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NORWICH BULLETIN, THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 1912 INSURANCE. A Specialty 2 ARM INSURANCE J. L. Lathrop & Sons, Norwich, Conn. HE OFFICE OF WM. £ HILL Real Estate and Fire Insuranc iccwied 1o Somars’ Block, over C. M. Wiliams, Roem 9, third floor. Telapnone 147 ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW " AMOS A. BROWNING Attorney-at-Law, 3 Richards Bidg. ‘Phone 00 Brown & Perkuns, tumeys-at-Law Over First Nat Bank, Shetuckst St Enance stairway next to Thacwes | Nationa' “ank. Telephone 333 = =| | |ex INVESTMENTS Dominick & Dominick Tel. 901 Norwich Frank O. Moses, Mgr. LMORE, Spectal, G. EDWARD GRA¥F Stocks, Bonds and Grain Reom 5 Broadway, . Chapman Building, Norwich, Co MEMBER Exchange Tgde Telaphone 842 C.H GILFILLAN, Magr. i' assoriment oi While cnam- elware just pui on sale. 25¢ | Let us figure on your Elec- tric Work or offer suggestions | for obtaining improved light- | ing. Company | { 129 Main Sireel, Norwich, Conn, | | | Advantage With K. O. Brown. L i Ath- I3 o t Lrown of New ¥ ght advantage over | Youns | ol Hills Practicing. ! ) tting in plen | the 2 st Sa day with the a since, Totekett Won Closing Game. " e ) baskelball team £r Jerum defeated the Paltic five at ¢ m \Wednesday evening with a Beor ; This is the last b ou t games plaved sar { Beware of Olntments for Catarrh that | Contala Mercury, i the futerang it wiil ao 1e | possibly | Citareh rur in Toledo. &o. " Tentiman Nineteen Miles a Second ar, shock or dlsturbanee, ig | our ear vet brings good health ol o & Osgond 1 s or 3 ! loug ur " trouble, | L Widy reatly unproved. My | Rdneys stronger, dizzy spells laft me w no longer annoyed ot night. | feel 100 per cent. hetter since using Fgley Kidacy Pills” Lee & Osgood Co | tions |longer oppress the average security| 1g) s holder with fear. f— The movement today embraced a|—o number of other specialties and rail-| 600 way shares of minor grade, the stand- | ‘201 Do. pld ard issues making less headwa al- 8500 Tennemsee Copper ough showing = decided strength. ey S Conditions {n the domestic labor sit- R uatio were bettered by the accept- 11 Union Pacific ance by the Lawrence mill workers of | 100 Do. o(d the terms offered by the employers, |~ Unted Saiee | kated $2,369,000, Disquali ified One Round Hogan Refused to Break Clean in Bout With Leach Cross—Referee White Takes Action After Five Infractions of Law by | Hogan—Cross Had the Better of Bout as Far as It Went. New York, March 13.—"One Round” speed events, aithough he seems fear- Hogan of California was disqualified | 1ess in the prize ring. he first round of his fight with it T e PHILADELPHIA AMERICANS Leach Cross. the local lightweight, at the Magison A. C, here tonight by FIND THEIR BATTING EYE Referee (] White for hitting inf 5. N % s the breakaways. Up to the time of | Pile Up 17 Hits on San Antonio, Win Heoan's o whish 00~ ning 12 to 3. curred after two minute: fighting. o San Antonio, March 18.—The Phila- delphia American “regulars” piled up hits in today's game against the Cross was we to the face, Cross was the first to offend by sting him with smashes hit- | 17 a cc | San Antonio, Texas, league team and ting in the breakaway, and Referce | San Ant us, e White ocautioned him. Immediately ' won, 12 to Baker's fielding was afterward Hogan hit Cross over the the feature, turn five roferee’s shoulder and was in ceutioned. Then Hogan hit Cro: | Commensial Cars Now in Limelight times In breakaways and the I'vleru'i Boston uncovered in Mechanics disqualified the westerner. oo | building Wednesday night the first The house was in an uproar. Cries| ( nmercial vehicle show ever held in f “Fight! Fight!" were heard from | his section. From March 13 to 20, in- very part of the house. Immediately| qusjve, this commercial show will con- pon_disqualis i Do leaped | tinve, with all the elaborate decora- from the ring, followed shortly aft tions that proved so fitting a setting ward by Cross. Referec White climb- | r"th Dlodaure car left in the builds ed into the ring and said ing where almost everything in the Under the Frawley law any person| oy of a self-propelled vehicle for taking part_in boxing bouts in the e e public roads will be seen slate must break clean. Hogan dis-{ 4.0 5 three-wheeled motorcycle with garded my caution five times | parcels van, suitable for use by small then I ais ed him.” | laundries, men’s furnishings stores, etc, The spectators quieted down and left | o 5" 10-ton truck for hauling coal of Fuctect Yowssedf! | AT FOUNTAINS, ucrtu. OR ELSEWHERE Original -ndGenume ORLICK’S MALTED MILK Obotsare Smédations TheFood DrinkforAllAges RICH IILK. MALT GRAIN EXTRACT, IN POWDER Not -in any Milk Trust “HORLICK'S” ad I‘“‘%‘..&“., g o FOOTWORK GOES WITH BOXING CHAMPIONSHIPS MoFarland and Gibbons Are Both Stars at It Of what value is footwork in box- ing? This question is continually croppirg out, and proves an interest- ing topic. In these days of rough in- fighting .or cyclcnic slugging, which a large percentage of professional boxers employ, swiftness of foot in both attack and defence is lost sight of, yet it is one Of the biggest factors in meking ring champions. Of the present-day Loxers wo ex- pert foot-workers stand out in bold [relief. They are Packey McFarland, | the Chicago welterwelght, end Mike Gibbons, the St. Paul middleweight. Both are phantoms when they begin fighting, for they can fade awey from a rival's wallop so quickly that box- ing fans are amazed. Yet when Me- Fatdand and Gibbons decide to land punches they shoot to the mark with lghtning-like rapidity. Their fooi- the hall in an orderly manner. and heavy mstertils — result of the fine dis at last vears's Boston AUTO RACE DRIVING : it Is believed the number of FOR WOLGAST AND BRONSON.| commercial motor vehicles in use in — New England increased 35 per cent in Two Pugilists Long to Be at the Wheel | the four summer months last year. e | Rolled 280 for New World's Record. Indianapolis, Ind., Marok 13.—AD-| Breaking a world's record for tour. parently the other man's game 100KS | pnament competition featured the el tasier than their own to two of he|oath day of the American Bowling most famous pugilists in the United | (omeress tournament at Chicago on States, for Ray Bronson, claimant of | \radnesday. Louis Vielstitch of Kan- he welterwelght champlonship, and | gas Gity established the record Whem Ad Wolgast, the world's champion po rofled 230 for a single game while lightweight, have come out simultane- | compoting in the doubles with Kid ously with the announcement that' Ninne e i lor (Wi T they are intending to enter the auto- ', waflonal leazua baseball club, The moblle racing game as professionals. | amcia) scoro beats the former The neement that Wolgast will| of 970 made jointly by Harry M b ssen at the wheel, of ‘oue “ob the | o st Bicus oity, Towa: axid Willam Case racing cars in Santa Monica ear- | Miner of Chicago at Tonls Tast] Iy in May, and later will appear as gen velief driver to Harvey Herrick and S Louts Dishrow, drivars in the sctond! |-.Comell's Eastsr Baseball Trip: Tkes race (o De held at the Indian-| _Ithaca, N. Y., March 13.—Cornell's \polis Motor Speedway, mext Memo- | Faster baseball trip in the south wil rial day. include f games. The sche: o Bronson has made tentative arrange- | nounced by the ll’h]f‘( J \011!)\‘»\1 today ments with Bob Burman, the world's | follows: April 5, Yale in Washing- seed King, to act as rellef driver on | to; April 6, Washington Americans ' Cugting oar wiich Burman will| In Washington;April § Baltimore In- pilot through the long Indianapolis ternational team in “fls\lin!}fill Apri rece Bronson and Burman are great 9, Virginia university in C ‘harlott 8- friends and during the recent speed ! ville; april 1 Georgetown in Wash- which famous driver made ington. * the Speedway, Bronson acted as his St :w‘.“vsm 4 later took the wheel, Challanging The Slippery Eels |His driving against time was almost! The Laurel Hill seco sketball equal to that of Burman, who compli- | team would like to chall mented him highly and offered him a ' pery Eels one week from Sa place ns relief driver in the long race. | h{ternoon 290 p f. The lineup is as srman_contemplates driving all but | folows, Baton, catch; Stanley, pi about fifty miles of the race, and. he . Blair, first; Pennett, second is firm in the belief that the short re- | third: Parker, Allan: right lief period will entirely cure Bronson' on, left stnd’ —chalisnges desire to participate in further | thfough the FINANGIAL AND GOMMERGIAL STRENGTH FROM ABROAD. n Rapld ciic her Transtt American Stock Market Affected by London's Cheerfulness. New York, March 13. To the ca ual observer today's stock mar , seemed to derive a great deal of its & early activity and strength from| '™ ¢ London's cheerfulness of the c preceding day became more accentu-| 9 C 8 | ated with a further advance in consols | S Conwilduted Gas and home ralls. The English marke 90 Dilewire & Hidie sent over a decidedly higher list of | 20 aver & Mo Granie prices for our securities and followed e - this with considerable buying here.| ;08 Dacier’ Seurlies .. o The improvemen: in British sentiment | 'ts00 Do, ist pid H seemed o have its foundation largely | 6 Da ad vt - R n the belief that the crisis in the| 130 Geeral Eleciie 4 oal sirike is passing and that hence- | o) Sxeé Nortbern pfd ... e forward developments in that situa- | 100 Dlinols Caral 13 on will be In the direction of settle- | 00 Intesberough Mot 1 e forelen situation was in 10| 1o Inier Mavine e 0% wise 1esponsible, however, for the| 40 Intrenstional Psper 10% movement {n some of our more active | 3 [specialties, such, for instance, as American Sugar and International Harvester. Concerning the former, which advanced four points, the com- pany mdde a radical departure from iis custom of many years by publish- ing a detafied statement of its opera- for 1911 This exhibit showed rofits exceeding $14,000,000 compared 0 vith 56,000,000 in the preceding year,| oo X e 24 pid and was in other respects a ote- | 300 New Yok Cavesl.. worthy documeat. Officials of the| X Y. on & We.. ompany also expressed OPtmiSm Te- | 1pd Newters ractie | garding the outcome of the govern-| #o Paege. Me ment suit now pending. As for Har- | 210 Pansyirania ... . ster, which gained three points, it| %0 DemeaGas oo is 1 believad to be a foregone con- | ™ 5o mestars Go ion that the company has arrived | 169 Preesd Stes Cir at an understanding with the govern- |—= Pullmn Palice Car ment, and thai dissolution proceedings | ,.o will involve no peouniary damage to | shareholders, In fact, the resulls of the disintegration of the Standard Oil and American Tobacco companies no 0 200 i 0 00 09 This wag partly nullified by the formai | rseee atied States reply of the anthracite coal owners| 70 Do. b to the miners; which, while concilia- | 2100 Utan Oopper tory in tone, constituted a general re-| 9% Y, Car. Chem fusal of all demands. No other an-|_'" 5" & swer had heen expected, but it had| 100 Wesem Marsisnd the effect of. giving pause to the mar- | —— Wednghoue = Electric ket in the last hour, which v N e the duliest of the session, o B ety marked by $uch contrary movements | 50 Chino Comper % as a rise, of four points in Central| 200 Ra. Connl Leather preferred and a fall of 7 in! o wies 370,800 shares American Tobacco. Kinal dealings re- N5 sl octed weakness In the speoulative leaders, Steel and Union Pacific los- COTTON. ing muchi of their mdvance, while| .New York, March | Reading and Lehigh Valley ciosed un- | tures closed steady | changed, Harvester and other m:»——‘\‘lwr‘h 10.37; April 10.38; May 10.47; claltics also fell off from best pr June 10.52; July 10.58; August 10.57; Honds. were_ active with fow prics Heptember 10.56; October 10.62; No- changes, except in London under- | vember 10.65; December 10.69; Janu- ground railways, which advanced five [ary 10.64; February 10.63, poincs, Bpot closed quiet, five points higher; Total sales, par valus, aggre- middling uplands 10.70; middling gulf U & gu.mflnlrntfi were unchanged | 10.95. Sales, 25 bales. : | ‘MONEY. 8TOCKS., : | New Yor Money on eall b o % | Armer: 2 per cent.; rullng ok 11 \rate 3 1-2 ciosing s 30% | bid 2 3-8; offered at 2 @% 4| Time loans steady 3 per iii il | cent. and nine da Bix o3, monits 3 1 3 HICAGS GRAIN MARKET. 4 WHEAT. Hoh Low. Close o wi % a comy My io% July i1 jo=d ny 106 Doyt 1045 | 9ATS: 08 Atluntle Const Line Mey 1560 Battinors & 0o July —— Becichom Suel St work is not it is a gift, “If vou Keep your feet moving all the time” sald McFarland recently, “it stands to reason that the other fellow will find it hard to reach you | with a #olid blow. Some fighters can- cuitivated, they say, but | not hit with effect unless they set themseives firmly on both feet and | then swing either hand from the hip. Many of these fellows do a lot of harm if they land, but when they do it is wholly because their opponents do not know how to offset the punche: “I have learned from experience tha y making a man miss I can accom- plish much. As soon 2s a fighter learns that he cannot land his best blows, he | naturally becomes discouraged. Then | you've got the battle half won, and | you caa clinch the victory by landing quickly delivered biows yourself.” But you cannot make a man miss or land rapid jabs for points unless you know how to use your feet.” While McFariand uses his feet and knows how to feint he is not a slug- ger. He can hit with keen, - cuttin results, LUt be seldom scores & knock- out. Gitbons, on the other hand, comblnes skill ‘with remarkable hitting power. He is a natural fighter. IUs easy for { him to feint a man into knots, while | he can make a rival miss in ludicrous fashion, But when he darts in to land |a smash he puts beef behind it and generslly produces pain. In fact, for {bis weight and inches, Gibbons is & wondertul punche Washington Loses First Game. Charlottesville, W. Va., March 13— The Washington American League baseball team in training quarters here was defeated today, 5 to 8, by the | University of Virginia. It was the | big team'’s first day in the open. New Orleans 5, Chicago Nationals 1, New Orleans, March 13.—Th Orleans Southern league club again defeated the Chicago Nationais here today by the score of 5 tc L Roller Polo Results Wednesday. At Schenectady: Schenectady 1, burgh 12. SPORTS OF ALL SORTS. _The boxing commissioners of New York have barred the kidney punch. Casper Leon, the veteran bantam- weight of New York, has lost his li- cense as a referee in New York. The promoters of Hammond, I, re trying to pry the lid off the game | In that city. Frank Moran, the Pittsburg heavy- weight, is after a match with Joe Jeanette. Harry Direet, who was the pacing sensation in Memphis last spring, is wintering {n Havis James' stable in Pleasanton, Cal. Doc Tanner moved from Brunswick, Ga, to Memphis last week with Uhlan and other Billings trotters that will leave for Russia April 15. Pater Red, 2.11 $-4, the son of Peter the Great, in Shawsheen river farm, is going to be a very popular horse with New England breeders. Unless he makes a great showing this season, Ralph Works, the Tigers young pitcher, will forsake the dia- | But donot be fied with anyl Thel'_émous CONTENTMENT best, whemhe best beer and ale costyou nomore than the kinds you get whenyou fail to order~ AND:c contemed or satis- hing less thanthe SELECT STOCK LAGER BANQUET ALE HAL Alittle health-alittle wealth llzfilefiou.fe&f;ndm With some few Iriends Jfor certain ends But hitle cause o mond at the close of the 1912 cam- paign. Harvard will have three weeks of spring football practice, beginning about March 26 and ending just prior to the opening of the spring on April 14, Tink Hills, who won the first M_ and | M., with Hendryx, who is president of the association in Marshall, Mich, wkich will open the Great Western circuit July 4. Marager Dooin of the Phillies say that “Runt” Walsh will get a theroush trial behind the bat on the training trip, and if he makes good he will Dbe permanently assigned to the Quak ers' receiving department. Jeff Smith tried to get out of bout with Kid Henry In Albeny ground that his hands were Smith_will not be allowed to New York tili he has boxe Albany club. But Sheldon, 2.18 crack campaigners of the half-mile tracks, died a ago in Orange, N. J. had_been Lensioned since 1900 by George Smith, who had owned him almost a quarter of a century. Because of the large number of candidates now working out dally in the Harvard cage for the baseball %eam, Coach Sexton has decided not to <call out the veterans of the squad un- til Monday, March 18, giving them one week in which to rest. Probably no member of the Wash- ington team will miss king. Street was always the Lo wonder’s ba‘tery mate and Gabby | knew how to get the best out of Sir Walter. Neither Eddie Ainsmith nor John Henry has had much success holding Johnson, particularly Henry, Chief Cowles of the New Haven po- lice, boss of the game in that city, does not believe that any boxer should get more than $500 and that bouts should be between boxers from the feather-weight to the welter-weight limit. The chief will not stand for Joe Jeanette boxing three white hopes in April. Al Lippe, manager of Frank Moran, the big heavy-weight from Pittsburg, €aid yesterday that if the latter de- feats Al Kubiak in their 10-round bout in the Knickerbocker A. C. of Alba N. Y, on Monday night, he will be willing to match him against Joe Jeanette, the colored heavy-weight, in 2 10 or 15-round bout. Packey McFarland left Chicago with TWENTY YEARS ON THE CINDER PATH By JOHN D. NOLAN. NUMBER 22 .People Are Suspicious of Me—Wil- —Coffey After the Orange Gamblers My race with Dufrane in Orange, N. J., caused much comment in sport- | ing circles throughout the country, not | on account of the time (15m. 52s.), but by reason of the amount wagered. jman Gleason?" was askod on all sides, rting men in Newark and New |Xork ¢ty recefving letters of ingairy | from Pittsburg and Boston, i W. Willlams, whose real name was Clark of London, Eng., challenged rm— at oncs after the race. He was a of money runner who was imported by Fmglish | passed him. sporting men of Newark to catch | Dufrane’s backers, but he had arrived | Gleason {on the scens too late, as we had turn- | ed the trick the day of his arrival. | “The race with Williams, which was {for one mile for $100 a side, was view- }ed by Coffey and his friends with sus- xdclon, { planning H them; dnd as feared the ba previo raco with Williams an asticle appeas: ed in the sporting columns of the New | York Sun giving an ant of my | mysterions "appearan at Orange, { races with Eaton and Dufrane, and ad | vising peepie not fo bet on th {as it was, no doubt, prearranged. { This articie, though entirely false, las I had never met be- 3 Accept English Runner’s Challenge— dent of his liams is Beaten in 440 for the Mile |t0 Gleason’s identity as ever, The question, “Who is this | intention to do so, it he could.” The peopie were as much at sea as some saying his name was sprinter, while others said he was a member of the Irish team, who had { come over to compete in the American | championships. “Is this race on the level?” Gleason was_ asiced. “Bet as you please. Il win if I can” quietly returned the runner. Gleason was a favorite in the bet- ting ring at 2 to 1. with few takers. | The friends of Williams were confi- [ dent, but when a roll was shoved in their faces, replied they had bet all their money already. At the pistol shot Williams set a het pace for three laps, when Gleason Williams immedlately | took the lead wgain, but after a lap passed him, after a hard struggle, and the men ran in close company until the last lap, when Glea- son let himeelf out, and won by ten vards in 4m, 40s. The spectators hewied, threw their hats in the air and hit ene another over head witl n of t 1ounted W Sullivar and I offey not being included in thi The winming of Lhis rase made me mare popular than ever in Orange, and John Erb, who owned a saloon en ain run it for Bim on a rdet, advised me to buy it or percentage plan; belting, but did not |and told us we could make a e any effect on the attend- | there in a vear. 1 about 600 people were pres- | this proposi e Te John Erb, called | love with Or: ce at § o'clock p. wm. June 3. The | remain there Newark Evening Post of June 3, 1890, |and fast agreemcnt called me “The Orange Mystery,” and | who, square with all his friends, was said of the race: “The Orange sports had great con- | alrcady planning a deal to fidence in the Mystery's ability to de | as vindictive as an Indlan, and he was get square with Coffey and the gumblers of feat Williams, but were not s coufi- | Orangs B 2 SR el recess, | “Gabby” Street | = more than Walter Johnson, the speed | olan, a Chicago | his manager, Emil Thiery. Pack is BREED THEATER “On the Edge of the Precipice” THRILLING WESTERN FEATURE And Three Other Dramatic Headliners Good The Baseball Fans W Comedy MELLVILLE & THATCHER HELEN MORAN The Irish Empress. Special for St. Patrick's Day, Another 2-Reel Special Coming Monday and Tuesday Admi ion 10c. Evenings—Reserved Seats 200 TODAY—5 REELS OF PHOTO PLAY, “THE IMPOSTOR” and other select subjects. Josep h McGinty in Two Popular Songs. we have cold, disagresable winds | COAL AND LUMBER. COAL TRAVELERS' DIRECTORY. |New L.ondon | (NORWICH) . | ine The Spring Has Come l‘i > The Flowers In Bisom () | NE ‘SY"’EAM‘E’K? RK Well not yet — no, there's a lot of Mflin! lfld New N‘mp‘hif‘ cold weather to come yet. | Choose t s routs nexi time but | 10 New ¥ You'll have a aell | voyage on Long isiand Bound and & superh view of the wonderful sky line | and water front of Manhattan Island. camer leaves New London at ii p. CHAPPELL 0. | 2, "iaek days only, aue Mew Tock Fier t 545 and Pler 40, Thermometer doesn't go so low, Worth River 7 lock next moraing going to his home to set inio ion | v i TAEW v for iz 10-round bout with Kid Burny, | Conirsl Wharf. and 160 Main street | - NEWY LONDON the west side midale-weighl, v | Teleph — | takes place in Kenasha, Wis., on thc | g | e v night of March 15. Before leutin, | NEW YORK McFarland said he would get even | | with Burns for the black efi'! wil | L 8. S 'dlvhnnn . T | be recelved in their bout in the Fair- | mont A. C. a few weeks ago. ‘ Jess and Eddie ranged three 10 j erack little place in New York | die O'Keefe ot Phi Joe Coster of Br , Tommy Houck adelphiz wili g0 aginst Patses | 1d Johnny Dundes will tak {on (he winmer of iha Young Wagner | Tommy Buck aght chwill be | ¢ided on mext Monday night | Agent, New London, Cond. fer rooms and Information. dentlst ‘of New York British exports to Turkey first nins months of 1911 700,000, an increase of * the same period in 1910, During 1911 1,071,743 tons of new shipping were iaunched in the United j Kingdom, of which the shipbuilding works on the e contributed 436,466 { tons. for the aggregated $4,400,000 “MY FEET WERE JUST ACHING FOR TIZ” | SRR |Let Your Peor, Tired, Chated, Tender Feet “Spread Out” Gloriously in a Bath of TIZ! “0, 0, glory, what a feelin't Wonder- ful what TIZ will do for your fee Just take your shoes off, and then put those weary, shoe-crinkled, achy, corn-pestered, bunion-tortured feet of yours i a TIZ bath. Your toes will wriggle with joy. They'll look up at you and almost talk, and then they'll take another dive in that TIZ bath! Yes, TIZ is life to feet! “Just couldn’t wait to take my hat off!” The man or woman who says anything like it, or as goa neyer had a fooi In a TIZ b When your feet ache, swollen, tender or sore, just Your feet will just feel fine; corns, bunions and callouse appear. Youw'll be able to wear smalis shoes, to0; vour feet will keep (o they'll never be frosthitten, nevar of bialned TIZ operates under a new princi drewing out all the poisonous exu tlors that make feet sore, corny tired. There's nothing clse ifke so_refuss any imitation TIZ, 235 cents a box, sold everywher or sent direct. on reseint of price | Waiter Luther Dodge & Co. Chicas 1l Recommended by all Drug Sti: department and general sitores. : To Mothers—And Others. You can use Bucklen's Ar re children of eczema, r: haflngs, scaly and cruste mors, as well ag their acclds —cuts, burns, bruises, etc., with pe safe! Noth! els neats & quickly. For old, ning or fever sores or piles it has 1 equal. cents al Tee & Osgood Co."s. A Cold, La Grippe, Then Pneumenia {15 tee often the fatal sequence, & wys- ial resistance. ¥o Compound & reliable med it Etops the celigh prompily aling the enase; soothes the inflamed air passages, ani checkis the cold. Keep always an hand. Refuse substitutes. Lee & Osgoad Co, sing medium 16 Eastern Connecticut equsl to The Bus iotin for business results. free Gurning Kind Is anu Lfln.n Mew York CHELSEA LINE Fare $1 Freight and passenger serwica COAL ALWAYS A D LHHBOP | t Shatus .y || direct to New York ket and Shetugket Sts | From Norwich Tuesdays, Thure + Teleplione 3-12. fAays, Sundays, at b ll G A iew_ York, Pier 23, vor, S — (cfll Rooseveit Etree hyn Foancadars. Fridara. at Freight recefved uatl § p, F, V. KNOUSE, Agent, GAI.AMITE GUAL | buras oy Well Seasoned Wnud C. H. HASKELL. 402 — 'Phones — 489 the Snest " pint of granulated sugar and 1% pint of warm water and stir Put 215 ounces of pure Pinex cents’ worth) in & pint bottle, and fill it up with the Sugar Syrup. you & family supply of vrup Take & teaspoonful every one, three hours. 18 surprising. stantly, an Ory Cleaner and Dyer Delivered to Any Part of Norwich the Ale that the best on the market PEERLESS. recetve prompt attention. Dest_euisine on Do eattle or frelght, 18 far the liner to JOHN A. MORGAN & SON, Coal and Lumber et | he lana that Contral Whar' | wiiie the worlq-famed Bermats flowers are i blossom. 1 Piryiand ‘yon can enjoy driving, e [ @olf, tennie, boating, ooean bathing. ana’ gvery c.ephona 884 from Now Yorke. Mt Attractive Tt Ever Offered. Get beautiful book te frem Atrastic (in ¥oewny. W, ¥ LANG [F==HOTEL GREGORIA NEW YORK CITY, 85TH ST, FIFTH AV, BROADWAY. Modern. _ Atwelutely . corsfortele And bom wetacnts, hops sed ¥ONE. BETTER AT ANY PRICE. 800 Reoms, each with private bath, sar 4 grot room sust et §2400 57 OTHRRS UP 70 $5.00. PARLOR, BEDROON, BATH. £4 90, Speatat caves waek o7 mom Bestavract el e PATENTS Famous “Pint of Cough | Proteet your ides Handsome §0-page JSyrup’’ Receipt | Guide Book Free. HARRY E. BACK, Attorney-et-Law. No Better Remedy at Any Price. Phoenix Block, Danislsen, Cenn, Fully Gusranteed. o1 TuThE 10 Gars More We have just got the roem week o take in ten oars for haufing and repainting. Batter have it done new rather then wait till fater when the rush is sn. We do this werk, all branches of it, 157 Frankiin St SUITS PAESSED 503 Our Wagon Calls Everywhera is acknowledged to be HANLEY'S A telephone order will D. J. MeCORMICK, 30 Franlin St. | ) | Make & plain syrup by mixing ome two minutes. (fifty for This gives he best, couy Tt never apoila. two ox this at & saving of 2. aver- The eflectiveness of this simple remedy, 1t seems to teke hold ine will usually stop the most obstinate congh in 24 hours. It tones | . ginting, trimming, ety In & frel- LS Jflfl;dt-v ke and is Just Jaxt | elase manner, eur prices being consiets ve enough to be helpful in & coug] and has & pleasing taste. Also axcellent | ont with good werk. ; for bronehial troble, throat tickle, sare lungs and esihma, and #n mmequaled remedy for whooping cough snd exo with Pinex strained haney) thousends of homes in the United States and Cunada. The plan has been lmita- ted, thovgh never su trv'it, nse only gen This recipe for ar muking eough rem Sugar ‘Syrup wr is & prime favorite in : Soolt & Clark Comp. Tel. 697 Greeneville osst If you o Pinex, which ia the most val rnylw‘ll\ll?l(-“ 'e-m; ,,'w llll ‘—z» und of Nerway white pine extract, ane 1 rich in gualacol and'a1l the natural | 4 FALL DREES GO/ ’ .Twaling pine elements. Other preparae vary tions will net worls in (hie recige, catmvnt ‘:;;! fm_. qusranty of absilute satisfaction, or mone pra " »«mx‘m}‘ with | MILL, REMNANT STORS e razeist has Pinex, JOHN BLOOM, ; n"iow'p'fnil & PR Kot W Maln S B SIGN FAINTING ) THEY you want to put.meme Bma Reasensble In price. prompils done, | N8R before the public. thess i me e 7+, Wy J. W, MALLK ES 30 Merket Street. Telephene M4-2 @tum better than threugh