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Berwich Zulletin und §o ef. Norwich, Friday,' June 2, 1911, REPUBLICAN CITY TICKET. Election: June 5, 1911, Aldermen JOSEFH D. HAVILAND FRANK H. SMITH Councilmen HENRY NORMAN XANDER WILLIAMS FRANK H. FOSS LOTIS 1. GEER Tax Collector THOMAS A. ROBINSON Monda. City Treasur LESLIE HOPKINS City Clerk | ARTHUR G, CROWELL Water Commissioner ALBERT 8. COM City Sheri GEORGF O. BE GEORGE W. ROUSE The Circulation of The Bulletin. ‘ THE CONNECTICUT SENATE. Since a majority of the senators of Connecticut voted for a Sunday license iaw, the peopie of more than one state have looked this wiy in amazement and wondered if that was a fair rep. resentation of the moral sense In the Constitution state. The Hartford Courant gives another pleture of our honorable senators which must help us the better to un- men's sufftage bill “got through the senate by vote of lt‘u.!‘lhln a ma- Jority of the senators and'amid laugh- ter and jests of those who did vete for it. This Is a convincing array, and it v N 5lv demonstrates that the suffrage is not wanted at present in this state” No ome regarded the recommenda- tion of overnor Baldwin for limited suf , women upon the old ground e should be no taxation with- n as a jest or a joke; contrary it was commended {he ablest papers in the country Senators who can gibe and jeer hon- en, vole for an open bar en and ignore the welfare of the ure not ame level as the A CONDITION. must be an attrac- ce when there are pents to house the to reside there. A Canadian town ont and thrifty fx > stag nti Where newcomers are to live in till such time be able to securs homes s have already establish- themselves in tents in North Cha- side ting tents 1s they m Many far The Ottawa Cltizen. commenting up- on_the fon in Chatham, st The Bulletin has the largest etr- | | culation of amy paper im Basters || Conmecticnt, and from three to foor || fimes largee than that of may ia || Nerwich. 1t la delivered te over 3000 of the 4053 houses Ia Nor- wich, and resd by mimety-threc por cemt. of the prople. Ja Windham # in delivered te over 500 houses. s Putsam asd Dasicleon o ever 1,100, and In all of (heme slaces it Is comatdered the local daily. Eastern Conmecticwt haw foriy- Wine tewus, one humdred and eixty- Bve postettice dimtrict ome rural free dellvery rou: The Belieitn fe sold in every || tows and om all of the R. F. D.|| reutes in Eastern Coemmecticwt. CIRCULATION Week ending May 27. WELL-CONTRASTED. In their Memorial day laddresses President Taft and Colonel Rooseve #poke upon war, and there is no fu ther doubt that they are not in mony upon this imper President Taft at Ar ed himseif as an e rather than of war, and ex; £rot that war was ¢ potnted ot have progressed awa preva by one soctal ant que: 2o er necessary from the long an insul he same ago. be wiped out mora fight temb in where he expressed Tegrets that the Spanish American | war 8 which he took part v only a Mttle one—in fact, not enough of a war to go round. He derided interna tienal arbitration ministration etands, net submit to arb honor any arbitrate abo: for which he id to our te nsults ore n a man couid| his wife it some should slap her in the face The spirit of these t this question was =0 d occasion tha \, the idea that T ~an echo THE TRUSTS THAT CRAWLED UNDER THE GRANGES. The gfield Republican out o gre " nave beern ehted gers of ountry take Against the ratification of reciprocity with Can: n_re en ela- ngfeld Republica senate f day and which a present time exper y some $2.000 equires increase smpetition to | rofits from the people. | The injury te the farmers is not| kely to prove to be one-hall as ous as has alleged by t arger interests who the support the WHAT SHOULD HAVE KILLED THE BILL. An estesmed « neetlon with a busin Bulletin took o Also let me speak a word of est appreciation our editoria last Thursday or Friday on the day hotel bar bill recently p the senate. I read in The F ouple of months age when ih men wers before the committee, a ing for the DIl that t adva a8 a prominent reason the great aut moblle Sunday trade during th s » write lletin a mer and the demand of automobile people for the Sunday bar. Which is safer—to have engineers in our e ges whe have come from a bar o t* “ave our streets filled with automo bes driven by men and filied by gay whe have come from & bar hould huve Killed the bill The extra session of congress ave aged a spesch an hour for the first 57 days it wag in session; and who now knows or cares what it was all ? The lce-cream cone is getting arcind idea, | ¢ An interesting light on the situation ealed by the statement that va- which there appears, to ty. are rentingfor high her words, the owners of being taxed as they ire content tg keep these until somebody with more t, or with a keener appre- lot be no sc ant ¢ value of such an in- t, is willing to pay a high o such land and erect dwell- ., Chatham today presents stra on of a system | render unprofitable the needed for dwellings, peculative purposes. EDITORIAL NOTES. < on the point of ex- t to vote to women as tending matter destrian used to have Tights e davs of automobiles; but has care The § now he onl on calls attention to the fact B | that she gets June bugs in May; and 2 May festival in June. The supreme court of the United recognizes trusts as good if they are obedient to the ago Ireland had a million ore population than it has gland fails to make life in- A cent and a hs da that suffering merely a state of that is what res rrying stone, rest of the two millions in its annua sand years old has been 1 Arizona, there is great curiosity to discover if possi- ble whether it was wet or dry The Boston Transcript calls atten- tion to the fact that it is perfectly safe to be overcome by heat there this since the ¢ all of nurses. put on right now. The tees the goes in fashi et atmosphe: e of N ) ate a newspaper a d a straight furrow city a mob of a thou- e knocked at the mayor's pld him the recall was eall- m. This is not exactly At Oklahoma sand men I New Yor D the newsbe ws, he called for dereqt the hardest wrote ay: When a it is not t to dis counterfeit cover n- it A < orgia ctising tif he did not quit vred plaintiff in the A passed a nine- o ' en and children; and o f the papers are declaring th s .a week ought to be SUNDAYISMS. tn tamn that the hottest will hell ke his em- ake in_ the resent ou get by becom- d vou will have nd worid are in I the people in just as if it had never heard board of heallr the best. you are looking for hypocrites in derstand the sense of dignity and] chivalry which possesses this high political body, when it says the wo. 1 drunkards | 1l have | ou'd better let me apply some of my hair tonic to your head,” said the melancholy barber. “You have a nat- urally finé hefd of hair, but it's falling out, sir, it's falling out. One of these days vou'll wake up- and find that yout hands and say to vourself in heart-rending accents: ‘Why didn't.I use that exceilent Macedonian hair tonic when I had a chance? “To thunder With yonr Macedonian onic!” exclaimed, the man in the chair. “Why can't vou go ahead and prunc my wiskers without talking so much 7 “I like to converse with my custom- ers, sir, finding such conversation mu- tually helpful. The fellowship of kin- dred minds, you know. Though hum- ble by station, I endeavor to cultiva my intellect and keep abreast of things. Most of my customers find .food for thought in my observations It was that Maj. Sparrowhead “Prof. Kinderduck,’ says our conversation is an education S remagked the ma- jor, ‘that with your attainments you | Should occupy a loftier sphere, but re- main where you are, I pray vou, and continue to stimulate the mental f: ulties of your customers with your in- parable Macedonian hair touic, removes dandruff and allays itching of the scalp.’ That's what he said.” “Weil, the major must be a chuckle head if he encoutages your twaddle while attending to your Customers. When a man tells doesn't want a thing why do 3 ahead trving to sell it to him? wanted any of your hair tonic I'd say another to need it. You meed a hair even if you don't want it. Why you suppose I am anxious to have vou try it? Do you think that I care you're as bald as Mount McKinley, and | then, when it's too late, vou'll wring | structive discourses while stimulating | their hair fallacies with vour incom- which | ou to hand out | t's one thing to want a ‘thing and | for the paltry profit3 If so, you cam- not understand the seal of the true sci- entist. Did Galileo sit.up late at nights and spend the best vears of his- life inventing the telescope for the money there was in it? No. sir. He wanted to benefit his fellow men. When he -had perfected the spyglass he took a sample of it and made a | house to house canvass, taking orders, |and I expect there were people Who | told him that when they wanted tele- scopes they would let him know. But | Galileo knew what was good for them | better thafl they knew themselves, | and refused to be turned down, and succeeded In selling one of his patent non-explosive telescopes to every man | who had the price. It's the same way with Thomas | Edison. When he invents a thing he does his best to sell it, not because he | necds the money, but because he knows the pople ~need that thing. Only the other day ome of his young men was in here trying to sell the Bdi- son electric fishpole, and he sold me ‘one, although I haven't been fishing for twenty years. Being a scientist, 1 understood Mr. Edison’s anxlety to sell his new fishpole. If he came into this shop he would listen patiently while T explained the merits of my Macedonian hair tonig, which restores gray hair to its original color. removes dandruff and soothes the scalp.” “My scalp doesn't need soothing” remarked the customer. “It isn't ex- cited. A barber once talked me into tryving some of his hair dye, which | would make my locks a beautiful fast black, and for several weeks I went around with pea green hair, and since then I draw the line at all kinds of barbar shop dope.” “Because one tonsorial artist was a disgrace to ‘his profession,” said the .melancholy barber, “all his fellow- crafismen must suffer. Tt is a bleak world of injustice. My usual price for applying the tonic is 15 cents, but in order te restore your faith in my pro- I'll apply it this time for 10 cents.”"—Chicago News. self. Some bugclogist could make a for- tune by pickling the man in ohol that hides behind a hypocrite and go around the country exhibiting it as the smallest thing on record.—Billy Sunday at Toledo. All know that death will come; it fe just as certain that judgment will me—the same God uttered both parts of the text. If T could prove to you that you will dic before next Sunday, you would spend the week getting ready to meet the God von have spurned onc of you knows that vou will be alive next Sunday. The fact that vour mother or your wife is a Christian, or that your chil- dren go to Sunday school, does not let vou out. (God judges every man by himself. ‘There is so much that infidelity has not done. It never charmed a drun ard from his cups or a gambler from This cards; it never prevented a prosti- tute from selling her virtue; it mever as linked with tender, elevating mor- als: it never built a school, or a church or an asylum for the aged or orphaned. ot one line is needed to tell all that anized infidelity ever did for hu- is wrong to do some- thing for which vou would be put in jail. You éught to know that it is wreng to so live that You will have to £0 to hell. God never forgets. He may delay his blessings and his judgments, Dit they will come as sure as sunshin Some cf you men and women are doing vour best to get into heil. 1 think the only sanc man is the one who ie a Christian. Let your motto be: “I will net think tomorrov; my possessions are of today.” ToOmOrrow never comea. The supreme test of character is in taking a stand for Christ. You must have your-eves in the back of vour head if you cannot see God in this great awakening. God is doing all He can to keep you out of hell and you are doing all You can to reach heil. Many are rich here; but are paupers or.—Rev, Willlam Sunday in To- :do Blade. A Longevity Record. At the age of 103 John Shell, Sr._of Leslie county, has recently taken his second ride on a railway in. This may strike the average citizen as thing wonderful, but there are no railroads in Leslie county, and for the orrect hue when persistenly applied. | greatar part of his long life Mr. Shell 2 . Sk 1s lived 35 miles from a railway sta- The Ohio man who buried his wife | tion. Five vears sigo he took a trip and advertised for anather | to Crab Orchard and first enjoyed the sccined 1o have a higher | novety of railrond travel.* Since the d for business th onrie. | building of the Wasioto & Black rd for business than for proprie- | Nrountain rafiroad Mr. Shell is s what more conveniently situ for St travel, and the other day he went fo &S News and| London to attend federal court. The for the statement the church you are a hypocrite your- | yet not | newspapers along the road found him | out and have been giving some Inter- esting facts about his history. From all accounts Mr. Shell is about the liveliest centemarian now running at large. He is a miller by trade and for more years than he re- members he has been operating an | old-fashioned ~ watermill on Laurel fork of Greasy Creek. He still grinds corn for a large patronage. He is sald to be as vigorous as the average man {of 70. He does not use eyeglasses and he wall vithout the ald of a cane. He enjoys squirrel hunting and says he “can still kill one of them at almost every shot” with his old-time rifle. | His hearing is a little dull, but ot erwise he is just about as good as new. lle Courier-Journal The Modern in Florida. Down in Florida six negroes, arrest- ed upon charges of murder, were hur- ried away to avoid a lynching party in course of formation. But the mob was not an ordirary bunch of mur- derous excursionists. It was to be utomobiles were requi- aced a hundred miles across country. The negroes were tak- en from a jailer by ruse, ridden to the outskirts of the town, strung up and riddled with bullets. ' The joy riders then took the roed for home. In the words of the rubber stamp journalism, | a good time was had by all. Truly there is no limitation to be placed upon this modern spirit of en- terprise, It erects a fifty story sky- scraper on profits of ten cent stores. It transforms a sand waste into a city. painting the clouds of might with the flare of blast furnaces. And here is gasoline and a small outfit of greasy Wheels and cogs made the means by GREAT NORTHERN MAY TAKE OVER C, B. & Q. R R Significance Attached to Execution of $600,000 First and Refunding Mort- sage. operations on the scale of the North- ern Securities company was announced by J. J. Hill, chairman of the Great Northern Railway company, today, when in & type: statemant he announced the execution of a $600,000.- 000 first and refunding mortgage to secure bonds for_the Great Northern Burlington ‘and Quincy railroads. The issue of '$600,000,000 in. bonds by the Great Nort ‘as announce by Chairman J. J. Hill means that a number of large projects are in pros- pect, according to a prominent rafiroad official who by reason of his intimate knowledge of affairs declined to allow his name to be used. First, it means the taking up of $330,000,000 of gold bonds of the Great Northern, _including $222,400,000 i3 bonds of the Burlington road for which the Great Northern is responsible. According to this official, it aiso means that the Great Northern wiil take over the Chicago, Burlington and Quiney railroad, separating it from the Northern Pacific. Tn view of the recent opintons of the United States supreme court in defin: “ing “reasonable restraint” it is though® that a merger of the Great Northern and the Burlington raiiroads will be decided a legal merger. LETTERS SHOWING DAUGHTER’'S AFFECTION. of Them Read in Bull Will Case Yesterday. Scor Alfred, Me, May 31—Scores of let ters were read and presentsd es ex- hibits at the opéning today of the third week of the hearing on the petition of Mrs. Olea Bull Vaughn of Cambridge, Mass., to break the will of her mother. Mrs. Ole Bull, widow of the famous violinist. Many of the letters were from Mrs. aughn to her mother and were offered by Mrs. Vaugnh's attor- ney to show that the daughter felt a real affection for her mother and a real anxiety over her physical condi- tion. There was also read & note from Joseph G. Thorp of Cambridge, Mrs. Bull's brother, and the executor of the will, in which they warned his niece thaf she should be careful not to an- tagonize her mother. Getting Near the Thron, ‘The Leitérs are greatly pleased that Marguerite, Countess of Suffolk, is to We want. i e, . f Dyspepein In. =y o Gas- tritts, or Irreguinr Bowel. totest Send 2c stamp with mame and address, for a week's treatment, to The JOHNSON LABORATORIES 1 Johnes Street Newburgh, N.Y. ALL DEALERS 10c. Makes face, han not show or rub off. Liver spots cured in a tion for years and recommend it. DERMA VIVA THE IDEAL FACE POWDER arms and neck as white as milk and dues Pimples, Blackheads, Freckies, Moth or few days. Have handled this prepara- Ctley & Jones. Price 50c i ESCAPES WasCured byLydiaE.Pink- ham’sVegetable Compound Elwood, Ind.—* Your remedies have cured me and I have only taken six | bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta- e ble Compound. was sick three months and could ignot walk. I suf- fered all the tim The doctors said I {could not get well without an opera- tion, for I could hardly stand_the pains in my sides, especially my right one, and down my right leg. I began to feel better when I had taken only ! one bottle of Compound, but kept o as I was afraid to stop too soon.”” —Mr: Sipte MULLEN, 2728 N. B. St, El- Wood, Ind. Why will women take chances with half-hearted existence, missing three- fourths of the joy of living, when they when you get, can find health in Lydia E. Pinkham's | Vegetable Compound ? and here for God| ' For thirty years it has been the of having some | standard remeidy for female ills, and e e g e (han to con-| has cured thousands of women who Al the devils Taush af me beeause 1) bAVe been troubled with such ail- hed.'a" Npine. 1ik6 &' Tiete of Tainel mflxtsasnlisxl;\cem!n(s.h\flammuflun, siring ulceration, fibrold tumors, irregnlari- It takes the highest type of a man ties, periodic pains, backache, indiges- Clrist in this God-hating, | tion, and nervous prostration. 1f you have the slightest doubt that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege~ table Compound will help you, write to Mrs, Pinkham at Lynn, Mass, for advice. Your létte; l will he absolutely confident. and the advice free. OPERATION | ALL THIS WEEK -Call in and get a EXHIBITION OF Grawford Cooking Ranges WITH LADY DEMONSTRATOR Cooking with Gas. M. HOURIGAN, 62-66 Main Street AT OUR STORE. Cook Book Free. | an_operation or drag out a sickly, | - Need Printing ? 35-6 The BULLETIN Co. 64-66 Franklin Street rarely | Leiter mill ‘were storing the Suffolk cou: I the countess: preferred to It almost the year round. She has coronation to see, but not to share, the honors of the countess.—Kansas City Journal. The “humble’ American = peanu represents a. $12,000,000 crop. { * EDDIE HORAN Comedian Featurs - 22 150 “The Witch of the Everglades” Miss Ethel Laws, ! , P.M, Try it! of soap solution. of Lenox Soap, cut it into until a solution is formed. It is. made of good materials and the shape is convenient. For washing dishes, woodwork, etc., use . it just as you would any other soap. For washing clothes quickly, easily and thoroughly, use Lenox Soap in the form TO MAKE LENOX SOAP SOLUTION: three quarts of boiling water. Keep water at boiling point —Take a cake small pieces, dissolve these in desirable aiiens. WOOD FRAME SCREENS FLY TIME TOPICS Items of Interest Mr. and Mrs. Fly having arrived, it will be well to exclude them as un- Our Fly Screens will do this cheaply and effectively. SHERWOOD METAL FRAME 18 x 33 inches SCREENS 24 x 33 inches 24 x 33 inches. 39¢ 24 x 41 inches 24 x 27 inches c 28 x 37 inches 30 x 37 inches 50c ALASKA ICE CREAM FREEZERS,) , ' . cori 4 quart 6 quart The only one with the A-rning}' - J Juart Sgon Duitver: $1.88 $2.25 3263 $3.38 NORTH POLE ICE CREAM Gl Foms FREEZER, the most practical all- ¢ ........ccoeeuens o - L $1.00 $1.25 metal freezer ever sold. Fiy Time is also Lazy Time. BE COMFORTABLE. On our THIRID: FLOOR will be found a complete assortment of HAMMOCKS, COUCH HAMMOCKS, PORCH SCREENS, including the well known VUDOR SCREENS, STRAW MATTINGS, GRASS CARPETS and RUGS. Prepare for comfort at the lowest market rates. THIRD FLOOR—TA BAMBOO PORCH SCREENS. ried in all sizes and prices, as follo: 4x8 _5x8 6x8 KE THE ELEVATOR. Best quality of outside bark only. Car ws: 8x8 x8 10x8 80c 75c 85¢c 4x8 635 .25 AWNINGS—Ready to put up, co 42 and 45 inch $250 each. Linen D at all prices, all widths, all weights. FLY TIME fabrics must be cool. dust-repelling Auto Coat vou will find nothing more suitable or comfortable | than LINEN SUITINGS in the natural color or pure white. 95c $1.10 $1.30 VUDOR PORCH SCREENS, made of thin, fiat strips of wood, closely bound togsther with seine twine in a lock switch weave. Artistically stained in soft weather-proof greens and browns that will neither fade nor rub. In stock in all sizes. Priced as follows: 1058 $5.50 5x8 .25 PALMER HAMMOCKS—the hammock of quality, in an endless variety | Bact 299 Siteet 54 of designs and colorings. You will find them priced a little lower here than | excepted) and Pler 40, North River, the same can be purchased elsswhere. COUCH HAMMOCKS at $6.75, $8.25, $9.50, $13.50. Prices ranae from 85¢ to $6.00. mplete with ropes, pulleys, cleats, etc. epartment For the Coat Suit or Skirt and the We have them NATURAL COLOR LINENS 27 inches wide. reieiee...150, 19¢, 21c a yard 36 inches wide % 250, 3% a yard NATURAL COLOR LINEN CRASH 36 inches wide. ... ........... ....25c, 20c, 3% a yard WHITE LINEN SUITING 36 inches wide. .29¢, 39, 50c, 62sc, 75c a yard 45 inches wide. 2 : 75c a vard 54 inches wide. .90 a yard 81 inches wide. .....$125 a yard 90 inches wid ..$1.50 and $2.00 a yard HEAVY WHITE CRASH SUITING 36 inches wide 3% a yard IF YOU WANT A FIRST CLASS PIANO. get a SHONINGER throu WHITE, THE 40 Sewth & St Tareethe. _—— Learn Piano in 10 Minutes To play beautiful chords send 15¢ for registered chart. WHITTAKER, Box 15 Voluntown, Conn mayida Veranda Furnishings Light and comfortable Reed Chairs and Rockers Latest Willow styles, with cretenne cushions, very unique and attractive. Couch Hammocks Very popular, made of heavy duck, tan or forest green, fitted with Nation- al Wire Spring Mattress, making » comfortable bed for out-of-door sless- ing. “Crex” Matting 1 yard, 15 yards, 2 yards wide, the popular green and new brown orings. N.S. GILBERT & Sons 137-141 Main Street 1 TRAVELERS' DIRECTORY. T0 NEW YORK NORWICH LINE The water way — the comfortabis | way of traveling. | Steamers City of Lowell and Ches— | ter W. Chapin—sate., staunch vessels tbat have every comfort and convem- fence icr the traveler. A delightiul voysge on Lonz lsiang | 8ound and a superb view of the wos- | dertul sksline 20d watertront of New or Stecamer leaves New London st 1f m. werkdays only: due Pier foot of 2. m. (Mondays | Fare orwich o New York $1.75 Write or telephone W.J. PHILLIZS, Agent, New London. Conn. | New York | CHELSEA LINE | Fare $1.00 Freight and pacsenger servies rect 1o _and fro Norwich NEw Tork Theadnse, Thi - 5w wani River, (] foot “Raoseveir Rireer. Mondaze | Wednesdass, Friause. at 5 B Freight received until 5 p. m. C.A WHITAKER, Ag cluding Biat LARGEST. FAt S oks"s any stas 1ixe With