding vote. i 'The republican members did not wish ' | E. CHAPPELL (0. 'L RS, EDEM ERY Frandlin Squan novisd used to b h vein, 40 fe ed The kind that motl when the great mamm thick, was first discov Its a Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA Central church and attend the football games, teo. A Massachusetts m it is a sin for women would have been a sin ster says that to work. It had not his | mother made his trousers when he was { a boy. 1 i —— v { ! ;. Mass., has a new fire- | |alarm whistle that can be heard | | twelve miles away. She can now be | placed among the leading alarmists - 3 Sy long; 3 inches wide; The ends, top and | of New In the western part of Massachu- setts, this week, deer may be hunted limitations that a man pot having the law with him may get a fine instead of game. The Rules Not So Bad, A current cartoon represents Champ Clark as studying Mr. Cannon’s rules mself, “Not so and saying softly to hi bad, after ail” As a candidate for { the spaakership of the r democrat- | lic house, Mr. Clark is v noncom- mittal in the face of the discussion | of the sug: that the power to name the house committees be taken from the presiding officer and sted in a2 new committee on committees. Present indications are that Mr. Clark may be forced to announce his views | the coming winter. inasmuch as the republican insurgents plan to start an- other fight againet Cannonism at this very point. Mr. Cannon is not unlike- 1y to invite Mr. Clark into the breach. —Springfield republican. “l never hear you call your wife ‘Toots’ apy more?’ “I had to step It. It always reminds her that she wants an automobile.”—Kansas City Journal. A cake of Lenox Soap is about 4 inches so that the cake is easily held in one’s hand. The top side of the cake bears the word Lenox; the reverse side, the name of the makers, Procter & Gamble. On the inside of the wrapper are i suggestions as to the best way to use Lenox Soap, that are well worth reading. Lenox Soap— “Just fits Lumber oV l | S | | Free Burning Kinds apd iehigh ! ALWAYS IN STOCK. _AbuTiRor Offica—cor. Market and Shetucket S:. UP-TO-DATE SHOES in all lsathers $3.00, $3.50 and §4.00 FERGUSGN & CHARBONNEAD, oct29a | sept22 Franklin Square. CALAMITE COAL AMERICAN HOUSE, | 7 3 Farrell & Sanderson, I'ropa. It burns up clean. "IAL. RATES to Theatrs Troupes . ! l“ra eling Men, sto. Livery connectei Wall SB&_!SQEI?[I Wood peleapiet u C. H. HASKELL. CEGRGE 6. GRANT, IS e e B Underiaker and Embalmar COAL and LUNiBER <2 Frovidence S, Taitviliz Prompt attentiou lo éay or night calla and 134 inches thick. bottom are rounded, Telephone 168-12. In the beautilul val ol \Wyoming, Telephon. ¢5-2% asri4MWFawl in Penn., lies the beds of the finest An- o i thracite Coal-in the worid. We have AUTCMONILE STATION, 8. J. Co!t, 6 Otis Street. Automobile and Bicycie Repwiring. Gensral Ma- chine work Jobbinz 'Phone / sccured @ supply of this Coal for thia i meason. Try it In your cooking stove | ana neater. ; 1 We are tne agent Roofing. ane of the L to the trade. JOBN A. MORGAN & SON. Lfelephone 334, aprisd for Rex Flintkote t roofings kuown T THERE 1s no advertising medium I8 Eastern Connecticut equal to The Baes letin for busimess results.