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‘aru;ich Hulletin and Goufier. 115 YEARS OLD. Subscription price, 13¢ a week; 50e & months; $6.00 a year. Entered at tho Postoffice at Norwich, Conn., wecond-class matter. Telephome Callss Bulletin Businees Office, 480. Bulletin Editorial Rooms, Bulletin Job Office, 35-6. Willimantie Office, Room 3 Murray Bailding. Telephone 210. Norwich, Saturday, July 22, 1911. The Cireulation of The Bulletin. The Bulletin has the largest efr- culation of amy paper im Eastern from three te four that of amy m Neorwich. It is delivered to over 3,000 of the 4,063 Louses ia Nor- wich, and rend by mimety-three per cent. of the people. Ja Windham it is delivered to over D00 houses, in Putsam aad Daniclson to ever 1,100, and in al these pinces is considered the local daily. Eastern Commecticut Las forty- Bime towus, ome hundred and sixty- Sve pesteffice districts, forty- one rural free delivery routes. The Bulletin fis sold im every, town and om all of the R. F. D. routes in Basters Commecticut. CIRCULATION 1901, average .....cceeeccee 4412 5920 4,068 MOTOR BOATS FOR OCEAN SERV- ICE. 1t is the dream of motor-boat en- thusiasts that these speedy little craft will yet become the automobiles of the ocean and that small parties will tour 1905, mverage . Week ending July 15 in them to all countries and islands of the seas, Their seaworthiness must first be established, and for this purpose the first one to cress the Atlantic left New York this week for Queenstown, and her speed will be a matter of much interest, The Romania is a high-powered eraft, fifty feet in length, although her tanks carry 1,200 gallons of gasoline. Provisions for two months and 180 allons of water will also be carried. The Romania is manned by Capt. John Weller, accompanied by Capt. William Small and three others. Captain Well- er expects to reach Queenstown, the first port of call, on August 4th, snd to return by the southern route. The venture is especially interesting, since the Romania is the first of what is zenerally belleved to be an enormous fleet of motor boats that will some day replace steam navigation. THE BENEFITS OF. A VACATION. It has to be admitted that too many people make a poor use of a vacation, owing to their lack of purpose or ten- deney to indulge in exce A vacationist was overheard at a widely popular resert to remark: “This is a mighty fine place for a fellow who has got a lot of money to spend.” This is a case in which the Iibricator is regarded as the whole. thing. Physical exercise in the open air is what gives value to a vacation be- cause it gives muscular resourceful- ness—a better appetite and a larger capacity for work in the future, The us vacation dissipations which cresp into the period of alleged rest usually send the vacationist back to business in poorer shape than when he left it, and he really has to re- cuperate at his employer's expense. Those who automobile have pleas- ure: but no physical - exercise to speak of; while those who boat and play golf and go te the wilds for game or for study, work days and sleep nights, improving their lung capacity and appetite and charging themselves with muscular energy. The upbuilding the pleasure- seceker is the prime object, and every- thing that impairs one makes a fail- ure of the purpose for which vacations are taken. LIVING BV THEIR WITS. There is an army of people who live by their wits in the large cities; but they could not if their clients had any wit at alL It is unexplainable why folks will 80 to people to reveal their future to them who have a ragged past and no future of their own that they féel sure of—who pretend to be able to disclose all things to them, when they do not ehemselves know when they have become elassified as frauds and the police are about to raid them. These impostors have so multiplied Chicage that Mayor in Harrison has ordered the police and law depart- ments to clean the city of them. Most of them work under the guise of clair vovants. They pretend to revl the future, reunite sweethearts and un- tangle all love and domestic difficul- tles, find lost treasure, sell all sorts of mines at fabulous prices; anything, in fact, that the dupe wants#done. The crusade followed an exposure of their methods by the Chicago Tribune, aft- er a reporter had visited a numher of the seers. Their methods are all the same. By trickery they answer a few questions to gain the confidence of the vietim. Then they say they can't make everything come out just right, but that the dupe lacks “magnetism,” and if that lack is supplied success will bo much surer, quicker and greatcr. Of course they agree to supply the needed “magnetism” by a “course of treatments,” at from to $100, de- pending upon the apparent prosperity of the dupe. Several seers have been arrested and the police are hunting evidence against the others The white population of the squth is only gaining 16.1 per cent, faster than the colored. The idea that the colored race would die out like the ha Indians proves to been false. During the recent hot spell the Mas- sachusetts Humane society watered in one day at Bosten 28,045 horses, and still 200 died and over 400 were pros- trated by the heat. b When the president reprimands Wiley the great American public will wonder what in the world a reco mendation was given to Ballinger f . THE PLAY OF POLITICS. V It is apparent enough to the coun- try that the so-called insurgents are politicians playing a new hand for a new grip on power, which at the present time promises no success to them, Perhaps no paper in the coun- try has shown them up more clearly than the Kansas City Journal when it put their play in this form for the ed- ification of its readers: “A boy entered a butcher shop and asked the price of sausage. ‘Fifteen cents a pound, said the man behind the scales. ‘They only asked me 10 cents a pound for it down to the other shop,’ said the boy. ‘Why didn’t you buy it there? asked the man. ‘They didn’t have any, said the boy. ‘Well," said the man, ‘we wouldn’t ask but 10 cents a pound for it either if we didn't have any’ The story reminds Joe Sat- terthwaite of the democratic house in session at Washington. They have passed a bill putting on the free list a lot of articles. They know the bill Wwill not pass the senate, nor be signed by the president, But they think it will make first-class campaign mat- ter for next year. Were it possible for it to become a law, were the re- sponsibility of providing revenues for the country up to the democrats, they would not be so rash in putting such a bill through one house. ‘A tariff for revenue only’ cannot be made out of a free list. But, like thg man who had no sausage to sell, they can make very cheap guotations.” EDITORIAL NOTES. The Connecticut legislature in its shrunken form is likely to ceatinue for some time yet. Billy Sunday has declined an offer of $500 a month to go back to hi favorite game of baseball. Those who drink at the bubbling, sanitary fountain know that the clear water is always coming on top. The veterans of Bull Run, while at Manassas this time, realized that Time can make havoc as well as war, In the past eleven years the shkeep have decreased in Vermont 97,000. The vacationists are more profitable. The Massachusetts legislature prom- ises to get through in a week or two, but Hartford may have ours till Sep- tember. Governor Pothier of Rhode Island is not ambitious to lead another politi- cal campaign. He says he has had enough. Mr. Wickersham will soon be aware that it is easier for a man to get him- self in bad odor than to recover his original sweetness. The gas meter is always a source of interest and curiosity—we all won- der what its revelations at the end of the month will be. Happy thought for toda: The man who follows his own inclinations when they are right can stand any amount of criticism, There have been three and a half million people to the top of Washing- ton monument in the twenty-three vears that it has been open. ‘When Jules Verne imagined the trip around the world in eighty days, no one thought that in 1911 the stunt could be done in sixty days. Since the jackpot got intg politics everyone cannot play the gdme; but now that it has got to go chances for lighter weights are brightening. /Texas is coming to the front with a corn crop of a quarter of a billion bushels, and this indicates that corn pone will be plentiful next winter. A western paragrapher advises the man in the moon to hand the new comet, since it is declared to be a tramp, a cold lunch, and to tell it to g0 away. TENNIS TOURNAMENT Open to All Who Wish to Compete for One of Five Prizes Offered. The Norfolk Tennis club will hold an open tournament on their grounds at the Eldridge gymnasium, beginning August 1. The following events will be contest- ed: Men's Sing ¢ to begin Tues- dav, August 1, at m. Men's Doubles—Play to begin Tues- days August 1, at 2 p. m. C‘onsolation single: Tournament Cup—The name of the winner in the singles will be engraved on_this cup and the winner may have the-custo:ly of the cup for the ensuing vear. First Prize—A cup suitably engraved will be given to the winner in sin- gles, to be his personal property. Runner-up Rrize—A cup will be giv- en to the ruaner-up in singles, to be his personal propert; Consolation Prize—A prize will be given to the winmer in the consolation singles. Those beaten in their first actual match will be eligible to com- pet Doubles Prizes—Prizes will be given to the winners in the finals in the dotinle matches. The cup for whicii the tournament ! be held was presented to the Norfolk Teanis club by H. H. Bridg- man and will become the property of the player who first wins it three times, not necessarily in succession. The cup has alrsady been won once Richard Augur of New Rochelle, . Y., twice by Robert LeRoy of York, and once by Fran Cale ¢ Hartford. There will be no entrance fee. Al contestants must participate in the drawings, and no substitutions of entyies will be allowed, Play will be governdd by the rules of the United State ational Lawn Tennis, association. Al matches will be the best two out of three sets, ex- cept the final match in singles, whi will ba the best three out of fivy In all matches vantage sets will be played. Disputed points will be. referred to the tournament commitiee, whose de- cision will b efinal. All entries must be received before 8 p. m. on Monday, July 31. Addres Charles H, Peck, Secretary, Norfolk, Conn. Tournament Commiltee—Carroll J. Post, Jr, referee; Charles H. Pec A. W, Pinney, Edmund Brown, rence Carter, Edmund Peaslee, Richard Lyman. Abandons Artesian Well. Director Eames of the New Haven public _works department annoanced that the artesian® well on the green will be abandoned for good and all, owing to the report of Dr. Lewis, tie city bacteriologist, that the weter is not healthful. The old pump has run dry, so that the only way people can get water now on the green is from the Pennett fountain, which has city water. J Why Trusts vell. Secrets seem to be the vitals of the ordinary trust, and it is little wonder yell when an attempt is ma‘de There is too much slam-whanging in t world. It is race against race, organization against organization and man against man. When it is brought down to this simple form it is popu- iarly recognized and known as slander —the output of an evil tongue. It is S0 common one might mistake it for a virtue instead of vileness. In the masg it is called “assaulting the en- emy”; and as a general thing it helps to upbuild the very thing it was in- tended to tear down and_ destroy. If man did not enjoy the excitement of it/ it would not be able to exist. There is nothing ennobling about it; and it is far from being accepted argument. Truth is the child of time who over- throws calumny whether it is uttered by the press, the puipit, or from any other point of vantage, It becomes every one to speak well of the living as well as of tne dead. It is not faults but virtues which well impress the human mind. When charity was associated with faith ard hope it was put last; but declared to be the great- est of the three; and, vei, the world overlooks it as if it had the merits of neither. The goldfinches cannot wait for the sunflowers to ripen their seed; and they are familiar erough with the way of the plant to sense that they need not. These birds will select a bloom well advanced in seeding and then pull out the outside petals and get at the ripened seed on the outer row, where the seed matures a week or ten ddys before it does in the center of the flower. They show as much intelli- gence at this work as the honey bee does in stealing the honey from a moth-flower, like the deep, close- throated petunia, which he cannot en- ter far enough to reach the nectar with his tube, so he will cut a hole in the flawer close to the honey-pot, and naively reach in and extract the honey like a sneak thief reaching for valua- bles through a broken window, leav- ing the faithful moth who fertilizes the seeds to do his work as he enters the mouth of the flower without get- ting his usual toll. The game of life in every backyard is s by sustenance. It is not unusual to find them tricking one another with a cl erness approaching the human qua The woman who Sunshine in My Soul T .y ing by the book, and speaking for all the rest of us. The sun in the heav- ens is the visible miracle-worker and it is not surprising that a. part of man- kind bow down to it and worship it as God. The sun is the of life and light: and of a po which seems divine. The sun keeps the earth in its perpetual round, the water upon the earth in constant ulation; every- thing tha‘ grows in its season a-going; and many useful things which are stored away in the earth. It is sun- shine which affords us material for our homes, all the things we eat and wear, the wood and coal we use to keep warm and prepare focd with, and the nerve force which keeps the very blood circulating in our veins. It is the sunshine that makes the steam- hin, battleship, aeroplane and other things possible, storsd In coal and pe- troleum. It is the sunshine that cr. ates the simple beauty of the flower and the majestic beauty of the moun- tain ranges, and of the sunrise and sunset, Sunshine is the source of pow- er and_ beauty, and all things else. Why should ail not sing, “There Sunshine in My Scul Today” when have constantly before us such a vi ble 2nd bencficent symbol of our Heavenly Father's daily care and con- tinual support. It is only those who love nature with a true leve who become aware of her compa mon‘)hms or who come to rea the spirit of comradeship that is abroad in the flelds and skies. A knowledge of natural objects soon impresses man with his kinship to the bee and butterfly, and to every living thing upon the earth, in the waters under the earth, and in the atmosphere which encompas: He becomes conscious of the inter-relationship of all things: and holds in disesteem no thing God has made. The birds, i sects, flowers and trees become old ac- quaintances to him when he has be- come familiar with some of their pe- culiarities and can call each one by name, or readily find it in its own abode. The very heavens by day and night have fellowship for the man who beholds in their beneficial service and hifting beauty the glory of God. Man was endowed- with mind that divine mind might pour into it the cons ness of beauty and power which inheritance and its ennoblement; and man does not awake as he should to his privileges and true enjoyment, but sleeps away the time d loses the joy and inspiration which the con- stant manifestations of divine wisdom and power are sure to excite. Perhaps you do not know that the butterflies were the first botanists, and that some of them are unerring in their judgment of plants. There is Papilio Philenor, who cannot get along withou* the Dutchman’'s pipe, because upon it Mrs. Philenor lays her eggs and the pipe supports her young. The Philenors are never bold about their visits, and T had not noticed them calling for a year or two. Just after the Fourth I thought it might be weil to interview the Dutchman's pipe and see if the Philenors were calling or slighting the plant. I sat in silence there a while looking through the foliage when I dis- covered a fat Philenor child attired in dark brown and spotte¢ bright red, fast asleep upen a big leaf, although 't was not 4 p. m. and I realized then their old relations were being main- tained and the Dutchman’s pipe was helping the young Philenors to be- come well dr. ed, respectable butter- and that after lingering near ugh the winter they would leave r young with it, and then fly away. How the butterflies and plants became so intimately acquainted no scientist has yet bean able to tell. The most efficient man is the man with the idea, not the man who with tools constructs things. The world calis the man of mind-forms a dream- er, and he who puts them into solid material a practical man. It strikes me that they are both practical meng for it takes as much practice to sec a new machine, or a new mansion, or a new town, in the mind and to make au interpretable draught of it upnn paper as it does to shape material to tha measure and lines that the manm of mind produces for the man who is said to do'things. 1 once went over a court house of granite with a cupalo 150 feet from the ground, and all the fittings and the furniture of the various court rooms were made to harmonize with the style of the building: and this great structure of granite and oak was produced upon paper from the mind of a man of in all of its wonderfal details; and it seemed as perfect as a song: in fz it struck me as being nearly equizglent to a miracle, and young designers and inyentors are do- ing this thing every day. But none of these workers could perfect mind creations without the help of the hew- ers and matchers and finishers. A per- fect work is seldom wrought by one man: but the efficient man is he who can take from his dream a thing of use and beauty and prevare the wayv for its being made visible, useful and permanent. There is no doubt one man’s weak- ness is another man’s opportunity: but it is usvally a selfish man, if not to take advantage of it. t old proverb. nvthing is fair in has been applied to trade with- doing any injustice to business ont methods in the competitions of busi- ness where every man is for himself, Long vears ago a wise woman wrate: “What should we have to about, if it were not for the weather?” and the weather is always a fruitful subject for thought and talk, but this Year it is outdoing !!..lf in engrossing the -attention of people in all parts of the land. Certainly the summer of 1911 will be remembered—by all who live it through. Those who leave home to find rest and comfort return to find comfort and rest at home; and those who remain at home are sure they 7| would be more at ease elsewhere. Certainly during the first two weeks of ‘July we have realized what the term, “sweltering humanity” means, and if we felt the heat so keenly in this locality with its open spaces and leafy trees, what must it have been in closely-built, crowded cities? No wonder we read of people overcome in body and mind by the heat, of parks and schoolyards thrown open for sleeping places, %f roofs and fire- escapes and verandas used for the same purpose; and of the many disas- ters resulting from the same cause. The dryness of the air has added to the general discomfort, and, take it all in all, few indeed are they whose philosophy is equal to the strain put upon it by the heated term. Every paper we taken up tells of some dread- ful disaster more or less directly the result of the intense heat. Perils by land and perils by sea at one time furnished the limit of dan- ger; but to this now must be added the risks encountered under the sea, and under the land, and, last of all, “in the sky above.” Collisions of va- rious sorts, trains derailed, wrecks at sea, explosions in mines, floods and cloudbursts, forest fires and conflagra- tions in cities, victims of ambitious air-flights, suicides, loss of reason; when was there ever such a list of woe? Still, an old uncle of mine al- ways insisted upon it tha: more people died in their own beds than anywhere else, and I fancy he was right. The entire year of 1911 has been thus far a year of topsy-turvy. We had no January thaw, and our win- ter was mostly in February. The grourdhog did not keep his promise, and the usval almanac days, so-called, the last Friday of the month, belied themselves until their reputation is much impaired. Warm days in March raised our hopes, only to be snowed under in April, and our April showers came in June, while the less said about May the better. The birds knew their time for nest- ing, however, and the flowers were mostly on time, though some seemed a little deceived as to date. were two weeks earlier than often- times, while the roses were later than usual or entirely burned up; and now we find it difficult to realize that many kinds of food are not to be had at the season when we generally depend upon ‘them. June brides were as numerous as ever, and the schools knew when the time came to close, and we may be Cherries | thankful for both pupils and teachers that the heated term did not come un- til vacation began. All_looked forward to St. Swithin's day for relief, but no showers came, and, according to the old saying, no rain must be expected for forty days to come. Meantime, we must shrivel away in the dry air, Perhaps, however, like all the rest, St. Swithin may contradict himself, and the rain may come after all. A passer-by expressed his mind forcibly today in my hearing, by saying: “I wish we might have a storm. wouldn't mind if it lasted three or four days. I'd be willing to work out lin it all the time” Before phe time | expired, T'll ‘warrant, he wotld wish i for sunshine again, for we are all con- tradictory as the weather is. I _presume Mrs. Caudle was glad to find the sun shining on the morning after .her direful prediction of “forty days and no umbrella.” T've no doubt the children were able to go to school as usual, and that her dear mother could be visited much the same, and that all was peaceful once more in the Caudle family. Evidently Caudle himself was quite a philosopher equal to the demand, and rested comfortably in hopes of the cloud rolling by speed- ily. Possibly experience had taught him that all things have an end, even Caudle lectures, and he had learned to endure silently what seemed an in- curable evil. Would there were more like him! How differently the story would have ended, had he been in- clined to argue the question. Perhaps he knew, too, that poor Mrs. Caudle was worn out with a hard day's work for him and the dear children, and very likely there had been a protracted spell of dry, hot weather to try her temper beyond control. Happy are they who have some philosophical companion to whom they may pour out their woes, and upon whom they may vent their spleen when patience and nerves are overdone. May the Caudles never be less in number than their lecturing mates, and always be able to turn the deaf ear up, and sleep soundly even while the shower of words eontinue: But Mrs. Caudle and her spouse have taken me a long way from my sub- ject. There are still many weeks of Wweather ahead of us, and with showers all about us, we have good reason for hoping they may reach us in time to firnish the desired relief. How happy we ought to be if tomorrow should find it raining. Even then some of would grumble at having our plans upset by the rain. “I wanted to go | to the beach today,” says one. “Now I cannot go down town, shopping, as I intended,” says another. “What a dismal rainy day!” is the plaint of a third, when we should all thank Heav- en for the gift of rain, plenteous, copi- ous showers, even if they find us like the Caudles, with no umbgella, and I have known people even to return a borrowed umbrella. AN IDLER. and the sentiment is, “The devil take the hindmost.” There is not much dif- ference in getting the best of a man because he knows less than we do, and taking things from him because we are stronger than he is. It seems to me as if the man who profits by the ignsrance of his fellow men must feel cheap when he sits alone and thinks his dealings over. Some people, doubt- less, school themselves to think that anything that is smart is creditable, even when it i§ getting a person’s sig- nature to a note ne does not owe, and is unaware he is signing. If we take the opportunity to protect the weak we have honored ourselves; and if wi grasp it to fleece them we are there after ever in dishonor whether we realize it or not. There is no loyalty of more import- ance than a man's loyalty to his own conscience. We speak advisedly when we speak of his own conscience, be- cause conscience is ofien but the an- ticipation of the opinions of othe and is not what the individual thinks The conscience is not the oracle ear but the oracle of Love; and has been truly said to be “the founda- tion of jo. It was Fuller who said: “A wounded conscience is able to un- paradise itself.” Py disloyalty to con- science it may be made the source of pain and shame. Napoleon found the hardest men to manage in the state were men “whose intentions were hon- est but whose consciences were be- witched”; and another notable sen- tence of his was that “his power emd- ed where conscience began.” It is better to be conscious that conscience has you, than that you have a con- science; that it is better to be law- abiding than to simply be aware of the la This “spark of celestial fire,” as Washington called it, burns true and clear so long as man declines te do evil in its name, SUNDAY MORNING TALK IN THE TOP STORY. LIFE Europe contains few more interesting relics than the great palace of the Al- hambra, at Granada. in Spain. Tray elers have told us about the generai plan of the historic old pile. In the lower part are the kitchens, ser- vants' quarters and rooms devoted .o menial uses. Above them are the liv- ing apartments, guest chambers and halls where formerly Moorish grandecs gave audience to envoys and friends. But far above all rises the great tower to which devout Moslems might ascend to look upward at tha stars or to medi- tate on the greatness of God. The glorious old palace is built, thus, in three stories. And it is much that way with a human life. Each one of us lives in a house three stories high. You can discern the kitchen and the drawing room and the watch tower in Your own personality if vou look for them. ‘Many of us spend a good deal of time in the lowest story. The kitchen is an important room and the question of what to eat and drink is an engrossing one. The proper care of the physical nature requir2s an immense amount of attention. You will find some peo- ple in the kitchen of life practically all _the time. The second story represents our in- tellectual nature. You get a broadcir view up there and the light is apt to be more abundant. Here we come for the culture of the mind. Many a man during the hard day’s wrestle for bread and butter is looking forward to the hour when he may settle down with a book beside the evening lamp. The joys of thought and friendship are here on the second story. There is a great deal of pure joy to be found in the drawing room of life. Highest of all is the third stor realm of the spirit. The most bean- tiful prospect, the best air, and the clearest light may be enjoved hera. The noise of the kitchen, the chatter of the drawing room cannot reach the watch tower where in the silenca God speaks to u He is a wise man who is careful io have a well-ordered kitchen .in his scheme of things; for the basis of life is physical. And if he is to be really alive he must frequently mount to the drawing room. He must feed his mind as well as his body. There ought o be for each of us some interest apart from the daily round to lend us vigor and tone. It were a pity to merit the epitaph of the poor fellow upon whose tombstone it was written “Born a Man and Died a Gr A But he is wisest of all who finls his way frequently to the tower room of life, He will remain starved and stunted unless hz pauses now and then to feed his spirit. It is good for us to look up at the stars, to reflect on the Power who placed them and here. Tt is good for us to feel the breath from the hills upon our fore- heads and realize our kinship with the Eternal. Oneecomes down from the tower roam humbled but wonderfully inspired for the work of life. Once each week is none too often to mount to the top story to get the viaw and to breathe the air. When some- one asked Oliver Wendell Holmes why he was so regular at church he replied “Thera is a little plant called rever- ence in a corner of my soul garden which I love to have watered about once a week.” A great many people feel about it as the genial poet faIt. THE PARSON. NO NEED FOR TYPHOID FEVER. Vaccination Advised by Connecticut Health Board. Secretary Joseph H. the state board of health, in the bulle- tin issued for the month of June, which, he says, worked so well during the recent maneuvers on the Mexican frontier that the government has is- sued an order for the vaccination of all enlisted men. e lucidly describes the vaccine and its use as follows: Townsend of Exhibit for Narfolk Fair. Dr. Jenkins of the agricultural ex- periment station at New Haven has written Mrs. Dennis, president of the Norfolk Agricultural society, that he will send to the fair to be held by the society this fall a tent containing an exhibit of all the experiments made at the station this year. This tent, yhich is 60 feet long and the exhibit two tons, will be sent there dneol from the Connecticut state | fair. The exhibit will also be shown | at the state fair at Berlin. WHERE CENTERS HOTEL FOR THE BUSINESS MAN, club-ike in its hospitelity. FOR THE TOURIST or sight-seeker, luxury, comfort and entetainment, after the day's outing. FOR THE FAMILY, home-like environ- ments seclusion o the with * o e i et e Sk THE HOLLAND HOUSE, 30th Strest and 5th Avemue OF NEW YORK CITY ‘Where “Znters Commercial Activity and the Attractions that Draw Visitors From Every Quarter of the Globe LIFE NORWICH _ Feature 0 “Her. Mlfiee" MISS MINNIE STEEVES, Soprane. TRAVELERS’ DIRECTORY. 70 NEW YORK LINE ‘The ";m way — the comfortable -y veling. City 6f Lowell and Ches- hapin—sate, staunch vessels every comfort and conven- ~ the traveler. "'A tful voyage on lm:5 Tsland und and a superb view of the won- “‘ful skyline and waterfront of New stmu leaves New London at 11 ‘m. weekdays only; due Pler foot of it 22d Street 5.46 a. m. (Mondays exceptad) 2nd Pler 40, North River, 7a m. Fare Norwich 10 New York $1.80 Write or telephone W.J. PHILLIPS, Agent, New London. Conn. New York CHELSEA LINE Fare $1.00 Freight and passenger service direct to and from New York. Brom, Norwich Tuesdays, Thuts- ays, Sundays, a New York, Pier 23, ngc River, foot Roosevelt Street, Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays, at 5 p. m. Freight received until 5 p. m. C. A. WHITAKER, Agent. Spend Your Vacation in BERMUDA SWEFL BY COOL OCEAN BKEEZES, An ldeal Sea Trip o tite Most Delightfal Summer Kesort in the World. Every outdoor recreation. Sea Bathing in the clearest of turquolse waters. LExzcellent fshing. 1,500 Mile Superb Ocean Yoyage B THE MAGNIFICENT, FAST, TW I EW clue C 14 Transatiantic Liner *‘OCEANA 14,000 Tons Displacement; 53 1t. Long Largest, Fastest, Most Luxurious and Only sively First-Class Passenger Steamer 1o Bermuda, N0 Cattle or frelght carried on (he “Oceand.’: FIRST-CLASS ROUND TRIP, in eluding stateroom xmu. & meais uP 8t the ext rate of Best aullire on the’ Atisuiic. Electric fans in every room. Many staterooms with brase beds; six suitos de lixe with private baths; promen eck In the world. Orchestra, Promenade Daces, Gymnasium, Wireless. ~Only Bermuda steamer with submarine signals TOURS }ading Shore Exou Hotels, &c., at Lowest Rate. Beautiful booklet, Iumerary. Tickets, etc. of Bermuda-Atlantic Line. 290 B'way, N. % MONTAUK STEAMBOAT CO. Str. “Wyandotte” leaves New London for Greenport. Shelter Island and Sag Harbor, weekdays, 10 a. m., 4.10 p. m. Leaves’ Sag Harbdr, returning, week- days, 6 a. m., 12.30 p. m. jyia STEAMER GARDINER Teaves Norwich for New London, Ocean Beach, Pleasyre Beach qud Crescent Bezch 805 A. M., 2.05 P. M., returning, arrives Norwich 1.25 P. M. and 7.25 P. M. SUNDAYS leaves & A. M. and 205 P. M. TWO CRUISES | Duration ARDUND| s e sewmtis | 1[0 DAYS —THE— cosT WORLD L ON AN Abon LINER | Ashore. HAMBURG-AMERICAN LINE, 41-45 Broadway, N. Y., or local agent. F. H. WILLIAMS, JR., General Agt H. C. LONG, Speciat Agt. F. H. KENYON, Special Agt. Hartford. Conn. jun2ss PLUMBING AND GASFITTING. JOHNSON AND BENSON, 20 Cenral Avenue. SLATE ROOFING Meatal Cornices and Skylights, Gutters and Conductors, and all kinds of Job- bing promptly attended to. Tel. 719. Sanitary Plumbing A peep into an up to date bathroom 1s 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 job. J. E. TOMPKINS, 67 West Main Street The Vaughn Foundry Co. IRON CASTINGS furnishea promptly. Large stock of patterns. No. 11 to 25 Ferry BStreec S. F. GIBSON Tin and Sheet Metal Worker Agent for Richardson and Boynton Furnpces. B85 West Main Street, Norwich, Conn. T. F. BURNS, Heating and Plumbing, 92 Franklin Streei Those who Take Foley Kidney Pills For their kidney and bladder ailment and for annoying urinary irregular ties are always grateful both for the quick and permanent relief they af- ford, and for. their tonic and strength- ening effect as well. Try Foley Kidney Pills. Lee & Osgood Co. ¥ S 'i‘fi;mam MuUSsIC. r. c. aezn TUNER 122 Prospect 8t, Tel. 611, Norwlek, Cu IF YOU WANT A FIRST CLASS PIANO, get a SHONINGER through WHITE, THE TUNER, 48 South A St, Taftville. COAL AND LUMBER. GCOAL DON'T SIGH OR CRY— BUY COAL IN JULY Tt gives one such a comfortable thrifty feeling to bave the Coal bin full of sparkling Coal.e The House seems cooler too. CHAPPELL CO. Central Wharf and 150 Main Street. Telephones. LUMBER GOAL Free Burning Kinds and Leighh ALWAYS IN STOCK. A. D. LATHROP, Office—cor- Market and Shetucket Sts. Telephone 163-12. CALAMITE GOAL “It burns up clean.” Well Seasoned Wood C. H. HASKELL. 402 — "Phones — 489 JOHN A. MORGAN & SON, Coal and Lumber Central Whart Teiephone 884. LANG Ory Cleaner and Dyer 157 Franklin St SUITS PRESSED 50c Our Wagon Calls Everywherz YOUR TEETH NEED TO BE FIXED. WHY SUFFER PAIN OR PAY LARGE PRICES? Without the pain you can have the mo: sitive teeth removed by method. Wa fill teeth with silver or enamel for 50 cents and gold for $1.00, or solid gold crowns for $5.00, Dr. H. D. Sydleman is a mem- ber of this Association and su- perintends the manufacture of our artificial teeth. He has no equal in this branch of dentistry By ordering of us you receive the benefit of his years of ex- perience. ®Work guaranteed ten years, and as we lease our offices and have been established here eight guarantee is of in- 4 value. We will be pleased any time to examine your teeth without charge. Open from 9 a. m. till 8 p. m. King DentalParlors DR. JACKSON, Megr. Franklin Square, Norwich, Conn. We have some pieces of Furniture, Tables, Chairs, and Swing Seat suitable for Piazza or Seashore Cottage. The Fanning Studios, 31 Willow Street WALL PAPER FURNITURE UPHOLSTERY STEP IN AND TRY OUR 35¢c DINNER From 12 to 2 DEL-HOEF CAXE, - Ground Floor letin for business res