Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 28, 1911, Page 4

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Norwich, Wednesday, June 28, 1911, The Wulletin is sold im every town amd om all of the W. F. D. routes In Eastern Commecticwt. CIRCULATION 1905, aversge Week ending June 24 .. THE STATE PROBATION SYSTEM Nothing so good or helpful that it will not enemics and get hard hit. The probation law is de- nounced by Chief of Police Cowles of New Haven: and it is ful if it really has the s y of many po- lice heads in the it is al help to useful and efficient law to have it assailed, for that is what calls out its value in op= eration and wakes up the friend are determined to keep it in force It is matural that the police who are daily in contact with crime and inals should lack that s feeling which the authers and suppor who ers of this law have for the vietims of vice and environment, A few failures in the endeavor to raise unfortunates o a higher and better moral and so- cial level are to be expected; and one success may consistently be regarded a® balancing two failures; but this is net the record of the system, for the larger per cent. of saved than lost tells for its wisdom and its perma- nence. The Bristol Press, referring to Chief Cowls' erack at the system, “Speaking-frony.an intimate acqu ance with 1he i working of the tion systém, Covering a number of i we have no esitatign In sa ing most emphatically that it is a su eess and a groat credit to the intelli- gence and « ce of Connecticut Furthcrmore, it is destined to be more BBIpful in the future than it has been in the past, for exper here as everywhere clse Probation is founded upon humane principles, and its pury bet- terment of humanely or promise of zond the and IMMENSE SCHOOLS OF MACK- EREL. Tt indicates that the price of mack- erel is to be reasonable when the mackerel strike in not done before for eastern Atlantic says “Aecording t lowed the mover for tions a twenty years o were taken when it was of tinkers. and elsewhere ‘struek in® ana Portiand vesse from the halibut, fishing and sent a ish and ers on a macke stocked $9,000 in and each cerved 2. while the may be far Maine coast twe thos ents ¢ cen o when immen: off the Main possible to ca mber ¢ So it s ago, and n, body knew where went, not do | they knew now why they have re- | turned. Could be a fisherman | farseeing enough the macke schools each a miliionaire There ough “tinker” ma ng the present THE SALVATION ARMY CHIL- DREN'S CAMP: T New England branch the lvation Army has opened a $10,000 camp for children at Canten, Mass., which it dedicated Mondsy e ne camp comprises 15 acres of woodland and meadow, Including several acres of land under cultivation which will yieid vegetable: Three portable houses te be used as dormitories and | - dining room have been set up, and there is & quaint New Englund farm- house, said 0 be mora than 100 03, which will serve as The quarters will boys and about 50 mothers and babies at a time, while plans are afoot to have day parties twice within the reg- ular ten-day tripe. There were 200 poor children present on the opening day, ranging in size from babes in arms o bovs and girls 15 and 16 years of age, some of whom never before have had a romp in a green field, or tumbied about in the | This title page, which announces the title and- scove of the work as follows:. “A Century of Vernon, Conn 1808-1908, A Summary of History, Barly and Modern, Exercises at Historic Congregational Church at Vernon Center. Inception and, Organization of the: Movement. Repoft of the, Proceedings and Prog- ress for the Week's Centennial Cele- bration, June 28 to July 4, inclusive, 1908; Published under the auspices of the speci Historical ~Committee. Rockville, Conn.. January, 1911. Press of T. F. Rady & Co., Publishers of the Rockville Leader.” It is clearly printed and well illus- trated and tells its story so racily and briefly that to sit down with It jn hand is to stay until it is finished. It is a_work that should be in every public library in the state: and which the natives of Vernon Will want and cherish. 1t is edited and compiled by Henry Conklin Smith, with a summary off early history by C. Denison Tal- cdtt. ESITORIAL NOTES. Caruso’s voice all right again, and he will try to make up for the $140,000 his idleness cost him : 1#_the picnics now being held daily cannot be relied upon to break the routh, what can be? The coming back home is a joy and a vacation to all the absent sons and daughters of Norwich. Lorimer is now charged with steal ng the name of homest Abe Lincoln , hide Lorimerism behind. Happy thousht for today who simply owes grudges 1 urged to pay The man s never fol- them. lowed a is said to have wept crowned: and ex-Queen t in recollection of other Queen when s Alexand makes no difference how hot the cnate gets mow, it is any hotter than it is It Unite Tik States to of the success of the now attributed to the They are entitled to rec- A large pa: oha dressmakers. ognition. announced that the Yale class it 600 infants not vet been commissio A woman for a divorce de- clares she had an unkissable honey- moon: but she doesn’t say she had an unkissable husband. Mary Garden took a hundred pairs of silk stockings to Europe with her. This must be the way she keeps her size from getting out Towever many failures Mr. Morgan may have had in his judgment of pic- tures, he is'rec ed as an expert upon the figures on the bonds. It is just as hard to get the speech *d out of the onal Record as it was to get Jlon out of Massac was never delive The N hink he has 1 he ch small boy does mot a Fourth of July un- ns its celebration three and .continues it one week be: It is =aid that 452 of the graduates of Harvard have selected their walks in Ten vears from now quite a number of them are likely to turn up on new path draw two hugbands at raffles in Philadelphia at chhreh fairs has brousht down against the repet t f it the whole force of the Cath-| priesthood. richest population in New the milkmen 1o Wear sn wrts ¢ pi A SENATOR PARK ON WOOL. No Excuse for Having an Abandonsd Farm in the State. ntly in the cied considerable 1t Conmecticut. It nd it was very Senator mage done to and pointed out how to the wool-growing had been told to whom he raising of sheep, engage in that account of the tor Park said is one of the 1 and that there r it, no matter becomes, He they form of 1d not t wool b nnectic ols a ready rket suppl the 10 other wools which have wide re ion 1o the advan- the Connecticut product, Sen- rk is well qualified to speak on . He is in the wool busi- no part of it with s not familiar. The death resident of the town of s week, recalled the state- Senator Park in the senate. resident conducted a large farm ade a specialty of raising sheep. fact is Connecticut is a much for agricultural purposes & people supp ¥ than Lake and there he ment o tnd r made can be grown at a profit Some years age he si a hearing of the committee erett J. that timber in this state. ed at appropriations of the general as that timber cut vears would pay num on the moj rted farms in Conne is no excuse for havin: farm in the state. Of vill persist in preferring dependence in the cities to comfort and independence in the country towns after a_growth shade of real trees, spent the day mostly in open-eved amazement at the ety of curlous sights that greeted them on thelr trumos Over the fifteen acres of ground; and the exclamation of eme urchin: Geé, Mike, sée the brown cew!” promises to be forever preserved with the history of the first day which the joyous threng present made memor: E “Music hath charms [ the hurdy-gurdy man asives me to drinks ther no help for it.—Hartfory Times. THend Answer Echoes, When? Senator Root invai s up with an amendment t ure but when did he offer to amend anything that was thoroughly bad?—Colambla State, Comfort for Chicago. Always emember when the heat geems inte in Chicago that it is hotter in Springfield.—Ch -d- Ler,in Spring Chicago Record. “A man who has some leisure on his hands receives many invitations to get busy,” observed the retired merchant. “I am always being ask- ed to officiate at one function or an- other. This evening I am ing to act as umpire at a game of The fats and the leans are going to meet upon the crimson field for the championship of the ward.” “Well, 1 hope you come back from the game all in one seetion,” said the hotelkeeper, “but the chances are against it. A man has a chauce for his life when he umpires a real game of baseball, played by professionals, but when he un es to preside over an amateur uprising the proba- bility is that he will be torn limb from limb. Td like to know why the fa's and_the ‘leans always are arrayed against each other in baseball. “A few years ago, when I wasn't half as wise as [ am now, 1 yielded to the solicitations of a committee ot patriots and agreed to act as umpire at a fat and lean game. I supposed. of course, that everybody would be £00d natured and that my decisions would be accepted as though they were the laws of the doggone Medes and Perstans. 1 took it for granted that the fats couldn’t play ball, ana would be in a humble and apologetic frame of mind. But if you want to find the man who knows it all, in any avenue of usefulness, all you've got to do is to hunt up some half baked amatcur. “It's just the same in baseball as it is in music. You run up against a fellow like Paderewski, who can take a piano in both hands and play it like a concertina. and he'll admit bafore he has talked five minutes that he mere- 1y knows the rudiments of musie, and would need to live a thousand years to arrive anywhere. Then you en- countér some village professor who can play ‘Silvery Waves' with va- riations, and he can explain just why Beethoven and Mozart were cheap musicians. n_ the baseball fleld a man like Christy Mathewson is looking fq ways means to improve himseif, that there are humdreds of | ‘possibilities he has not mastered. Then you see some barnyard chief- tain, withnis Whiskers full o cockle buns, trying a stunt. and nobody can tell him anything. He knows it all, and the men who in- vented baseball would look like a wax figure | e him. “Well, T hadn’t been umpiring that fool game five minutes before I saw I had made the mistake of my life. Every man on the ground knew more about the game than I did, although I had studled it all my life, and had the rules by heart. Both teams were made up of silver tongued orators, and every time I made a decision a lot of the players would leave their-places and gather around me and make the welkin - ring. The umpire at an amateur game has to stand for this sort of thing. He can't order offend- ers to the bench or off the grounds, and if he tries to assert his authority there is danger that he will be taken to the nearest tree and Iynched. “Before the second inning was end- ed everybody was frothing at the mouth, and the fat man in center field had a’stroke of apoplexy. It seemed that 1 was trying to rob both sides, and ' people were always coming toward me with bats upraised, threat- | ening to brain me. . There is an old superstition that fat men are cheerful and good natured, but don’t you be- lieve it. The fat men were far more violent than the lean ones, ‘but, fort- unately, they couldn’t run as fast. When the game ended with a foot- race. with me setting the pace, the short wind of the fats was all that saved my life. Several bats and stones hit me as 1 vaulted over the fence, and when I got home most of my features were out of alignment, but I wasn't mortally injured. “If you emerge alive from this game come to the hotel and try a new lini- ment that I bought in a gallon can from an agent the other day.”—Chica- 50 News. MRS. SPRINGER MAKES APPLICATION FOR ALIMONY Henwood Murder Witness Needs Cash for Divorce Suit. Denver, June While Mrs. Isa- belle Patterson Springer, principal witness in the Hemwood murder trial hers, was under cross examination, attorneys were asking District Judge George Allen to grant her alimony rending the decision of the divorce case brought by her husband, John Spring According to an afidavit presented to Judge Allen she will not have funds with which to contest the divorce action unles sthe court awards her money for litigation and personal expenses. SONS OF REVOLUTION. Hold Annual Meeting at East Had- dam—Presentation of Nathan Hale Medal. The Conmecticut Society, Sons ot the Revolution, held its annual meet- in at East Haddam Thursday, the business session being held in the Nathan Hale schoolhouse in Nathan Hale pa The following officers were elected: President. Morgan Gardner Bulke- ley, Hartford: vice-president, Daniel Nash Morgan, Bridgeport; secretary, Edward Hart' Fenn, Weathersfield treasurer, Walter Collyer Faxon, Hartford: registrar, Francis Huber. Parker, Hartford: historian, Charles B. Whittlesev, Hartford: chaplain, Rev. Frederick R. Sanford, Guilford. The board of managers is: Will- fam R. Bushnell. Old_Saybrook: Eu- gene Boardman, Fast Haddam: Thomas D. Bradstreet. Thomaston' Walter J. Wakefield, Hartford: Joha Jr., Hartford; Chark Hartford; Colonel Rogers, Danbury: Rocky Hill; artford. Following the election presentation of the Nathan Hale medal, which is given the society 1o that bov in the public school votea by his schoolmates as displaying the most manly qualities and as_being best fitted to raise and. lower the flag on the schoolhouse every day. The medal this year was awarded to Har- Na- Louis Waiter St. G. came old son of Fred E. Ray, the presentation being made by former Senator Bulkeley. president of the society. A basket luncheon was enjoyed in the park during the afternoon. Would Have Been Appropriate King George shouldn't have appoint- ed a sailor and a soldier as aids to John Hays Hammond—he should have ppointed a couple of lawyers.—Wash- ington Post. Itis Unrivalled .. ,uiy—. . qualites which make Pears’ Soap the leading agent in producing and maintaining ® radiant beauty of complexion. Low in cost; high in all good qualitis ia ears’ SO0AP Cahe for the Unscented e SERIES OF MURDERS OF NEGRO WOMEN Each Sunday Night a New Victim Is Strangled in Atlanta. Atlanta, Ga., June 17.—The finding of the mutilated body of a comely col- ored woman on a side street this morn- ing makes the sixth mysterious murder which has puzzled the detectives and thrown the negro population into a state of terrc: ecutiv ay nights have been marked by the murder of a negro “woman, and in each instance the body en mutilated. Tke indications | are that the women were first stran- gled to death. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA SUFFERED FIVE YEARS Finally Cured by Lydia E. Pink- .| ham’s Vegetable Compound. Erie, Pa. — *I suffered for five years from female troubles and at last was 5 almost helpless. I 'went to three doc- try Lydia E. Pink- lham’s Vegetable Compound, and when I had taken two bottles I see a big change, so I took six bottles and I am 4 now strong and well again. I don’t know how to express my thanks for the good it has done me and I hope all suffering women will 8:0 Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable mpound a trial. It was worth its weight in gold.”—Mrs. J. P. ENDLICH, R. F. D. No. 7, Erie, Pa. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Co: und, made from native roots an erbs, contains no narcotic or harm- ful d and to-day holds the record for the largest number of actual cures of female diseases we know of, and thousands of voluntary testimonials are on file in the Pinkham laboratory at Lynn, Mass., from women who have been cured from almost every form of female complaints, such as inflamma. tion, ulceration, displacements, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodi¢ pains, backache, indigestion and nervous prostration. Every suffering woman owes it to herself to give Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound a trial. If you want special advice write Mrs.Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for it. It is free and always helpful. ters of Credit for travellers, availa- ble in all parts of the world. Correspondents of Baring Brothers & Co., Litd. 115 DEVONSHIRE STREET BOSTON RIHETTI AL R ULUHGT ‘u!“, JUIRITLTLY KIDDER, PEABODY & CO. BANKERS 56 WALL STREET NEW YORK Héiise}k%eeyerf WE HAVE WHAT 10U WANT WHEN YOU WANT 1T ALASKA ICE CREAM 'FREEZERS $1.88 $2.25 $2.63 $3.38 9 NORTH POLE 1.00 and $1.25 FREEZERS Galvanized Watering Pots, Seamless Galvanized Refri Pans Wood Frame Window Screens, 39¢c, 45c, 59¢, 69c, Metal Frame Screens. Clothes Baskets. Clothes Hampers, Galvanized Water Pails..19¢c, 21c, Brooms 35¢, 39c, Self-wringing Mops Dustless Dry Mops... Dustless Furniture Mops. Closet Mops - Stair Whisks Asbestos Mats . Asbestos Holders . “Howard” Dustless Dusters....... Oid Dutch Cleanser...... 4 Ib. pkg. 21c Bath Brick 20 Mule Team Borax, 1 Ib. pka. 20 Mule Team Borax,!s Ib. pkg. Silver Cream Polish - Krystal Soiloff (for the hands) 6-5-4 Stove Lusta Pots, or other they must be replaced. Now is Enamel Wares of merit we carry in the first quality. 39¢, 49c, 5%, 69¢ 25c, 29¢, 3lc, 33c $1.25, $1.35, $1.50, $1.85 “Granite” Water Pails....39c, 45c, 55¢ erator 36¢c and 39¢ 50c 79¢c 25¢ 45¢ 69c 11c 7c 19¢ 7c Paring Knives ............. 5¢, 8¢, 100 Tumblers .. Coat Hangers .. Folding Coat Hangers. Skirt Hangers Trouser Hangers . Clothes Brushes Closet Brushes Sink Brushes Scrub Brushes Gold Dust, Dri-Monia .... Swift’s Pride Cleanser. Red-E-Cleanser Toilet Paper, seven pkgs. for..... Dutch Hand Soap.- Hand Sapolio U. S. Mail Radiator Brushes Gold Dust, 4 . pkg.............. .: dozen 25c ch 5c each 5c each 10c -10c, 19¢ .......... 10c, 29¢, 50c .5e, 10¢ three small pkgs, for 10c] e a can 5c a can . acan 5c Dutch Scouring Seap...... a cake 4c Soap....ten cakes for 25¢ Queen Borax Soap, seven cakes for 25¢c 20 Mule Team Soap, Pans and Kettles, like clothing, will wear out. time. the Satin Gloss Stove Polish......... Liquid Veneer ......... seven cakes for 25c At some time All of the various Cooking Utensils in aluminum, tin, irom and steel, whatever you want, we have it. The Reid & Hughes Co. We Give Out Hair Pins Tonight When you want a good smoke, buy the HIME P VAAAAAAAAMAANY Perfecto 10¢ or 3 for 28c E. F. HIMES & CO., Providence, R. L. b | i i i | o Hummer Sliding worth 30c— worth 3 , worth 4 Sherwood Hetal Sliding Window Scre 13x33, worth 33e—now 24x33, worth 40c—now 24x37, worth 45c¢—no; 30x37, worth 50c—now. . 30x44, worth 60c—now . Bulletin Building FRISWELL : has the Largest Line of Alarm | Floral Designs Clocks in"the City. 25-27 Franklin Street Window Screens 15¢ 193 28¢ 29 ens SPEGIALS OIL STOVES 1-burner, worth 50c—now....... 350 3-burner, worth $1.3 3-burner Union, worth $1.75—now $1.50 3-burner Florence, worth $2.50— now $2.25 LAWN MOWERS 14-inch Easy Running, worth $3.00— now $2.50 18-inch Easy Running, worth $3.50— now $3.00 THE HOUSEHOLD, 74 Franklin Street Cut Flowers GEDULDIG Tel. 868 77 Cedar Street | MATINEES 5¢ Miss Ethel Know! George - Ehrets’ Extra Lager Is sold only at Wauregan House Cafe, PARKER-DAVENPORT CO., Proprietors. . Suit Cases and Bags. for Summer fraveling. All weights, sizes and styles at lowest prices. The Shetucket Harness Co., 321 Main Street, | WM. C. BOD! Prop. WALL PAPERS Are all in and ready for your in- spection. All grades and prices, in- cluding our English Imported Papers, Moldings to Match. Decorations and general painter'’s supplies. We are now receiving orders for paper hang- ing, decoration, and painting. P. F. MURTAGH, . Telephone. 92 and 94 West Main St. MILL REMNANT STORE West Side—179 W. Main St., 1s the only piace to, = o on every dollar buy Dres: Silks and Cotton Goods. New goods for Spring and Summer, Good lengths for suits, dresses and waists. Come and sce thé bargains at MILL REMNANT STORE, 179 W. Main St Featurs Pisture. “A CASE OF HIGH TREASON” 8.45 Iton, Sepranc. MUSIC. . _rcazEm TUNER 122 Proapect St Tel. 811 Norwish, O IF YOU WANT A FIRST CLASS PIANO, get a SHONINGER through WHITE, THE TUNER, 48 South A St, Taftville. CCAL AND LUMBER. COAL | The Best Coal Comes In Juse, duly and August The Coal is no better but it's better” prepared. You know how things are usuall done in times of rush. It's exactly the same in the Coal | busi and these three months ars not rush months. CHAPPELL CO. Central Wharf and 150 Main Strest Telephones. LUMBER GOAL Free Burning Kinds and Leighh ALWAYS IN STOCK. A. D. LATHROP, Office—cor- Market and Shetucket Sts. Telephone 163-12. CALAMITE COAL “It burns up clean” Well Seasoned Wood C. H. HASKELL. 402 — "Phones — 489 DR. C. R. CHAMBERLAIN, Dental Surgeon In charge of Dr. S. L. Geer's practice during his last illn McGrory Building, Norwich, Conn. SUMMER TOYS! Sand Toys, Pails and Shovels, Sand Mills, Boats, JOHN A. MORGAN & SON, Coal and Lumber Teiephone §34. Central Whart AMERICAN HOUSE, Farrell & Sanderson, Props. SPECIAL RATES to Theatre Troupes, Men, o Livery connected TUCKET STREET. SH Lunch Baskets, i Celluloid Dolls and Toys.i‘ Kites and Summer Goods of all kinds. RS, EDWIN FAVS, Franin Squars | | On Exhibition A fine assortment of the Latest Styles in Millinery for Summe MRS. G, P. STANTON’S, No. 52 Shetucket Street. DON'T WORRY It Makes Wrinkles wear at Worry over lli-health does your health no good, and merely causes wrinkles, that make you lock older than you are. If you ar2 slck, don't worry, but go about it to make yourself veil. To do this we repeat the words of thousands of other former snufferers from wom- anly ills, similar to yours, when we say, Take VIBURN-D | It 15 a wonderful female remedy, as | you will admit if you try it. Directions for its use are printed in six languages with every bottle. Price s at druggists. FRANCO-GERMAN (I 106 West 120th Street, MICAL CO,, New York. Freo every English Lunch &50.5 venins. Hand's Celebrated Half Stock Ale a specialty. The Westerly House, Formerly D. J. O'Brien’s, 68 No. Main. Kenyon & Pickhover, Props. Fidelio Beer On Draft or in Bottles. Team Delivers Everywhere. H. JACKEL & €0. Tel. 136-5. cor. Market and Water Sts. | best tonic The Roads Are Settling sure driving will he the best ipest way to get the embrac- resh th better than the Phone us for a good MAHONEY BROS., Livery Stable. alls Avenue. Allow Me Please ta quote you prices or to give you es- timates on all kinds of contract work, jobbing, carpenter work, painting. ete., ote. promptly attended o Estimates chee given, C. M. WILLIAMS, General Centractor and Builder, 218 MAIN STREET. Jobbing “Phon STEP IN AND TRY OUR 35c DINNER From 12 to 2 DEL-HOEF CAEE, Ground Fleor Refrigerators Qil Stoves Carpets We are agents for the three leading makes of Refrigerators. They come in all the different sizes and unsurpassed for value. BLUE FLAME OIL STOVES. no smell, always ready, bakss well. Our price ths No smolke cooks well, lowest. CARPETS. Our stock of Carpets is now completa We can furnish you with any kind of Carpet made. Either store. NORWICH or TAFTVILLE. SHEA & BURKE TBE RODERICK BOWLING ALLEYS reopen Saturday Evening with will . SPRAYING 1 of all kinds of trees by Forenter. Office 138 Palmer St. full size regulation, Your patronazs ia solicited. JOSEPH T. DONOVAY, Pron. HERE 15 ne adveriis) Eastern Cos u&l.) e‘r:rc nnnxlf«: et -

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