Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, April 29, 1911, Page 4

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Borwich Gulletin and &au@i:f. 115 YEARS OLD. price, 13¢ & werk; S0e a & yemr. m Bartorr Hoowa: 51 Fob Seice, 3570, Buflfdiag. Telephone 210. P e Nerwich, Saturday, April 29, 1911. —————— AN ODD FELLOWS’' DAY IN JUNE. The Odd Fellows all over Connec- ticut are centemplating a celebration and ceremony at Waterbury in June, when thé new Odd Fellows’ monument is to be dedioated Waterbury is getting ready te wel- come all the members of the craft who may eome and The Republican tees having the affair In charge are| half realized, the celebration that llly-l will be ome of the mest notable in vears, although in point of numbers| the guests may not be as sireng as on| some past occasiens. This is anether | strong piece of evidence that Water-| bury is fast taking its place among the Important oities of .the cowntry | and its improved railroad. facili- | tieg and other counvenisnces are none| too soen completed or much beyond| the tests that they may be put to at| any #me. “The importance that the city is hegimning to piay a gathering place js mot without its responsibility. That these who come here as stran- | zess mey go away with good impres- | sions and speak well of the city. it| behooves evesy individual inhabitant to de his best to maintain the town’: g00d name amnd well being.” The cenvemtion city has te cultis vate & good deal of style, Its imprfl!-! ness is more deeply realized by | the warm heart and glad hand than-ip any other way; but the comeliness of | a ity is of importance as well as| the ecordiality and hospitality of its/ people. ! GIVE HIM TIME. James H, MaeDonald, highway com- missioner of the state of Connec- commissioner of the state of Connec- | ticut, freely admit that he does not| know how te build a macadam road| that will stand the traffic of touring cars from thirty to sixty horsepower zoing at a speed of frem twenty-five to fifty miles am hour. No other state highway ecommissioner does. Commissioner MacDonald’s roads, where they have not been subjected to excessive and unandlcipated wear | and tear, speak o well for him that his friends do not need to waste words | upon this point. Ths roads he has| bullt in mile sections In most of the| towns of Comnecticut have been the. object lessons for fourteen years which have made good-road building | popular in thie state. He inaugurated this democratic and educational sys- tem and has ne reasgon to be ashamed | of s record if the governor does de- ciare that he cannot grade a road by | chemieal analysis. Those who know Mr. MacDonald are aware that he has built a road on paper thgt delighted the road builders of America, Great Britain and Eu- rope and made him the recognized head for years of the Good Roads as- soclation ef America. Well, we have to admit this is quite a feat, if auto- mebiles, or even milk wagons, can do no business over this kind of a road; but this has mnade Connecticut known on two comtinents as a master state in this work. We all know that the commissioner doesn’t lead weil in the hands of de- signing politicans, that he ereates op- positlon by looking owt sharply for the state’s interests as agalnst private interests, and makes enemles of con- tractors who plan to do the state treasury more carefully than the; to perfect a good job. To this of & contractor he ean address himself in fifteen languages, and we will not| attempt 1o tell to what extent he may have reat the air. We have no doubt he can grade ¢ road in Latin drain it in French and! touch it off in the language of Tim-| buctoo, As he is the patentee for a| Ane road metal, we suspect that he! knows something of the binding ele- ments which his exceilency thinks | state rodds are =0 sadly in need of| and if he is just given time he will surely be binding roads that will stand not emly the greatest wear and tear! but chemical analys The republicans did their duty to| the state right well when they re- fused to appoint a successor to him. THOSE WHO STOOD BY LORIMER It is not strange that Lorimer i%| being urged to resign to save from | exposure the men who gave him ma- terlal aid; and he is likely to yield| i0 the pressure as new facts come to light. H One of the latest disclosures is the | statement that the eight vwnm(!uu'! enators who voted for the retention of Lotimer bad, during the tariff session broken their platform pledge and vot-| ed for the maintenance of duties upon | lumber And it w fdward Hineg president of the tiopal Lumber Manufacturers’ asscciation, who coly lected, it is charged. the $100,000 bri- | bery fund with which Lorimer's elecs| tion was bought. It is clear enough that hé has littie chance of yindication if his case again opened in the senate, and canngt be blind. His resignation see: to be in order, alth slow, he o igh it may come a defeat of American iroops by the Canadians in the war of 1512 at the| cotonation, but it has heen eliminated 1t meed not have baen omitted on Am- eriea’s account, says an exchange, since we are satisfied with the re- sults of that war. It wi the anti-treating law that put in motlon the recall at Tacoma; | and the opposition are destined to| win out. The recall appears to be the | fulerum for every sort of trouble. Tie friends of Senator Lorimer who raised the swag want all the news- papers wiped off the earth. Disre- spectors of law and merals never| speak well of the press. “A Leyal Canadian” says in the Montreal Star that reciprocity cer- tainly meanms annexation, If it gets a% agreeable as that all round who will there be to object? s | Baltimore, and he was there for three | using it without payi | and is getling a good deal of the pie. | | to defend the industries of Connecticut Nowadays the box office seems to be the main consideration and even the programmes, although filled with ad- vertising, are sold at dime, tén cents,” to spectators, along with the popcorn and peanuts. Several years ago the menageries of all circuses be- gan to dwindle, but gorgeous page: ants were added as new and stunning features which the old one-ring, bare- back-rider circus did not possess. Now the pageant is abolished; the races are spiritless and prearranged, nearly all of the acts in which real rivalry took place are gone and nothing but novel- ties on the slack wire and the aerial trapezes have been added to sustain the interest. The clowns are the same painted, slapstick clowns that the old ‘agon show displayed, with the dif- ference that the slapstick nowadays is loaded with a cartridge and the mechanical contrivances have a few new if not comical effects. Everywhere the pruning hand of economy is shown | and little of the old spontaneous zip and go which were the making of the circus remain. Where is the old thrill. ing competition between the tumblers as to the number of horses they could dive over? Where are the old jumping contests of dogs and horses? The, circus is today nothing but the crud circds of twenty vears ago enlarged and tamed. Three rings have been| added and the tiers of seats for spe tators are enormously greater, but the | momentum depended upon to fill the box office is that of the old time clr-l cus, SPIRITUALISM TO PEACE. Tt will interest the Spiritualists in| eastern Connecticut to learn that Ro geli Fernandez Guell, who until r centiy was Mexican consul at Bal more, will endeavor to bring about peace in Mexico through the influence | of various spiritualistic societies of | which he is ome of the prime movers. | Advices from Mexico state that Senor | Guell has been sent as an emissary to | Madero, who is also a strong flgure in | the spiritualistic societies. According to the information given out at thef Mexican consulate yesterday, it would| seem that Guell will play upon Ma dero’s passions and thereby sway his | thoughts. The societies of the spirit-| ualists in Mexico have among them | some of the most prominent and| learned men, They will, it is said, all| concentrate their minds on peace, and | then peace—well, peace will then be| casier to achieve. While Senor Guell PROMOTE | | was consul in vears, he was in constant communi- cation with spiritualistic societies in Mexico and in Spain. Spain has quite as many of the societies as Mexico, and it is said that all of them com- bined have quite an influence in the government and in the affairs of men. King Alfonso is said to be the presi- dent of one of the societies. The information received at thej Mexican consulate says that Guell has | already secured passports to go into northern Mexico, where he will talk to Madero and seek to sway him with the thoughts of the rest of the psy- chists in Mexico. By this means it is hoped. to finally convice the rebel leader that he should influence his followers to agree to an immediate peace agreement. EDITORIAL NOTES. ‘When vou resolve to look for hap- piness, just call to mind that it is here—not elsewhere! Happy thought for today: You cannot give a hint to some folks— they will not take it. The Mexicans shot Douglas, Arizona, on to the map;: but they are not plan- ning to shoot it off again. Canada does not appear to realize that most of its independence is made possible by its relation to this great republic. A top-lofty Vermont congressman | refers to the advocacy of reciprocity by the papers of that state as beat- ing the tom-tom! The master of the Nationsl Grange| is being told that a majority of the| farmers of the northwestern states | are for reciprocity Capt. Peter C. Hains is tired of lifs in Sing Sing, and there is a desper- ate endeavor on foot to get this as- | sassin out of prison. The recall out west is the source of great fun for the voters, and they are any attention 1o costs, which are piling up, Governor F ss of Massachusetts has written 22 messages, and the 23d is| expected any day. In this he ap- pears to be without precedent. s noted that Dixie is more de- mined than ever to control the po litical pie counter in Washington, has The government recovered its| title to’ two lion acres of forest land in central Oregon, so the timber| agitation has proven beneficial to the| people. Out in Omaha they are discussing| “Are whiskers more of a detriment to | a man than a bald head?’ A fine| theme for country debating societies| next winter, — i There is no suspicion that Senator Lorimer’s tear glands have run dry.!| The report of the committee of the| liinois legislature is expected to start| them up again. | The Omaha Bee says unless there is a fall-down somewhere, Omaha booked for six elections in the next! x months. As a new style this does not look inviting. As Caanon Views Hill. In a peevish moment the other day “Uncle Joz" Cannon fired this at Con- gressman Hill: “I haven't got my head filied with statistics at every angle which I use at cne session of congress and to at- tack all the other industries of the United States at anothe m-" Cannon s nat alw: accountable for what he says when he is excited, and his attack on Hill will be viewed only from its ridiculous side. Sensible people will not believe for a minute that Congressman Hill is of =uch narrow mind that he would be- ve Connecticut to be greater than mainder of the United States. It is not necessary to rise to the defense of onr ngressman—his record has al- reads aitended to ihat—New Haven Palladivm | he is a wage slave cannot be 2 happy iy b sense. of a keener Wi the fear that you may have nd out. When he not perfected trick, the conceit of satisfaction not soothe him into the semse of smartness which comes from ha done you. He cannot see why he fi ed in your case when he succeeded In others by similar methods; and he cannot find out ‘was Keen=| ness or only b foiled him. Get a rogue in.a quan- dary regarding the ability and keen- ness of those he would fleece, and you have him in the worried class and in mental distress. Do not' try to' let him know how you got onto him, for if you do he will rscognize your weakness and eventually show you where you made a mistake. There is power in keeping one's own counsel— silence where one is expected to be provoked to words, is a manifestation of power which never fails to surprise and confuse those who would be bet- ter pleased if silence was broken. The robin in his search for the fresh worm is more interesting to me than than the robin who is looking after the early worm. It is in these days of ground-breaking and raking, worm distributing operations, that he fol- lows the raker, the digger and the plowman, and gets his' reward. black cap and gray breast are not as bright as after a moult; but his_sharp eye and the pert tipping of his head as he comes near, as much as to say: “I know you! wouldn’t hurt me!” wins a warm place | in sympathetic hearts. He casts a careless glance at the dog and mnever turns his back to the cat; and has the air of one who realizes that the air is | his highway and those poor grovelling | creatures cannot follow him in his| flight. And each year it is the same old robin. The robins are homing birds; and for twenty years a robin has been known to nest in one place. | Where robins find conditions to their | liking they come year after year, and are really old friends. There time for finding out that it is easy to get the kind of help that you de not need. The evervday laborer seems to owe his lot to his own heedlessness. | There is one little thing that he has, not had ground into his soul which | would have made life different every | day to him: and that is: “Whatever you undertake to do, do it well—what | I do for others I will do as well or better than I would do it for myself!” the man or wom-| an who is resolved to do every- thing undertaken well and conscien- tlously and acts upon this conviction | is ever in demand. These kind of | men and women are the kind the world | is suffering for today; and this kind | are not floaters in the world of .in-| dustry—they are in constant demand. Hard luck is oftener traceable to heed- lessness .than to anything else. The person who harbors the thought that is no time like the spring-| worker, or find joy in his ‘work. Cheerful thoughts “and correct ideas of life are great promoters of success. It is easy to work against one's self. | often wonder if there is a streak of yellow in me: and I must say that in this direction I catch myself being rather suspicious of myself. You ma not think it is good to be a suspect in | your own eves; and yet, you will have | to admit that this is better than be- | ing a suspect in the eyes of another. | If this vellow streak meant gold in-! stead of measly qualities such as the vellow dog has, we should not feel so nervous about it. Some folks get so go0d that they think they are near- angels; but when they get their fur stroked the wrong way most of them appear to be near something else. We can flatter ourselves into foolinshness a. great deal easier than any one else| can flatter us toward fmbecility. 1 have often thought if man is but a| little lower than the angels, the angels | must have been on a mission of mer- ey when this relation was discovered —it was only temporary; but it has been made the most of. It is better to be a suspect in your own mind| than in the eyes of a policé officer. There is a woodpecker building nest, perhaps, in an old tree nearby and it is musical to hear his constant rat-tat-tat! on the dry and not very punky big limb in which he is drilling a hole and carving a mest. He is a model of industry, for he works with the steadiness of a steam drill and not with the irregularity of a lot of hu-| mans at the rock-pile; but how many | hours a day he puts in I do not know. His rat-tat-tat! is to be heard in the morning: and it is to be heard in the | late afternoon, with not a shade of | difference in the frequency or per- sistency of the blows; and it has been going on for more than a week, now. | It might annoy some people; but 1f| annoys no one who feels an interest in the wonderful things going on about them. This is the Hairy woodpecker, a great driller of holes where grubs are plentiful; and perhaps it is food rather than a nest that he so stead- ily works for in this city tree. He pulls the borers out of the wood and helps the tree bear smoother and bet- ter fruit. With all the rest of the world we| are complaining because April has not | been as balmy as usual,—because jts mornings - have seemed to symbolize almost anything but youth and hope. It doesn’t make much difference how man regards April since the month never fails in its purpose of opening the way for fairer and more flowery May. We never miss the haze, the flow the bird-songs or the bon- fires of April; or the electric storm or the lightning, or the rainbow. Jack| Frost Is usually in April's budget for he yields slowly to the sun’s increas- ing power and melting and revivifying | influences. The lilies will sprout and | the dandelions and the rhubarb grow; in fact, “all the host of growing things | feel a stirring as of wings, and are| wakened from their dreams by the! warm and sunny gleams of Apr sunshine in the air;—Springtime’ spiendor everywher We have the! spring scents of earth and grass, of leaf and rain. If nature is a little be- hind in some things she may be ahead | in others. v What is common sense, anyway? It never has in it the feeling, “I am better than thou!” You couldn't shoot a bit of common sense into that | little five-worded conceit with a rifle it has been defined as the wisdom | which is drawn from common things; because what keeps happening has more of the juice of the universe in it than things that happen only once in a while. Somehow common sensec | and horse sense have become some- what confused—they are not synony- mous. Common sense is apt to prompt the right action at the right time; but no one claims this for horse sense. Horse sense is rather uncer- tain when the animal suddenly con- fronts a new experience. According to one writer, common sense is in time to become judge and jury of all things. “Science, religion, art, gov-| ernment.” he savs.” “will be judged by | it ahd nothing will stand that cannot adjust itseif 1o the siow, silent, mer- ciless cri m of common sense.” It 100ks as if the vas destined to | recognize it by T woman who is unsatisfactory as a mother is the one who is most S0 as a_mother-in-law. Perhaps there is no one place on’ earth where it pays 80 well 10 mind one’s ewn business as at the point where voung people go to home-byjlding for themselves, They are it, and are pleased to have things | and they were. considered suitaj sheets | just quoted is this: {'boys and girls gets. ‘and lier as she mittens, defending herself. ing that one row .Of equivalent to several in fl k2 ages of war dwelt | re brought to strange st to provide .for their: story was told of an southern woman wi . her husband a pair of trousers in ‘tinje of need, being unable to furnish in any other way. She had plenty of cotton rolls from _which bhe (yarn could be made, and her crochet-needle and ingenuity did the rest. . We at the north had to pay high prices for everything made from cot- One calico print dress I had all that tim e price of which was 60 cents a and 'poof, thin stuft it was at that, not better cgnn is bought now for five cents. A few scraps still remain in the house, . and are kept as a reminder of those times. Another, bought & year or two ‘ear~ lier for another member of the fam- ily, was 36 cents a yard. We feit ex- tremely well-dressed in such A enterprising was, e for and ‘pil- also, and - Jaund all- occasions. = Cotton ! low-cases were a luxury, very carefuily handledyand ed that they t last as long as possible. The schoolgirl, of the pres- ent time would scorn to. carry the coarse handkerchiefs which we were compelled to use. The high prices extended to. food products, ¢oo, and rose even beyond those of recent times, which have caused so much comment. 3 Then as now, there were those who did not scruple ‘o make money for themselves from others’. . ort. Then as now, cheating the govern- ment seémed an allowable - practice, and we heard of water carted to the soldiers in kerosene barrels, of uni in spite of tender care. 1 m:yp there was no returning brother, | or father, or son, and the happy faces | % rejoiced n:ul:dtl\e mourners’ sorrow more keenly Our city sent a goodly number of heroes to the cause, and gave hex share of patriotic workers at home whose never-tiring industry did so much to furnish aids and comfort to those in camp and hospital, and proved that patriotism and devotion to a rightsous cause will nerve many a feable arm to strong deeds of love and self-sacrifice. So long ago all this seems! To many of the children in our schools, ome war is like another, and little dif- tam'ie exists in their minds between Revolutionary times and those which I have been recalling, but to those of us who were old enough to realize any of the horrors of war with its anxie- ties, and to rejoice in its successes, there will alwaye be a fixed &l).d defl- nite meaning to the words: “at the f t! ‘war.’ et sin) AN IDLER. their own way; and they are going to have their own way if they have to fight for it; and they are entitled to have it and to profit by their mistakes as have their parents. . Three-fourths of the friction in family life is unnec- essary; and the other fourth on close examination will be found to be pre- ventible. It is hard to become Con- verted to the fact that no two pairs of eyes sees things in the same light— no two minds form exactly’ the same | opinion; and it is a nice trait to.be tolerant of one another’s opinfons it you feel even that you cannot respect them. The widest .Almhronce; e often founded wupon incere convic- tions. Butting-in is a shameful habit that relationships er . experience, or age, cannot justify upon.any rational grounds. SUNDAY MORNING TALK STARTS—POOR' AND OTHERWISE. Three commercial itravélers were tellin% what days each liked best. Said one of them frankly, “I hate Monday; I'm a bad starter.” He voiced ‘a feel- ing common to many. Few enjoy the first contact in the morning their feet with the bare floor. -Even the practiced Jiterary worker @reads the first sentence with which he must be- gin his article. ' Not a few .shrink from the fresh starts that have to be made from time to time in-life as one passes from one school into another, or takes up a new job, or resumes the old routine after a delightful end ab- sorbing vacation. “To their credit be it said that “bad starters” not infrequently brace up as they feel the irspirations and challenge of the day or of the task and often reach the day's end having accom- plished a considerable means of profit- able work. To them the old adage: “A bad beginning makes a good end- | ing” applies, and it would be distress- ing indeed if those of us who have faltered, or possibly fallen, in the ear- lier stages of the battle of life, were not able to rally our forces, retrieve our blunders and perhaps at last en- ter. the enemy's citadel with" flying colors. ¢ But a better adage - than ‘the ome “Well is half done.” Theoretically at least the runner who gets the best start ought to win the prize.. At any rate, more attention is being paid today. than ever before to starting children right in their life careers. ‘Not only- philan- thropists but hard-headed -business men, sensible of the fact that the chil- dren are the greatest asset any tion can have, are demanding for them fresh air, good schools, proper play- grounds, wholesome ' food, freedom from contaminating influences and the right moral and religious instruction. Far-sighted men are seeing that the | future of the nation depends upon the good start each new generation of ‘America. is what it is today largely because of the char- i acter of the persons who landed at Piymouth Rock and Jamestown, start. ing on_these shores a new nation. So when the start has to be made afresh, the very situation itself chal- lenges a man to show himself a good rather than a bad starter. Certain considerptions will aid him_at this point. If he has to get up early, the chances are that others, too, in vari ous places are also by force of cireum- stances early risers. Moreover, if starting calls for the 2xertfon of more effort-than does the mere continuance in the routine he once established, let him remember that men who have at- tained fame, fortune,. influence, su cess of any kind, may. bhave had, to nerve themselves at the outset in or- der to put forth every ounce of energy they possessed. Starting is soon over; why make such a fuss about it, pro- vided vou know what way you ara going. and what you will find at the end of the roa:” Why linger “tremb- ling on the brink?’ it and have it over. It will come easier next.time. LRSS A All of which is & parable of the Christian life. Here. ‘the bad start, while not necessurily irretrievable, is somewhat of a handicap. The Bettdr | | Da- | not you have started, and leaves other people in doubt, too By starting strongly, by clearing away _entirely from the old moorings, if they are holding you back, you at once accom- plish two important things: first, you a more distinct idea of the goal B toward which vou are traveling; sec- D:vdv. g'ou uomeyat once into fellowship with Him, who is mmne your helpful companion all along the way. > THE PARSON. Sundayisms. You can't get down on your knzes and pray “thy kingdom come” and rent your building for a saloon. You can't get down and pray “thy kingdom come” and keep somebody on the side. % You can’t pray “thy kingdom come when outlawed debts are ch: against you on & merchant’s books. T'd like to be able to yank a string and pull off of you men all the duds lthat aren’t paid for. Some of you wouldn’t have anything left on except a celluloid collar and your socks. Some people pray as though they expected nothing, and they afe never disappointed. I'm surprised God is doing as wall as He is with the bunch He has to work with. Get down on your knees and tell God just what you are end there will be nothing in heaven too good for you. Some of you women are so puffed up with pride you look iike a poisoned pUup. 4 Jacob, that old stock raisar of 6,000 years ago, would make a good twen- tieth century stock swindler: Halt of the paople in the churches have never been converted, and they do not know what religious exparience is. A man may know the long and the short catechism and the 389 articles and all the dogmas and creeds under the sun and yet be so close to hell that the devil could reach out and touch him. Some people on their knees are om- nipotent and some never seem to get any answer. If you come here to grumble and grow! and find fault and chew the rag my sermons will do for you what the plug does to the slot machine. I don’t give a rap if I shock the sensibilities of anyone on earth— Toledo Blade. Dead from a Sense of Duty. The brave baggageman on the Cen- tral Railroad of New Jersey who lost his life in an attempt to save the lives of othars did only what policemen and firemen are constantly doing. But trainmen are not employed with a view to their fitness for such rescue work. It is not in their line of duty and the i tact gives added heroism to a deed of self-sacrificc which is to the ‘credit of the service- There is more of this quality of courageous devotion to duty beyond the letter of their instructions among railroad erployes tuan is commonly recognized. An exampie of it was fur- nished by the station agent at Croton LaXe, on the New York Central, who gave his life to protect the company’s property from robbers. The pension granted to his widow testifies to the road’s apareciation of conspicuous fidelity in the employe. It is present in every engineer who sticks to his post when his locomotive leaves the rails, and in firemen, telegraph operators and brakemen. It was possessad by the Buffalo flagman who wad killed while trying 0 dJdrag a woman from the tracks. If the sense of responsibility among the rank and file of the service were always matched by an equal efficiency in executive offices there would be few- er occasions for its exercise at the cost of life. It ought not to he neces- sary for baggagemen to leap from their cars to give warning of danger or posszible for passengers to be killed on the fracks beofore a station.—New York World. Perpetual Troubles. It appears that neither the Mexican nor the Lorimer situation can enter- tain much hope of permanent peace. FAREWELL The Poli 10c and 26c at Matinees Offering for the First Time in Stock in New England Augustas Thomas’ Acknowledged by many to be the Greatest of American Dramas. Same Low Prices MATINEE EVERY DAY Players - Grealest Drama 10c, 20¢, 30c at Nights MATINEES b BREED T OHAS. McNULTY, Lesses Featurs “On the Deserl’s Miss Ethel Laws, Soprano. : 2.30 Picture, 7.30 Edge,”Western| s.4s P.M. COAL AND LUMBER. GOAL A Bin of Bright, Shiny Coal, Bought and Paid For In the Spring, is a source of unmspeakable joy all through the year. A ton at a time in the Winter doesn’t have this cheering effect. Moral: BUY COAL EARLY, CHAPPELL CO. Central Wharf and 150 Main Street. COAL AND LUMBER. LUMBER Fre 33]@!&%1@ ALWAYS IN STOCK. A. D. LATHROP, Office—cor- Market and Shetucket Sts. Telephone 163-12. JOHN A. MORGAN & SON, Coal and Lumber Telephone 884. Central. Wharf CALAMITE COA *It burns up clean” Well Seasoned Wood C. H. HASKELL. 402 — 'Phones — 489 WM. F. BAILEY (Successor te A. T. Gardner) Hack, Livery and Boarding Stable 12-14 Bath Street. HORSE CLIPPING A SPECIALTY. AUTOMOBILE TO BENT. Telephone $88. H Advice to Mothers had baby's photograph Have you taken 7 It's an art to take baby’s photo- ;IF YOU WA ' MuUSIC. N @ P, C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect 8¢, Tal B1% ° Norwieh, Ou NT A . . __FIRST CLASS PIANO, get a SHONINGER through ‘WHITE, THE TUNER, 48 South A St., Taftville. PLUMBING AND GASFITTING. JOHNSON & BENSON, 20 Central Avenue. SLATE ROOFING Metal Gornices and Sanitary Plumbing A peep into an up to date bathroem 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 work of putting them in in the best manner from a sanitary standpoint—and guar~ antee the entire joh 3 J. E;: TOMPKINS, - 67 West Main Street The Vaughn Foundry Co. IRON CASTINGS furnished prem . stock ef patterns. No. lfi 25 Ferry Street S. F. GIBSON Tin and Sheet Metal Worker Agent for Richardson and Boynton Furnaces. 65° West Main Street, Norwich, Conn. Heating and Plumbing, © 92 Franklin Sweet. - New Line of Panama Hats justin at MACPHERSON'S, " The Hatter. This is the time to have your oid Fanama bleached, blocked and trim- med, so that you will not have to wait gmph as it should be taken. To catch|for it when' you need it most. is roguish little smile, his pretty little dimple, Such photograps become prized remembrances of babyhood's days in vears to come. We have had years of' experience in photographing children. They always 100k their best when we take them. No troublasome posing. Snap them in a jiffy. LAIGHTON, The Photographer, | T 13 Opposite Norwich Savings ‘Society. Detroit Journal. Other Fellow’s Success. Most of the other fellow's success is way.is to commit one’s self te ft, fully. [credited to luck, and the rest of it to gladly, resolutely.: = A -hai ed {a penurious disposition, — Atchison start leaves you doubting whether or Globe i F3Re Safe Medicine for Children. Foley's Honey and Tar Compound i & safe and effective medicine for chil- dren, as it does not contain oplates-or harmful drugs. The genulné = Folev's Honey and Tar Compound is in a yel- low package. Lee & Osgood Co § MACPHERSON, 2. Fidelio Beer ‘On Draft or in Bottles. Team Dellvers Bverywhere. H. JACKEL & €0. cof. Market and Water Sta. A fine assortment of the Tatest Styles in Millinery for Spring and Summer Wenr, at i - P MRS. 6.

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