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NORWICH A BULLETIN, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1910 Horwich Zulletin and Cunfied. 114 YEARS OLD. Subscription price, 1Z¢ & week; Goe n wonths; $6.00 a year. Frtered at the Postotflce at Norwich, Coun.. ss second-class matter. Telephone Calls: Bulletin Business Office, 430. Aulletin Editorial Rooms, 35-3, Bulletin Job Office, 25- tie Office, Reom 3 Murray ng. Telephone 210. Friday, Dec. 2, 1910. PRt £ A Sy A QEMAND FOR ECONOMY. it goes without saying that the state .onbt go on imcreasing its indebted- ess over a milllon a vear upon any text The report of the state »mptro the fiscal year ending \ber 30th, 1910, shows tbat idebtedness is now $8,144,- Increase for the past year of ta an 1,845.06 Following 18 a summari 31 od 8 ement report, wkich the why and state of the ymptrollers won shows the present by compar September 1910 ,319,941.06 state $1,020,000: temporary total, $5.054,941.0 September $4,217,903.9 $1.000,000 total 56,9 ona Year enera iss $17 ending nue. 90 1910 Expendi- stember 30, Balance of civil 0, $1,164,847; debt of state i in 1909, $2,013 Se Net lebt the great n t or the bullding good ause for the large state's income big appropria- y the last legislature 45.86 ent goed roads and state srmatory took $80, The new state iibrary took $18, mands $78.28 hess reason s capitol and demands there ap- why the legis- should not resolve to go TAKING THE GOVERNOR'S MEAS- URE. iry American, tempting to solve what Governor Badwin will be likely to do in the watter of putting republicans out of fice and democruts in, points to his confessed supreme partisanship as a oter as an indication of what is to be expected. Fhe good sense of the oMovdng conclusions s apparent: udge Baldwin democrat, an id-fashioned party partisan that he voted for Bryan in spite of sagreement with his views. If any republicans expect that he will be slow o turn them out when their terms ex- The Wate in o man, so pire they are pretty sure to be dis appointed. He may not hold the old- fashioned theory that to the victor be- ong the spofts. But he almost ce amiy believes that the afairs of this tate cam be better administered by emocrats than by republicans, and we ure almost sure that as far as he rea- sonably can, con with public terest, ho will republicans wd_appoint de He has a ro publican legislature to deal wi He would pref along comforta- biy for e of accomplishing somethin but he is not a eompro- | ser in the least degree, and he is t & bk afraid of a fight. We expect im to prove a strong, deter ned and zressive exeeutive and a thorough- #oing partisan where partisanship has ight to express itself’’ There is uo reason to complain of s perpendicularity. The up-and-down manliness should not be too slop- '%; and the man who has the nerv. o homor his convictiens is the man vho deserves to be honored. GETS NO DEMOCRATIC SUPPORT. Governor-eleet Foss of s gels no support in his campaign he siate against the re-election of anige for senator and when he start- Massachu- ne ed for ¢ 1o open Ms political assauRk upon ho democrats re- fused to aceompuny him, and he now ¢ only the support of the insurgent ublicans. It is opelieved that the | spect for Senator Lodge's re-elec- ian by the siature grows better vy day. He has the support of the - elemer of the old Bay state. | am H. Moody, former justice of eme court, has written a 1 v ) entat in the leture, urgng him to stick to whoar h . legistat c inary experience, ing and knowledge, his apacit pub speech ceed W 1se of min: or dif DR. FREDERICK A. COOK COMES | BACK. . Frederivk A ATC . nes back through the ¥ A Mampton's Magazine, in as d for s suld bave been ex- pected He % trying to find his * adkc confidence which ' v »re value to him than i e confesses that he may hotty staken as to his - b rthest north; but wt from him bow he e to make ke t elf he odions charge that he is the g s eir of the age. Having recov- sred trem the shock of adversity, he ymes to the front with ma. «nd will doubtiess be received harity by those who have their raith #n him. There is one thi eb iz constantly in his faver, and that Is he mever appears to be her than a gemtleman. What he has sny abowt his inability to prove that was at the pole is just as true of mmander Peary, who, because of iong serviee and more Influential 11 powezful backing was able to stand the dfseoverer of the North pole ne other proof than his own word figures. There appears at the time mo question that Peary seen as nege the pole as any mor- w14 upon his persistence as an ex- piorer and his integrity as a man the whobe mateer yests. The Bulletin does t deal of interest in how . so deceived, but it hopes that be will bave a pleasant trip Lome and-enjoy a Merry Cheistmas, he TAX ON CHRISTMAS TREES. The Vermont legislature has made a law taxing the little evergreen trees cut in November, to be sent out of the state, for home devoration at Christ- mas time, twenty-five cents each, as a means of conserving the forests and preventing their shipment from the state. Whether the scheme will work as expected remains to be seen. The tax is not likely to make much dif- ference. In this age the people feel that they have got to have Christmas trees, and the addition of 25 cents will | not stop them from buying one tree in a year. The only advantage we can see fro may add a few thousands to the treas- ury of the state. There will be just as many trees marketed as ever and the only difference will be that they will cost a little more. But what will the children care for that? Or their par- ents, eithe MONEY IN POLITICS. The publicity given to the cost of campaigning under the cor tices act of this and other shows that money is in politic that the man's ability to “put up” has more or less to do with his popularity as a candidate, although the recent election showed clearly that it did not tell for success like uprightness or recognized integrity of character. | The Rutland News, commenting up- subject, say think the way to prevent t money in elections is to nom men who would not spend it. such men, as a rule, are very un- and the people always want ate I popular When everybody has a pension prom- ise hung up in front of them this may De a more assuring, if not a better, There “tion that er hapy | thing. s to be a general con- J. Hill unless he is predicting some- Happy ught for tod The behind a scheme is not so su ting ice as the man behind cutter the ice- ago comprises only e popuiation of II likely to gather in h is big enough tw nois, fi L3 of it when sted t ntlammable 1d be applaude yvement. a Christmas eavy as a real re- Willey much stren If, as Dr give one egg wil h pound of cents are pretty exgs at sixty onable fodder. Perhaps would he Sugar tru e Sam t into hot It do "m The Rh Island have found that it co: pair to hatch and the shore-zone lobster. just art on a ca Our record of 1 lons of | ministerea by the husband were p alcoholic liquors drunk ar shows | voked by the wife’s nagging habits, a that the endeavor to assuage thirst|decision implying that the court re- WAl nacaglithg ity gards the feminine tongue as a cruel 3 “nd dangerous Of co 5 s . | will be unsaf The emperor of Germany is aid to | it s i have declared himself to be a prohi- | drens bad table manners, or mental bitionist. ~He may discover how to|and physical shortcomings to the make prohibition prohibit. | father’s corresponding deficfencies, will | e | justify his stunning her with a book or Mr. Gla divoree " record for I clude; possibility of his bel | taken for a saint in the proposed law is that it | no long- | man > of cut- | hs of is it | tax up- whis- throw | ter it would | to commissioners The club women of this country are “Well, sir,” inquired the undertaker, stroking his long black whiskers, “what can I do for you?” “I just dropped in,” replted the stran- | ger, “to get vour figures on a first- class funeral. ' I'm no Croesus, by any | means, but when it comes to arrang- nug for my own funeral I don't care a | whoop for any reasonable expense.” “Your own funeral, did you say?’ ed at the matter from every angle and i “I have arranged most of my world- v affai Jim 1 am dead, and the proceeds will turned over to the undertaker plants me. ranged with Jim Evans and he'll see that the obsequies are conducted ac- cording to Hoyle. When a man has as much trouble as I have the only thing he can do its to cash in and be who | see, I've been boarding for a year or more with Mrs. Hasher, a wid- | ow of a certain age, so to speak, She's | such an llent cook that I feli in love with her several months ago and | paid court to her in the most ardent |way. I am a susceptible man and feminine charms always did get me go- ing. Finall she consented to be mine and one evening, with a heart palpi- tating with happiness, I went to the THE BULLETIN'S DAILY STORY — e TIRED OF LIFE returned the undertaker. i ir, my own funeral. I've look- | have come to the conclusion that there’s more satisfaction in being dead | | than in being alive. 1 gave my fighting dog to | house fairly intoxicatec , the fblacksmith, and my | ness. other property will be raffled off when |a sta be | I have everything all ar- | | that she was my true soul mate. alone and 1 for her. | events of the following days. { mer difficulties were doubled, for both | Mary and her mother, unknown to each | other, were expressing great anxlety feit. I had misread the emotions of my heart. The daughter appealed to me, 1 assure you, as no other woman on earth ever had appeale: “I immediately endeavorcd to take her heart by storm. I felt that life without her would be a desert waste. I had to engineer things with great tact and convert myself ipto a board of strategy, for Mrs. Hasher was always asking me if I got that marriage li- cense I went after, and she seemed im- patient to be led to the altar. I laid siege to Mary in a clandestine way and managed to eludeythe old lady’s vigil- ance. , ‘Mary consented to be my bride and 1 made my second trip to the court- with happi- { e wooed and won ke Mary, my dear | sir, you simply can't understand how | tumultuous were my emotions. “I got the second license and hasten- ed home, and was met by Mrs. Hash- er's second daughter, Jessie, (whom I had never seen before. She had been going to the university and had run down home for a visit. “The moment I saw Don't Pull Cut Those Gray Hairs | HAY’S HAIR HEALTH will restore them to their natural color. It never faila. Can be ured without detection. IS NOT A DYE. Thousands have used it with wonderful results for twenty-five years. Your mon- ey back if not satisfied. Send 2c. for books “The Care of the Hair and Skin,” Philo Hay Spec. Co., Newark, N.J.,U.S.A REFUSE ALL SUBSTITUTES 51 and 50c. botiles, at éruggtsts For sale and recommended by lingler & Smith, Lee & Osgood Co., Chas. Os- good Co.. Utley & Jones. Unless you h -eyed maiden Should be Less Reminiscent. Charleston must be disappointed by the result of the census enumeration, for its population ie found still to be below the 60,000 mark. With 58,883 inhab! ts, Charleston’s growth for the decade has been less than 6 per cent.. though this is a greater rate of increase than it exhibited in the pre- ceding ten-year period. Charleston’s situation, off the main line of great railroad systems, is a partial expla- nation of its slow growth. Its port h never recoverea from the war. her 1 realized One glance from her hazel eyes convinced me that she had been created for me detail the | My for- “I haven't the heart to on the subject of marriage licenses. 1 had to resort to all sorts of tactics in North Franklin Conn., Dec. 30, 1910. Immediate Relief Proposition. Mr. Editor: Among the multitude of suggestions on the water question, I ould like to offer the following for immediate relief of our citizens ho are suffering the greatest desti- ion and distress, I read Mr. Ryth i s plan _concerning Trading Cove | brook. Why wait for the slow and | elaborate plan to pump water into our th mains? Why not have the fire depart- ment send a steamer to Trading Cove pond to fill casks loaded on wagons | and such of our watering carts as are v ble. and tribute it to our | public schools and most needed. The expense would be comparatively light. h team could asily make two trips daily. It appears to me that this ? relieve much would l sufiering, and would in no way | interf with the committee alread | appointea_to investigate and report. This, perhaps, would tide us_over a hard place, until wis | plans can be put into successful opera- tion. 1 know of no person who can | make a legal objection to our use of 1| this source of supply, except the Hall Erothers. The generosity of these gen- tlement is so well known that we need | not tear serious objection on their part. ! JAMES P. MINER wich, Dec. 1, 1910. 1t B3 5 H 3 g - H = » E3 = B v New Yorker who wishes to beat his wife without giving her ground for divorce in that state has now only to let her nag him into a nasty mood, and whac away with what ever | comes A justice over in Broo! |1yn den a wife's suit for divorc upon the ground that the blows ad- weapon. making other violent demonstration. ife's sneer at her mother-in-law’'s the bibulous habit her by marriage, or the criminal record of her husband's more or less remote might perhaps be r garded New York courts | Doctors Failed to Cure. not ireful in selecting her com- | Miss Mabel F. Dawkins, 1214 Lafay- pan eite St, F Wayne, Ind., writes: ne 5 { y 1 was troubled with | i & h ik blood disease. I tried se: I SO one st st ithe. g of e s and dozen different rem- {milifon in the population of New Eng- | edies, but none of them did me any land in the past ten vears was a na- | good. A friend told me of Hood's Sar- tiv rease; foreign enterpt ana | saparilla. I took two bottles of this arift helped medicine and was as well and strong S A, as ever. 1 feel like a different n~rsurn i and recommend Hood’s to any one suf= | LETTERS TD THE EDITQR | fering from catarrn.” S — | Get it today in usual liquid form or Whazt Is Money? | chocolated tablets called Sarsatabs. i Editor: What would you "‘"i of a mun that had one hundre ars | of money in the “till of hiz chist | | wanted to buy a cow > price | me that he b hundred money ad of takin the ce nd g note fo one hundred dollars with interest | leaves t money lyving in the | Do you believe such a person would | | know enough to feel offended if you | | told him he acted foolish? Would not 9 et, | Such a transaction have a tendency N to make the price of the milk higher T if he Lc Would not such a sys- tem of d ] 2 all business h a ten- | t tt' | dency ‘to make the cost of MHving Tl\ N G g tmul'h higher, than it naturally would | ere s o e ln be if it was done under em pay | | 82 Sou 307 Now, T wish o am e Away parallel. First, I wish to assert that | money to be genuine money must be | from the fact that it pays to be well legal tender with power o pay a debt. | dressed. This does not mean that it This. legal tender quality comes | i1 po necessary for you to b = through a law of congress. The above | » .. P¢ ne Y bt o being true, then it can safely be as- |tinually purchasing new clothes — jerted that “Money is a creation of |take advantage of our service o have law Again, money. legal tender | s c DI e money, belng & nationai (not a local) | YOUr Clothes cleaned, pressed or dyed. factor or function, must necessarily | Once you have work done by us. it be created by comiress, and as con- |goes without saying that you will con- gress is for the purpose of making |tinue to do so in the future. laws for the whole peopl it not v l')fiu'«muhln to beli that it the P TR B ina duty of congress to create money for 9, all the people (o use? In a natshell Lang S Dye works is his: . Congress havin > tand right, if ou lease ) S M3 0 isht G sou viease) | Telephone. 157 Franklin 3!, ey to p dept (within its juris- ¥ decid tizens where it is| r and better | said to have declared war upon the |mitigating circumstances in her subs. { hookworm. That being so, the hook- | quent suit for marital assault, and we worm may as well begin to farewell take it that the Brooklyn justice who | i oL s |h.|= iven the decision under consider- P : T v ation would make large allowance for Attention is called to the fact ”‘”i““ exhibition of hasty temper by a lingland apples ought to have | husband whose wife had ridiculed his national and international fame, | our d to see they have|- i o T ; Fativetaile) | Years of Suffering En man declares .| Catarrh and Blood Disease — | HIGH CLASS VAUDEVILLE PICTURES ADMISSION, 10c. Island, lst?;:l', 3d AUDITORIU : THE GREAT HORNMANN MAGICIAN STERKE Cyclist on the Wire LiLLi Presenting SALLY IN OUR ALLY. EVENINGS, RESER VED SEATS, 20c, Thurs., Fri., Sat. SWISHER & EVANS Comedy Duo AN REED & CO. A Novelty Sketch. BREED THEATRE CHAS. McNULTY, Lessee “MORE THAN HIS DUTY” Miss Doris Wood, Soprano. Feature Performances 2.30 7.30 8.45 P.m. Picture, A Modern Shipwreck. In an account of the wrack salling ship Carnarvon Bay on King | Australia, when the vessel stru: camly took a ecigar from his pocket, bit the end off, and lit it before ordering the boats to be launched. t display of lack of fear did not enti ly prevent some degre the men, « pushed off in the port lifeboa 22 to scramb . howev. into the s: is T ck. it of p and captain boat, the of the elated Ev anic among | even men the starboard 1id not put them. In- - he boat he 100 steered in with empty later both miles Try Lenox Soap. WE BELIEVE IN THE SQUARE DEAL, THE SQUARE TON OF SQUARE COAL AND GIVE IT. We don’t pretend to be any bet!ori than any other Coal dealer; but we do want everybody to get his money's worth, and the right change back. E. CHAPPELL CO. Central Wharf and 150 Main Street. ‘Teiephones. Sold by grocers everywhere from “Just fits the hand” popular men for candidates. When the | courthouse and secured ' a marridge | my courtship of Jessie, but finally she | §avannah has intercepted the cotton In spite of n eneral tone is elevated to the point | llcense. | agreed to fill the vacant place in my |¢rade: and Charleston looks to the | men in the port boat refused to come here monew s mot looked for ana der| I returned to Mrs. Hasher, walking | heart, and we went quietly to the judge | phosphate beds instead of to the plan- |alongside, and those in ¢ y . OF £ - lon air, as it were. Only those who |to be married. That exceilent man was | fation for business expansion. Still | boat shouted that if they ¢ manded in elections there will be less | haye experienced true love in middle |just pronouncing the solemn WOrds one of the most attractive cities of [off the masts would full on of it used. Money 1is not used in poli- | life for the first time can understand | which should have made us one when|ihe south, with an admirable winter |stead of hurrying to th tics unless there I8 some one to re- |the passion that held s in my | Mrs. Hasher entered ihe room by one | climate, it ought to find in these ad- | tain strolled to his cabin and collected | ceive it.” bosom. Arriving at the house, I found |door and Mary by another. The scene | antages a revenue that would par- | his papers. | The logic of this paragraph is clear | that Mrs. Hasher's daughter Mary had | that followed— tially compensate it for some of its | After he had entered th | enough. The law cannot prevent the | COMe home on a visit. She is a suc- | “You must excuse me, sir” eald the gisappo .. Other of the rebel- | transferred five men to the port boat | S R € | cessful music teacher in a neighboring | undertaker, rescuing his buttonhole I jon =0y fared much better, | and mads for Tasma \ise of money, but the publ nce | town. | from the clutch of the stranger, “T have | picimond and New Orleans, Atlants |away. He and the mates can when it recognizes that money and | “As soon as I saw her I realized that [to mix up a fresh lot of embalming | ;4" Savannah are as if the war had |turn, while the men baled merit are not synonymous, neither |my love for her mother was counter- fluid this morning.’—Chicago News. mever been, while Columbia, the cap- |biscuit tins; ana 48 hours money and manhood. Correct estimates }ital of South Carolina, has now more |boats reached land and right action tell for better politi- 7 {than 26,000 inhabitants, an icrease of | 3k e R tter pollti- | 4ction) by what authority can and l’hnnd made kitchen garden, questioned |25 per cent. Columbia has gone in = g does it create a debt and tax the peo- | his taste in neckties, or pronounced his | for cotton mills; possibly if Charles- Children C'ry | T ple to pay inte on the debt | Christmas verses mere doggerel. There | tonians were less reminiscent they i { EDITORIAL NOTES. Does this not have a tendency to |are domestic annoyances that husbands | might find an industrial opening for FOR FLETCHER'S Some le think that Dr. W make the cost of living higher, fo at | will endure with patience only when | their city as well—Richmond Times Apon o et e il ‘,‘\:“,” least the amount of interest that is | once more, as in Genesis, the sons of |and Despateh. CASTORIA o o iding just aft-1..iq4 on the debt? Would it not tend | God shall take to wives the daughters b dP to lower the cost of living just the | of men.—Boston Herald. e BT P of interest paid, if congress | gy i Now mer is loitering ed the money initead of the debt | about to get a chance to | and pay as we go? Is mot this latter | LUMBER AND COAL. sit in the December. parallel case with the former? If | P th K 1 b — ot, why not? The man had the mon- | California’s overno ¢t just | ey and put himself in debt. Congress | el:haps e work would not be so frowns upon the inauguration ball, and | ha8 power to create money, and puts | hard if you used better soap. now the dancers think that he b e NNLLETTE. | sense | Lumber decldaw COAL free Burning Kinds and Lehigh ALWAYS IN STOCK. A. D. LATHROP, Office—ocor. Market and Shetucket Sts Telephone 163-13. oct294 CALAMITE COAL “It burns up clean.” Well Seasoned Wood C. H. HASKELL. 402 — 'Phones — 489 | may24d COAL and LUMBER | i i In the beaut valiey ot v\'yommg,! | before selecting. You'll found exorbitant. at your pleasure. In Penn. lies the ods of the finest An- thracite Coal in wie world. We have secured & supply of this Coal for this | Season. Try it in your cooking stove | and heater. We are the agenta for Rex Flintkote [ Roofing. one of the best roofings known | to the trade. | JOHN A. MORGAN & SON. | velephone 884. aprisa | Telephone The custom of securing articles of “real coming more prevalent. People are looking for something that will be of lasting benefit to the home. We invite you to inspeot our Specral Rockers, Beautiful Tables And Other Articles worth Buying Furniture For Christmas Gifts is each year be- SCHWARTZ BROS 9-11 Water Strect run across a hundred things here that will appeal to you—that will make ideal gifts, at prices that will rot be You may select now and have the goods delivered 5 according to well-known authorities, cooked with lard digests naturally and easily; the other 90%, instcad of nourishing the body, merely clogs the digestive = organs and starts stomach trouble. Cottolene is as pure, nutritious and whole- it goes one-third farther. Made only by THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY some as olive oil,and makes food which any stomach can digest. + It is more economical than lard because fat, yet, Cortolene shortens your food; lengthens your life. ngi\itiBiscuifs t}\at melt in your moilti\. are made with Cottolene Lard is the most commonly used cooking not 10% of the food ¥ that | the captain this | Thursday Friday Saturday POLI'S ™5, GREATEST OF ALL VAUDEVILLE Where the Growds Are Going EXTRA —Woods’ Circus Monkeys, Dogs, Ponies, Cats. Bring the little one. Cook & Stevens | Mintz & Wuertz “The Chinese Comedy and the Coon” Acrobats BIGLOW & CAMPBELL “Syncopated Melodies” Special Attraction B.—Donovan & Arnold—Rena The King of Ireland and the Queen of Vaudeville [ Added Attraction W. B. Patten & Co. In the Screaming Farce “Getting Acquainted with Mother” 4—People—4 December. 6th—OWLS NIGHT Jas. 1 mMuUsic. WILLIAM L. WHITE, Piano Tuner, decld 48 South A St., Taftville F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect St Tel. 511, Norwicly, Ct | Fire Extinguishers in house and store and factory would be better protected against fire if pro- the present emergency every vided with our Chemical Fre Extin- guishers. They will act on oil fires or electrical fires botter than waten Price only $1.00. ATON CHASE Company | 129 Main Sireet, Norwich, Conn. nov22d | QUALITY | In work should always be considered, | espectally when it costs no more than the inferlor kind. Skilled men are | employed by us. Our prices tell the | whole story. | STETSON & YOUNG. may27a | Dr. L. F. LaPierre 94 removed to Central hth has avenue stree Hours 1-3 and cor: by special appointment. LOUIS H. BRUNELLE BAKERY We are confident our Ples, Cake and | Breaa cannot be excslled. Give us a | tria) order. novid 20 Falrmount Street. [Hane You Noticed tha i Increased Travel? | It's & sure sign of good weathe: ang fine roads. People like to get out into the open alr. We furpish the best method, and it yowll take one of our | teams yowll say tbe sarae, MAHONEY BROS. Falls marlid Avenue WALL PAPERS Spring The leaves a larger hand he and we have made quite a reduc-— It is a good time of above, to e it in to buy now. Also Paints, Muresco, Moldings, and the prices. | a general supply of decorative mate- riale. Painting, Paper Hanging and Decorating. P. . MURTAGH, 92 and 94 West Main Street, Telephone. junid IIAAVE YOUR Watches and Clocks Repaired by FRISWELL, 25-27 Franklin Street. THE PLANK Headquarters for Best Ales, Etc.. in Town. JAMES O'CONNELL, Prop. Telephons 503 -oatay junlidaw Lagers,