Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, April 22, 1911, Page 4

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WHAT 1S THE MATTER WITH BUSINESS? There is no good reason why there whould be anything the matter with business, The crop outlook was never better and the financial coudition of the country is sound, Political uncertain- ty always makes capital timid and then it utlous about making in- vestments. hn W, Gates, speaking of conditions at present in New York, the other day, sal “Wall street may be blue, but fund- amental conditions are sound every- where. The banks are all strong in cash. In fact, the majority of them have too much meney. For ‘the past four years the policy has been to cur- tafl, retrench, weed out the bad from the good, and economize in general The result has been the placing of the finances of the country on a sounder basis and the strengthening of the general business situation. Business is ready to go ahead as soon as the country is released from its bondage of political agitation. One of the great troubles is that we have too many politiclans who lack the business tralning necessary to safe and sound legislation. “We will not have a boom year, but it will make a good average. The steel outlook In general is not bad by any mea Like other lines, the steel busin being held up by political agitation. The New York Evening Post is of the opinion that everybody will be ready to do business when the “bond- age of pelitical agl " has been broken and the United States suprgme ved—and in the way world regards the right way—the present uncertainty as to whether or not the larger industrial and commercial affairs of the country may be conducted as mow or must be conducted hereafter under a system that was long ago outgrown and is today archalc, NO CORRECT FAMILY SCALES. The commissioner of welghts and measures of New York city reveals how hard it is for the consumer to keep informed as to whether he is being squarely dealt with or not. This is what he said to the members of the tional League for the Civic Educa- ori of Women the ether da “Avold the telephone! It is respon- sible for a large percentage of the dishonest butchers and grocers. How can you tell what you are getting, if voti are net there to see it measured and weighed? Every kitchen should be equipped with accurate dry and liquid measures. 1 am sorry to say that there is no family scale now on the market that is worth using.’ We compelled the manufacturers of these to submit samples a while ago, and none of them passed muster. “You can watch, however, and see that your things are weighed correctly. Don't trust a scale that has the dial in front. It is #0 easy to add two or three eunces by just a slight touch of the finger behind i, I understand that in some butcher shops the fore- men instruct the clerks to make up their weekly salaries by these finger- touches.” What Commissioner Walsh meant }o s#¥y was that trading by telephone was not ecomomical; but if the clerks welgh their fingers they would do it whether the buyer was present or not Dishonest dedlers can only be dis- covered by re-welighing and re-meas uriug their output; and correct fam. Iy scales are to be had in Norwich The telephone is /. convenience and it doesn’t cheat. If dealers do, the consumers ought to know what to do. A sixty-ygar-old Boston man whe had wandered for half a century through all parts of the earth has struck a night school. It beats any- thing he ever saw, and he says he never can grew old so long as his new passion for learning keeps up, The man who neglects his family should stay out of California, for by a new law he may be added to the chain-gang at $1.80 & day and the money be used for the support of those dependent upon him. A French doctor recommends five meals a day and & half hour's walk after each -meal as & means of making fat folks lean, Good scheme for gro- cers and shoemakers and perhaps the undertakers. . Billy Sunday says: “If George Washingten had had the same kind of a mother Happy Hooligan had, he would Have been & luppy Honll‘ln. The time is rapidly coming when the old garden te will seem to be the same dear old spot, .um.u to face value. The detectives - the.stolen conspiracy and receiving stolen goods. These mén were found guilty, anc Naftzger, who made less than $65 on hig part of the transaction, was finec $5,000 and sentenced to 15 months ir prison. _ The judge said to him: “Te "ot your financial position the fine is not a punishment.” This sort of medicine ought to prove to be an effective cure for greed if per- sistently administered. THE MEXICAN REVOLUTION. It looks as if a majority of the peo- ple. of Mexico are opposed to Diaz and his tyrannical methods and wish to see estsblished there a republic in reality rather than a pretence. ‘The majority of the American peo- ple will endorse this comment of tha Philadelphla Times with reference to the possibility of intervention on th¢ part of the government, that “YWe Americans are in poor position t» deny to any people the elemental right of revolution. “We became a nation by processc revolution; and we are, proud of it “If it was right and justifiable for us to reyolt against a tyrapnical gov- ernment, why is it mot right for the people’ of Mexico to dq the same? “It will not do to say that we must intervene in Mexico in order to re store peace and security. “Spme things are more important thawm peace and security. Humai rights are among these things. “It will not do to say .that Ameri- cans have investments in Mexico which must be protected. “Dutch, French and Spanish inves- tors had investments in the colonies at the time of the revolution; but Hol- land, France and Spain did not inter- fere to suppress the revolution. France, indeed, intervened, but it was in the cause of the people, not of the tyranny. “But a still more apt pavallel tu| the Mexican situation may be: found in our own civil war. Foreign invest- ments in this country were imperilled. “Did any foreign country intervene? No. “Why not let Mexico fight out her own. battles? “She ig rich enough to pay all th indemnities that may be necessary.” All of this is true; and there is no reason why we should not applaud the Mexican people for their endeavor te wake a freer, better, more lherzl and more progressive governman. EDITORIAL NOTES. The newspapers de not mind Rep- resentative Cannon’s thrusts. He ha; cause to make hard hits at them. Now that the Egyptian sphynx has been recognized, the magasines may ,b‘e relied upon for a two years’ run o1 im. Ed. Howe, the Atchison Globe man say “if we were a woman, we dc not believe we know a man we wou. marry.” A Callfornia judge has ruled that poker is not an American game, even ‘when it is played with red, white and blue chips. The promise of great crops has knocked the price of wheat down tg 90 cents and corn to 52 cents a bushel from 68 cents and $1.15. It is noted that no one goes to sleer in Billy Sunday’s congregations. He doesn’t have to throw a hymn book af his deacons to wake them up. There isn’t a state in the union that doesn’t feel as capable of being a mother, of presidents as old Virginia, if it can only get the chance. Now that Winsted has a distinguish- ed son in command of the troops at Douglds, Aris., it becomes apparent that all her sons are not fakers, , It beats all how busy Norwich is filtering the water it isn't drinking; while it is drinking the water it isn't filtering, which is the worst water. The Ohio legislature has just passed a trading-stamp law which makes the issuers of them pay their face value in cash to holders if they demand it. The Helen pink is_rather a subdued color; But the Tafts are somewhat cel- ebrated fer making everything come to their standard. Aunt Delia's pies do that. Happy thought for today: The near- philosopher who-says, Men are ‘mis- ters and Women are mysteries, for- got to mention there are exceptions in both cases. Governor Foss launched three mes- sages upon the Masgachusetts legisla- ture all at once on Thursday, and the one for controlling aviators was re- ferred to the public health board. Meodern Scheol of Mariners. | The old saying that there is no loss | without some is borne out by the change which been wrought in the ' country's shipping. There has been | mueh lament _over the decadence of | the famous Yankee smeamanship, but! after the passing of the clipper and | Whllll" fleets at last has come to the high seas a new breed of Americans who are the equal if net the superior of the ald. The mechanical genius of the nation has sent many native young men to tho #teamships of the navy and the marine. Ninety per cent. of wh saflor-mechanics of the United le# navy are American born. Twen- tY vears the proportion of Ameri- cans on merchant vesfels was only eent. In 1910 the propor- er cent., the natives heav- ting over the naturalized. for this year will be even movement of Americans & 3 8 been steadily increasing op eral years. ’:nv ways the mariners of the | nt' school are better than the old shellbacks that heaved at the capstan bu.u’g'l.uoutenm ond of the yard- o d trical machinery require. a dil lutj_:& of witfll and more intell constant advance of mecl \cl and electriéal science makes it nece: sary for them te keep mentally fresh and aletty They. know ‘more and are more jrogiessive then . the old-time sailor, and In their habits they are eland Leader. ! things helps bring them about. great, e lves way to pessimism that puis a e, if not a gloom, over declining years. If he has only learned “to love the Lord with all his heart and his neighbor as himself,” he finds the eye of faith clear-sighted; and no cling- ing doubts get into his mind to har- rass his closing days. The more a romn loves flowers the more he _individualizes them. Flowers bunched into a bouguet are not so pretty because ve har- mony of color does not answer for the obliteration of ‘he beauty of form of each flower. Some one has said: “Take one flower where it graws, un- plucked, and woo it, and you will work it .into your soul” Select a handsome rose and put it into a vase by itself and you have a thing of deauty. A multiplication . of . roses Jammed together in a vase mar in- stead of improving the heauty of them. A half-dozen beautiful dahlias in a big vase form a picture, while a score in the same vase make simply & mass, which might correctly be call- ed a mess. A French novelist wrote in. La. Picclalo: “The prisoner had only one little flower to love; sp he came to know it” A little bunch of Houstonias in the grass impress the soul by their' simple beauty more then would an acre of tulips. Those who are not moved by the splendor of a single bloom, cannot fully admire many. How “we do worry ourselves with adverse circumstances; and how they hold us down. This is because we i make too much of the wrong things in life. Things which are pleasing should bé cherished; and things an- noying should be put out of mind. Thinking of our good fostune s what gives us- fortitude against un- controllable annoyances; and a con- centrated mind upen a day of better ‘The force of personal thought and conduct is not givem the attention which it merits. The value of good manners and kind words and patience and for- bearance when it is 2 severe test up- | on our nerves, is simply inestimable in improving conditions which seem to be unhearable. Brutality and cow- ardice vield to the self contral which ignores a broil and radiates sunshire Meanness cannot live forever in the presence of good nature. It can only thrive where it is bringing others te its own level. Do you kmow that some pecple have no better conception of religion than doing their duty, just as if it was labor instead of love that works wonders. No one ‘can imagine an angel doing the service of the Lord from a feeling of duty, for delight in the knowledge of love and good works, the desire to have others realize the benefits of them, must be the heaven- ly prompting of the soul. It tcok a hard-fisted mind to conceive of a sense of duty having anything win- ning about it. It is when the Christ- ian soul is extending in gladness the blessings which have come from Heaven to it that other blessings flow in. It is love in motion that prevents stagnation and broadens the influence of those who believe in Him. The true Christian must live in_ gladness, for therp is no reason why he_ should have forebodings since the Father's will done in him knows no such thing as fail. The Auduben secieties do not suc- ceed very well in enlisting the women to_abandon dead-bird trimmings for millinery ornament; and perhaps it is, as a wit proclaims, because “they caré more for the bird on their hats than they do for a whole yard full of poul- try.” The Wwoman who loves to hear a live bird sing and to know some- thing of its individuality and habits, readily joins in the andeavor to save useful birds from extermination to meet the demands of vanity. Indif- ference, which is akin to ignorance, Is Chargeable with all sorts of wrong doing in life; and it is guilty of per- petuating this crime against bird-lifa. which is really a crime against man, for without the presence of bird- werkers man couid not live on the earth. Some day wisdom will pr vail and the insectivorous and scav- enger birds, and the song-birds, will be valued by man at their true worth. ‘The sweet pea is to be the corona- tion flower this year, and a London newspaper has offcred a thousand pounds sterling for a bouquet of the very best examples grown in Great Britain; and this is the largest sum of money ever offered for a ‘bouquet of any flowers. The sweet pea has been coming to the front rapidly ever since it was Spencerized, for Spencer found a way te strengthen the weak colors, to enlarge the petals and to give the wings a ruffled edge; and it may be posaible that the Spencer pea. | take this great premium of $5,000, which does’' not mean that the man who has done so much to improve this race of flowers will get it, but some one, who with his improved seed knows how to coax these flowers to do their very best. This also gives the sweet pea a boom among the flow- er growers of the world. That “murder will out” has. been acepted by the people for untold ages; but less is said about the fact that character will out, never mind how hard we struggle to hide our true selves. This is why we have ona esti- mate of ourselves, and our friends, or our neighbors, have another. He is 2 true thinker who proclaim “It is what T am in my closet in the dark, that sings out loua above all my vo- litional deeds, For none of the forces supposed to mold or sway me, such as argument, entreaty, or command, singing, praying or preaching, is to be compared in strength to the irra- diation of personal influence. It ean- not be concealed: it leaks out, no mat- ter how hard we may try to bottle it up. The most useful acts are those 1 do in secret from unselfish motives— the greatest wrongs I commit are the unclean or dishonest or cowardly thoughts I harbor secretly.” This is what makes the command: “Know Thysclf,” of the utmeost importance. It strange how fool notions often become popular notions because of the persopality of those indulging in them. It is not uncommon’ for one class of self-assuming folks to look down upon another class of less as- suming peaple. It is the one way weak human minds have of showing signs of importance; and at th esame time they entertain a notion that tne folks they look down upon will ilook np to them. although there is no evidence that the two clasgesa s upen diiferent levels. Tf there was ever a scneme to attain an end more silly than to expect to win respect by a show of disesteem, na one has been able %et to discover it. The fruit of superiority is not vain airs but ex- celling quality, There is no doubt that meny human beings by their conduct lénd foree to the theory that they are of simian descent. RBut it is our conceptions of man which make or mar us, so we should all have a s | little they amount to, how unexpansi- ‘we see that it Easter n:ow—flurry * to delay. -the breeding rap! orb'as mat o also _be again h the middle of the reco: eeks break in th ing morth. e My most interesting. duv- bird- wise in many & day ‘was from North V\rcm;lstockulo Putnam. on M;’m 2;1 At the outset a White-headed eagle paasede over ,the Pnlne meadows fly- ing slowly and i . Whither bound, and from ‘wi , who can -tell ? This is the second eagle seen in Woodstock in ten yeafs. There was a doubtful re; of baldheads breed- ing a few miles north of us. A little way south of Pond below Glasgo they are: somel . seen, and are fairly commen in summer on 3:? Th‘a-ntxe,l below o ’tlns‘ s point 1 had my first.glimpse season of the - white marsh hlwk. often seen last of May: On Easter Sunday # view of this albino strip of meadow amd mousing care- fully over all our upland, It goes without sayi] that I covet ' this heuumulmhu er for 'my collection, but would not Driving by the ‘}m‘x the whip at balf a do birds on_the least a hund u black cloud from the other M! the wall, 15 feet from the team. It was the finest sight of 'purple grackles I've seen since I ustd to raid the rookery in the maple and savin swamp east of Chuckymount, on Fishers Island. m‘rh: East Wopditook' hu‘:\eh of ent one e .m wfi.‘ s were - le under which-I drove M; uad theY did not fly when I counted and SUNDAY MORNING TALK EMPTY LIVES , “Her life is altogether empty.” So spoke sympathetically a R bor of a woman from Whom in quick suc- cession had been (dua three very dear to ‘her, an aged ther, -an invalid husband, and & Htfie child, all of whom were dependent upon her and to whom she minstered wm\ the devo- tion and constaney of _which. only noble womanhood 1s capable. And now with all three gone it did nvpsar that despite her hig and well-furnish- ed house, there was little left for her ;n do and nothing left r'or her to en- oy This is one kind ef an empty but pitdable as it may ieem, it is 1 finitely preferrable: to a life that has never been anything else but empty. The woman just referred to had at least the comfort of recidling the days when her home, her hgnds and her heart were full. But sepie. women and some men have always led empty lives. Nothing b8s heen emptied out | of them, because there was nothing in them to empty. They have existed rather than lived. They have simply scratched the surfa of real life. Singularly enough those persons are to be found in two widely contrasted spheres of activity. In remote cow try places whither books and visitors seldlom ge, where the Hmitation of poverty is keenly felt, we find empty and vacant lives. But I consider them | ne more vacant or iname than certain lives lived in the midst of the city’s glare and excitement, the lives of the butterflies of fashion, the people who must have each day some fresh e citement, who dare not stop and think about themselves or others, who are absorbed in_ superficlalities and arti- ficialities. They may not realize the emptiness of their lives until some sudden bereavement or reverse of fortune comes, but they grow old rapidly, owing to the swiftness of their pace, and often before théy reach mid- dle life they themselves reéalize how few are their inward resources, how ble they are, how emsily spared from the circle of their so-ealled friends. But there is not-much to choose be- tween the empty life of the ignorant and narrow ysuon in the country and the empty life of the giddy devotee of fashionable society in the city But empty lives of every sort need not remain in -that cendition. They can, if they will, open up four sources of enrichment. One is the field of knowledge. Never was the world so full “of iptere-mu' ‘and instructive books and periodicals; never were libraries so numerous. or- their custo- dians so anxious to e ser- viceable to the ‘world; néver were there more inducements ;to choose some specialty and prosecute it: his- tory, biography, ethics or edonomics. Then there the fnnm-tmq field | of one’s ewn personality. Yeu must| have some specialty, something that: vou like to do and can do fairly well, | some taste or talent which, jf you mn but cultivate will yvield you end your | friends much happiness and profit, You may have to utill and sacrifice some other thi the cultivation of yeur speck: nelp fili up your depleted life. There is the field of good will te others. A healthy human interest is a great preventive of ennui. This does not mean a prying curlosity or a dis- position to gossip abeut ome's neigh- bors, but a hearty interest .in folks as folks, in individuals with whom you have to do dey by chance acqma.lnunm hy ‘When you really. besl people, to care for t‘helr nowth in the best things, then your own life is cor- respondingly enlarged. There is a room called réverence in everyone’s heart. Some of us hard- ly know.that it ig there. With others the custom for years hos been to keep the room utterly cloged but some day open the deor and explore a bit. forces wbich if given )Iu sunlight and ! a _chance to expand, will guicken your] wholg he rnnlu ou more truly a len your - life and” 1EE It tntn tdhvvbip with iu maker. Whepn that » which i the supreme avut that h-m:e ul liting an to any wan, emv(y lite vrm lm-u passed away for- You will be sure to find influences andi : Town there ‘were one hundred Po-mg.lsom. of the Taftyllle lot lows Hill to Norwich Town | Lisbon Green, an and Jiwott Clty e grosbealks at e scouts from | o company st Tnl’tville. Mr. un wbm !ho w-quonnoc school, w featuring Bird 'l'anan.ndu , may have W slides ot the wards who bave been under his eye so long. A cock on a roadside .'fke. ther along the dislike at ruffed grouse was budding & mile fur- h:{‘; lhow:: his be\nz disturbed breakfast, and at first would not be rove the flushed wi and lw down over the lained furiher flight,"and his ruff swelled up till it looked like an Elizabethan col- lar. He was clearly mad as a March hare, actually hissed, and acted as a hen grouse will at times in defense of her tiny chicks. It is not generally known that budding birds are unfit had bad The Poli Nat. C. th Play for food. We a cass of blood-poisoning in our family from FOR THEIR TWENTIETH WEEK "Will Present’ 2 Goodwin’s Big Success, In Mizzouri by Augustus Thomas' Souvenirs for fhe Ladies Monday Afternoon What Happened to Jones Playol-s eating a partridge budding on hemlock, thet had been and the late ‘Mr. James Bussey came near dying for the same reasonm, Near the end of the drive, in the edge of the Mat- thewson larches, zen singers. Except single lhlike, this is all the win- music we have had, till robins and song am:trvl burst into song. I was su mourning doves a to sze two mile epart: it seemed 100 early for them, and I had always seen them in pairs on arrival But committes on game, and Paine, we freed thh-ty-flx l. The birds grey quail wen-:‘nwhted ideal boxes holdlnl nine cocks and nine h, h-w' absut the \ April 10, with Mr. Charles chaizman Hununn-n in eur home quail of the house M. Trvin ol these are brought in eac] Xes and water in fine ted tumln.- looge. 08i - instruction for | g riaps are under the covers, and by putting light brush on the burlap when the covers are re- moved, the birds escape slowly and ‘witheut ln]u,ry traps, they As they fly from Lh e e larger than bobwhuas. with red side stripes and the same rocket-like fifght as the California peinted partridge. We opened one box in oxc«llent q\ufl- cover .on the Paine farm, eighteen lusty birds back of the Q\ufi Trap, where the covey of hobwhites wintéred well. We have some hopes of their breeding in spite of the pre- diction at the village. “You'll never hear from them again,” said an old farmer. after “The cateh most of them,” said a trap the rest,” liberation I hawks and owls will nr. flushed one, last evening one came in the house yard, four of the first lot were seen togeth- er in the public read, and two of our covey on the fifth day we saw on a cross road. ' Daily I scatter ‘wheat and oats, and a® I write these notes I hear the pecullar cry north, east, and west of the bungalow. Both coveys arz under surveillance. and if they - survive -and Increasewillbe im- mune from gunners for three years. More than ‘a_nine days’ wonder are tha thick-billed vigitors from beyond the Rockies who are still with ns but not outstaying their welcome. Barnes of Lacon, Ti ‘So far as I ¥mow the evening grosbeak has never been heard in this country, M. me: Mr. writes seen or neither last winter nor et any time” Frank Blake Websater of Hyde FPark, bird-man, who carried the veteran the Gallina- mos glant mru:duv to Baron Roths- child, wrote me, February 24 0 “We have not heard of grosbeaks be- ing seen here nor has any ome men. tioned them in our corre: ! From the John Lewis Chil and Library of Natural History Floral Park, iny bulletin heard of the Long Island this wintes ndence.” Museum at Y., 1 have the follow- 1 have neither seen nor appearing on 1 quote freely frem Arthur A. Dean's letter of March .19, as he well describes the actions of the birds of the Oceident here, a 1ong chapter of whose life his- tory will b written in_the east this Yyear. “One morning, about a month 280, a flock of sixteen evening beaks came into an apple tree south of our hoyse on Spring street, ielson. whole fleck. was tescltnil ground near the house, hop freedom upon the deorstep w! a few crumbs; busy with their stubbe ing something from the ground. were with us thirty minutes, Dan- thin a few minutes the upon the ln‘ with Rere werd ‘were mostly bills wrench- They The but_th following day they appeared again; and have been seen in thig neighbor- hood about a month. Twenty-gix were on the groun under a cedar tree across the street from us on Friday, the 17th inst. 'They manifested no | fear of teams or pedestrians, and have been observed by a large number of | bird students and bird lovers. We capnot wonder that the hirds ! waited a long again, since they were 50 meraci. east lessly shot in 1890 for cellections, time before coming But as they appeared in greater numbers | this time, were made more welcome, | came earlier and remained longer, does it not seem likely that they will not wait a generation before reappearing; and if these birds bring their younsg and the eastern instinct becomes her- edlwy. it also seems possible that a Jar yearly eastern migration wul e place. and we will welcome .our 'prasent visitors every winter. It is not in the nature of reciprocit; —the exchange we have made wi the Oregonians. For their brilliant bird, we sent a useless, songless vag- abond—a desecrator of bird homes. “a disintegrator - of equine exuviae.” (Cees.) But, after all is said and done, the chief charm to us of thi§ mnorth- western bird its is novelty, days its pla‘z here will be more than its congener—our own rose- home bird of more beautiful plumage, of far finer.song, and, speak- ing by the record, of much greater service to us. $10,000,000 to See One Play. The death of the veteran actor, Den- man 'n.omgaon, ‘Jowhua Whitcomb" in “The country as known all over the Old Homestead,” brings ont estimates of the gross earnings of that play. ‘which run ag high as $10,000,000. believed by some who are familiar with { cover all the ties. Denman Thompson and * gros- | MATINEES 5c 'utur- BREED THEATRE [tvimme OHAS. McNULTY, Losses “THE FAITHFUL INDIAN" Miss Ethel Laws, Soprano. Picture. ~ etage affairs that no gmaller sum would | tickets #old for OId | Homestead performances. However that may be, it is certain that the earnings of the play have been enormous, and the end is not yet. All the money paid for seeing a dozen plays of the sensational type which | are rated as successes could not bal- ance t,he account with “The Old Home- | In the light of these enormous profits with a play which exalts the homely wirtues and depicts the sorrows and joye of plain, = everyday Americans, there is no denying the possibility of making such drama pay richly. It has to be done in the right way and by the right actors, but it has vast op; rtug{& e Homestead” have not exhausted the fleld, nor have their rivals and follow- ers.—Cleveland Leader. dandruff, itching, falling hair, brittle hair—splitting ends— and these show the hair is not - properly nourished and all in~ dicate approaching baldness— begin now with And Hair Tonic, §0c. and $1.00 and prevent loss of the hair, but first thoroughly cleanse the lmr and scalp with Coke AMPOO. Duilghtfull efreshing. Large bottle, 25c. 4t All Druggists. THE KELLS CO, 1 Joknes St., Newborgh, N, ¥ On Exhibition A fine assortment of the Latest Styles | in Millinery for Spring and Summer | wear, at MRS. G, P. STANTON’S, No. 52 Shetuclket 8t, I BREED TO THE BEST The fast pacing Stallion, GOLD BIRD, 2.21%, will make @ short season Conn. For terms and pedigres call or ad- dress B. MAY NARD. Lebanon, Cenn. ' JOSEPH BRADFORD, Book Binder. Blank Baoks Mada and Ruled to Ordsr 108 BROADWAY. Telephons 3% . - Rose Bowling Alleys, LUCAS: HALL, In ten | 43 Shatucke® Straet. . &3 c OTONR Pren AMERICAN HOUSE, Warrell & Sanderson. Props. T It is in the stud at my stable, Lebanon, Songs and Tunes of Long Ago WITH ORCHESTRA MRS. GROSVENOR ELY at the plana Beautiful Entertainment at Park Church Parish House, Saturday Afternoon, April 22nd, at 3 o'clocks Tableaux illustrating old-fashioned songs and poems. The latter read by Miss Alice Cogswell. Prizes in the GRAB BAG. Flowers, cake and candy for sale. Tickets 25 cents- Children undes 12 years 1j cents. apriswy MUSIC. - P, C. OEER TUNER . 123 Prespect 8¢, Tel 611 Norwish C& | IF YOU WANT A FIRST CLASS PIANO, get a SHONINGER through ‘WHITE, THE TUNER, 48 South A St, Taftville. E————————————— PLUMBING AND .GASFITTING. JOHNSON & BENSON, 20 Central Avenue. SLATE ROOFING Metal Corni a Gu 2} omml.:uflmu‘au.“m attended to. Sanitary Plumbing A peep into an up to date bathroom is only less refreshing than the bath itself. During the summer you will the more look to the bath for bodily comfort, I will show you samples and plans of the porcelain and other tubs and give you estimates for the worlk of putting them in+in the best manner from a sanitary standpoint—and guar~ antee the entire job. J. F. TOMPKINS, 67 West Main Street The Vaughn Foundry Co. + IRON CASTINGS i F@.fi"‘. E L F"fram S. F. GIBSON Tin and Sheet Metal Worker Agent for Richardson and Boymton Furnaces. 65 West Main Street, Norwich, Cenn, T, F. BURNS, Heaiing and Plumbing, 92 Frankiin Stres!. WM. F. BAILEY {Successor to A. T. Gerdnery Hack, Livery and Boarding Stable 12-14 Bath Street. HORSE CLIPPING A SPECIALTY. AUTOMOBILE TO RENT. Telaohon- Lol 5 | SPECIAL RATES to Thestre Troupes Traveling Men. ete. Rivery copnscted v.ltwm STRIET. 'm ym want to Ddl vour busie m

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