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NORWICH BULLETIN TUESDAY. WAY Eat Strawberries 10c, 2 for 25c, and 15¢ a box. WATCH THIS SPACE THURSDAY FOR PRICES ON VEGETABLES, FRUIT AND MEATS. SOMERS NOTICE All persons desiring or intending to or for afy othei purpose, 1e season of 1812, 1 ermit from the office | Vater Commissio bose without sald This | | It is expected that a successor to | the late President Hays of the Grand | Trunk will be named within a few —— | days. of the Board of person usin tten permit shall be fined $5. o will be strictl: S. RAYMOND, Clerk of the Board of Water Commis- Jefferson King King you place foremost dentist in New England, his wonderful inventions, fonized the science of ing Safe System of Dentistry no matter how old. extracted, filled or WITHOUT A PAIN OR DISCOM- NO PAIN, NO HIGH PRICES! ices are within the reach ppreciate good work. Iy 1 claim to be the | painiess dentist in Nor- FULL SET TEETH $5.00 WITH THE NATURAL GUMS King Dental Parlors 203 MAIN ST, s Drug Stor Norwich, Conn. t and Clairvoyani | /5 €1 ALL THIS WEEK BOTTLE STAFFORD'S GIVEN FREE With WRITING PAPER. AT THE NOVELTY SHOP C. L. HILL, 56 Franklin Street. CARRIAGES TEAM HARNESS sharpen the SAY, HOW ABOUT THAT CONTRACT WORK? Placed it yat? me before going further the materials " d work for you and my prices will sat- | Connecticut alumni having given Many of my satisfied cus- | $100 to re Gar tomers in this city will teil you the | &nd William Henry Hall of S r “you to |lington Better consult with would gladly r Call me on the phone No. 370 and fet's get together. C. M. WILLIAMS, 218 Main Street. F. . ATCHISON, M. D. PAYSICIAN AND SURGEON, . Second ¥ or. Shannon Bidg. Night ‘phoue 1283. [ .. AL HE FINEST 35c DINNER IN TOWN DELL-HOFF CAFE From 12 12 GEO. E. PITCHER Civil En(inme.;r,‘ AT Broadway, Chapman bullding, oppasite the Y. M. G & JOSEPH BRADFORD, Book Binder. Biann Eooks Made Ruled to Ordas AWNINGS. Let me have your order Any size and any co 80 Market 8t. | can appre WHER you want o DUl VOUF busi- mess oefers the public. There '3 no me- betier Loam th @he Bulletin. Norwich, Tuesday, May 21, PERSONAL Mrs. Danfel Grey of Ledyard has been visiting her aunt, Mrs. Charles Stoddard of Mystic. BILL FOR LINTON TRIAL APPROVED 912, VARIQUS MATTERS a day or twe. about town have blossomed, Long Point for Mrs. E. King Boston. to 't W ght, now coming north. The approach of Memorial day ways means an increased and patriotic emblems. ning. Admission 25c.—adv. the weather changed to warmer, dozen, are being collected. Continu grass is in fine condition. I the 125th anniversaj tution, which was framed May 1787, which well on Friday. Farm workers who are trying necessarily be short, appre: dawn. It is d break now at at the ship Tt of Town ( hall. ha d to be painted and the summer season. tted out Field Secretary Karl Lehmann was entertained by Norwich fr over the week end, is to address Christian Endeavor convention antic on Memorial day. In ar hers. | schoo! A the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Co. Frank 4. Davis of No, 9 North Main street was No. 1091 in the list of win- ners, which entitles him to a silk um- bretla, About eighteen musicians comprise the Broadway school orchestra, whi arsing under_direction ble | J. Herbert George for commenceme |and other public exercises of Samuel . Stevens, who w, 0dd Fellows' home, | an old apple tree on the grounds a beautiful cane, which Central lodg Middletown, has presented William J. Kieft of the lodge. Norwich friends learn that Horace | Johnsor Middle Haddam weat | prophet,” who was 88 last weel | such poor health that he may not able to t s annual trip to Block Island this summer. Li ol. R, P. Davis, recently ap- pointed commandant of the New Lon don_artillery_district, succeeding Col. Willlam C. Rafferty, will be given s eception by the officers of Fort H Wright this (Tuesday) evening Stewart| Tt has been discovered that the rea- |son the steamer Chelsea came near for your | Brounding at her new wharf in Groton was because spiles from a forgotten ferry ianding lie imbedded in the mud 14 Bath St., Norwich, Conn. It was declded at last week's meat ing of the State Federation of W men's Clubs at Stafford Springs, { hold the next annual meeting at South Manchester. The semi-annual meet- tng this fall will convene at Mt. Car- | mel. | 1 Noted among Connecticut allumni | have got Who are contributors to a fund f fos Wilbraham academy — twenty-two Some of the state conductors appealed to the public utilities mission asking that passengeps prohibited from riding on t | work dangerous, Dogs got int | Hart Buell had belong betwean thre tonbury, Hebron and Marlboro. Mrs, Rose S. (Baker) Wilson amoso! Ieaves a daughter in Sanderstown. Those Hard Old Bergs. Capt, Willlam Ierrfe Wood of new causes the average person ghout the compurative istance lurge bodies of ic fatally hurt at contact, “In all my nineteen years in Nerth Atlantic I never suw suc of i muybe more. If you think of it glass, or even flint, instead of hand of man ¢ jce and the weight of an eighiy-foot | berg. 1t is ulmost like hitting « rock £osgh Tae B eI, for it js next o statiomary afaa " | Yook Mali Mrs. Walter Jeffers has returned te Montville, after a few days spent with relatives in Jewett City. The almanacs predict cold Winds for | Eipart Johnson of McKinley avenus has accepted a position as chauffear Many of the horse-chestnut trees | OF @ family in New Londen. Miss Ella Coughlin of New Haven has returned after spending a week City artists are already arriving in | i, ) JEHEC Sarer SEERC O ¢ the shere tewns for summer sketching. All were in It:;nfl::c(% “nrt‘ (t‘)f\.co-.:: | onday evening, | Mayor Thayer presiding. journed meett Charles B, Nash of Fishers s in stupor most of the time and can live only a few days. | mon counetl A cottage is (o be built_on Groten 1t was 9.15 | preliminary | committee. The reading of the journal was omit- ted, but an error was corrected, the | payrell which had been approved at |the reguiar meeting having included by mistake the pay from M: Mrs, J. Lavalle and Mrs ette spent Sunday in New London, the guests of Mrs. G. Herbert Rich. At Fishers island the macadam road | is befng finished as far as the enirance Miss Myrtice and L, Osgood Fielding cailed on their grandmother, Mrs. L. M. Flelding of Mohegan recently: The strawberry crop is ripening so | rapldiy that berries from Delaware are ameunting to $533.35, This, it was stat- ed, belongs to the next month's bille and the total for the month of April | Mr, and Mrs. George S. Palmer, who have been in Europe for nea ale Of 11a88 | 11, unths, ‘are expected. home In - June. was therefore corrected. Upon the petition of Fannie H. Tur- ner, Alderman Gebrath reported that | | the tree at the corner of Broad and |could be levied for oiling. The law Cedar streets had been removed, which | was accepted. Cemetery Department Report. W. Jarvis of the depart- | tinued this year, as it is more effective | ment of cemeteries reported receipts | and lasting. An appliance that can for the vear to be $7,330.01, from in- | terest on trust funds $1,895.43, and ail | recommended to drive the oil into the other sources $5,344,52, ed receipts for the year were $6,300, 80 there was an excess of $930.01, disbursements amounted Mrs. Charles R, Cross have returned from a with Robert ¥, Cross in Hart- Remember the pinochle, whist and social at A. O. H. hall Tuesday eve- Renovation and refurnishing of shere | s |and country homes has begun since | were at Mrs, Marquis’ | former home on West Main street for the week end, Mrs. Thomas Church of Montvill the Backus hospital treatment, is able (o be taken abolt the grounds in a wheel chair. The estimat- | Tor the first time in twelve months, | it is claimed, strictly fresh eggs are seiling in some places at 23 cents & |y ocE00d Flelding has returned to the naval training station at Naturalists state that the wet spring | 98¥8 with his parents at has left the ferns in unusually good | condition, so that perfect specimens | During the year Rev. James J. Smith of St. Francis’ | very ill is able to sit up and is con- i rains have freshened up When ha bi e becomes the Jawns and terraces, burnt as the | (HORCIDE v may to Europe t result of 1 year's drouth, he | i g Al result of last yea outh, and th | 8ain his health. TY WINNERS IN SERIES WITH ST. JOHN'S, | ing rapldly. | hay from the cemeterfes. A man has been kept at the City cemetery through the year and at the Hamilton avenue | & water service has been Lots are being surveyed | money was used from the general ex- tory classes will note this week of the consti- there by G. E, Pitcher, which will be a | New London Young Men Were Royal- | 50uree of income later. Three teants | have been repaired at Yantic ceme-| In the 36th annual repert of the se lowering devic: The report was approved and ordered printed in the journal. Streot Commissioner’s Report. ommissioner, E. C. Lillibridge, was | ¢ontnued and 180 fixtures have heen It showed that the appro- ,nril)l(lons for the year for the public works department were $95,440.91. The disbursements amounted to $83,258.68, | Gi8tribution. Jeaving qa unexpemded balanc ey owners on Whipple avenuoe asked to The joutalde waerk aocount | y,ve the!avenne aocepted as a public | tery and two rush their planting, as the season must ate early | New London, represented by 35 of its members, who came here on a special A recent gift to the Peck library | Norwich Free Academy is the |of St. Joseph's Sodality and were roy- United States National Museum work, | &lly entertained in the Sodalit; Birds of North and Middle America. later at Cadillac hall. | ternizing of the two soc ontinuation of other The U. . revenue cutter training & is anchored off Fort Trum- bull after an absence of several months | coming to New London from Maryland. pleasant social few months, mark of success in that line, For the first part ch setting a new showed that $1009.09 was received, all | From the contingen! licensés, rents and | fadne s Norwich, and the outside work the | ®XeCutive committee. total receipts were $31,679.04. A detailed account of the erdinary street repairs was given, together with repairs to fences and stairs. Thames | amounting to $71.95, was presented and remacadamized Thames square o Shipping sireet, and Framklin, Norih Main and reparied with Bath street was macadamized and tarvia B was placed on Broadway the entire length, proving preserver of macadam members of the ons met in a The New Haven Bird club is working to secure the formation of a federa- tion of the various societies of | games,at which the 2d to yield the palm w London young state that are engaged in nature stud; The Montville selectmen, who all | ter have been meeting at the office | od as follows 269, St. John's 169. Sodality 146, St. John “lerk C. N. Chappell, are now | holding regular sessions in the town avenue were Forty-five— crushed stone. In pool the following were the gwmes ConnellDLLUUT The auxiliary boat Aelous, owned by H, H. Walker of Norwich, has been nled on the ways at a Noank boa is recommended. The collection of garbage and ashes was taken care of with very few com- | could not be presented at plaints, a total of 5,104 loads being col- cost of $5,990.06, or about wha nds At 10 o'clock the party all repaired sverb contest conducted by siven to catchbasins and their repairs aces being set for being | morial day parade. The meeting ad trimmed or removed. 7 June, the trees were extensi otal of 544 being treated, LoLndon visit Sum of $71.98 Veted William H. Shields—Annual Reports of the Cemetery Department and Street Commissioner Estimates Coming Friday Night. August, a total of 13 tanks being used at a cost of $4,050.07. The department oiled the portion the Connecticut com- ditional tanks of oi No assessment was levied for sprink- ng or oiling as under the law none has since been changed whereby the cities can aseess abutting property- owners for oiling as well as sprinkiing. It is recommended that oiling be con- be attached to the carts for oiling is rond, and avoid puddles and tracking, which is the only complaint from the The | oil. to $7,079.74, | The Hourigan lane improvement ha 38 less than the appropriation. | been made and the Maln street brick TThere are due the department 3147721 deaths during the vear, of which 177 were In Yantle cemetery. four disinterments and sale of graves |amounted to $412.50. 15 new graves were laid out on the pavement laid, the latter costing 36,- in Yantic cove, extending the spiling There were | 539 feet on the west side. On the | oast side 254 were driven, ihe exten slon being 378 feet. The total cost of the work done was $4,987.56. | Because of complaint from sewage During the year several dead trees |lodging near the municipal wharf per- were removed and disposed of, also the | mission was gained from the United States government to build a stone|¢0Ck Dickerson, Joseph wharf a distance of 200 feet to be | H s completed January 1, 1913. There was | George Ulrich Mtller, no appropriation for the work, but the ense account and to May first $1,337.- 59 was spent. er commissioners, Henry Gebrath, W were issued and all but ene was used There have been eight cesspools dis- connected with sewer: D. J. Twomey and 24 other property highway from Blizabeth street to My- Bill for Linton T The bill of William H counsel for Capt. George Linton ordered paid. The sum of $5 for fees and $10 for stenographer. $50 ‘was voted. journ to a date prior to the 2ith. The clerk was authorized to provide las been | for the proper transportation of the council and water board in the Me journed to Friday evening at 7 | o'clock, Quite a yumber were in at a | tendance at the meeting. HARTFORD DAY. Class of 18 Advances to 32d Degr: Masonry—Banquet With Work Af- ternoon and Evening, Hartford day in the Scottish Rite calendar was observed on Monday at the Masenic temple with'a class of 18 upon whom was to be conferred thie. erades from the 19th to the Connecticut consistor: rendezvous In Scottish Rite h cost of $412.01, or ahout 76 cents a|sonic temple, at tree. Sewers were built in Laurel Hill | avenue and North Thames street at|the 20th desree. |a cost of $1,085.13. Block paving re- | ssion opened. owing to a |moved from Main street was put meeting of the executive | Market street. | | Watering carts were put on until | from all parts s X the use of oil was possible, and sprink- | in this number were Charies M. Ger- ling with water cost $1,209.04, Oiling | denler, 38d, of Bridgeport, an active | was commenced iIn May and again in | member of the .45, having presents- tion of petitions, balioting and werk I | DYSPEPTICS, HE OF NEWS: MI-O-NA DRIVES AWAY THE BLUES, GET A 50 CENT BOX Albert 8. Comstock, 33d, commander in chief, presided, and in the attend- were 32d and 33d degree Masq Suffer if you spremé council At 6.15 there was & banquet at which | the profuse floral flowers and potted plant 25 tables were a beautiful miserable and « | and irritable and mak to bear for your fami | possible—Do it If you w decorations in n all of the pany must do for $1,000, which was | §i ; used towards the purchase of four ad- | the evening, calling forth particular | praise for what the Geduldig estate | had done in this line. for 223 with red carnations at The menu, served by Davenport | of the Wauregan, was as follows, Open up that close fist of ve | pand that hesrt that dyspepsi & Osgood | box of MI-O-NA stoma |¥ou will have Strawberries and Bisque of Tomato—Windsc Crap Flakes, food, heavines in five minutes Roast Squab Chicken: Mashed Brown French Peas—Patisienne. Sage Dressing y ywed MI-O-NA w distressing Boned Turkey Boiled Smoked Tongue nervousness h Tutti Fruitti Cream 496.58. There were 587 spiles driven | Lady Fingers. Ais not a pur The candidates, | banquet, were the following: Ralph’ Augustus Bark- | s THE DAY IN CONGRESS. | Trsak Watiace Lodwe Constitutional Amendment to Heman Carl Kline, Everett Terms of Certain Federal Judge: Washington, Ma summary of the day in congress Oakley, Ralph Emerson Page, Middletown—Arthur Burr New Britain—William Cowlishaw. sdward Twichell John Harper Trumbull Suffell—Hugh Mead Alcorn, Charles Luther Spencer. In the evening the 27th sequent degrees lo the 3 Reports of majority and minerity nvestigating W. Lang and J. W. Williams, it was | v v | were submitt shown thet 46 permits to lay drains | tor Lorimer's , the minority condemnir Senator Crawford introduced a pfe amendment nd the sub- ¢ constitution red from out of g The reports were ordered printed in | LOWn at the asylum were the follow- courts to ten the journal and 300 copies printed for | 3 > o > C. M. Gerdenler, Congdon, New Morgan, Hartford; Normand | Hartfora; W A T. Bitgood Representative s avenue. It was referred to the cirenmstandes New London; Cyrus B, "] with a Color Shields, Comstock, New Vernon H. Jewell, We Tudge Archb was for o retainer, consultation, advice and trial before council. The sum of $11.98 was being continued Frank W. Alien Irman C. Stevens, Edwin Tolles, Hart- Iy settlement of the claim of D. Ty- | ford; 1l -ler Roath and C. J. Roath the sum of | Frederick A. Hitting Folly as I+ Flies Moulthrop, Tol | George K. Brusseau. George P. Mine Nathan M. Parker, Putnam; Frank W. Wl Mayor Thayer reported that the A continuance of its use | finance committee had not been able {10 get the amounts from the different departments, 8o that the estimates was ridiculous fi ;. Jean Guyer, E. H. Newburn, nam, Danielson; | ing, and it would be necessary to ad- | ington; John E. Prio Clark, Westerly inson, R A. Barkman, Ralph E Frank W. Cooke, Hartford is meet- Bindloss, Ston- Moosup; George : Theodore B 0 -] e, | George R. Morris, George L. New London. ried out with selections b COMMITTED SUICIDE AT SUTTON, MASS. Prof e club. Mus- ternoon the body of | 1n found hanging He bad committed sui- | : ¥ hanging himself from the water When discovered the body still warm and a physician was sum- the direction James Ahearn Norwich entertainers. man, but without av whom (he deceased had been empl T. Rogers on Norristown Trip, as one of the gn no reason for Mr. Tweedy's ac- as guests o shown over The deceased entered the em- ploy of the New Haven road as fireman 1873 and was promoted to engineer , serving In this capacity en he entered the livery ness on Bath street with Henry Gray, the firm name being Tweedy Mr. Tweedy lesmen were given a dinner in one o Norristown bought out his p Accepts Position in Waterbury, et e e e stables were bought by L. sided in New Haven, to which place he removed from Narwich in 1832, he was married to nd her salary increased at a Miss Murphy will in September. where position to teach board of education. g0 to Waterbury P i mathematics IN COMMON PLEAS. G. G. Grant of Taftville Sues to Re- | cover for Work Done. Milk Strike is Averted. The farmers of Plainfield and vicin- , it was learned Monday, have ac- pted the offer of 40 cents a ten quart for the summer Season | made by the Providence Dealers’ asso- The settlement averts the long talked of milk strike, from ,000 each—are Gardner Hal h Wil In the court of common pleas Mon- morning the e running hoard of open cars. The conductors claim that the practice makes their New Commandant at Navy Yard. commandant the Thames. arles Butler Grant atteched $157 due to Mr. Chap- work done for the town He took up #pring of 1911 he as u member of the board of selectmen had s; “hapman about the town und that t he eould do it ed or injured thir ty-seven sheep, The damage fixed by the appraisers at $150 will be divided towns, ar Mr, Buell's farm lies in part in the towns of Glaw oken to Mr, ard at the present Work for the City Beautiful. Mr, Chapman had About a week Chapman, san of C he board of trade wh Johnson has c Wednesday evening at his home. owned the horses which were employ- ed on the job and that he weuld seek compensation fer the werk apd not tha A. 5. Spalding, Clark B. Chapman testified. On Baturday the case of Edward K. . B. Elliott wiil be up fer Chajrman O. mother of Willard B, Wilson, secretary of the Rhode Island Sunday School | tion, died Sunday at her home {n Providence, Another son is Mel- | vin A. Wiison of Mogsup Vallen. She g e elder Chapman, The Last of the Old Army. as relieved of the cem- mand of (he department of Califernia May 1, retired for age, there we three officers left f the army whe served in the Trustee's Aesounts Allowed. Two hearings were held en Monday morning before Referee in Bankrupi- A. A. Browning, at both of which £ the trustee was allow- idend is to be declared, but has not heen anmeunced vet. The hearings were in_the bankru ter of Fitch & Brewn of don, plumbers, and the Fenny Har- lavy bankrupley of this city, where Mr. Harkavy was in the candy busi- 2 Franklin street. on the active freighter Etonian, ran his ship through the very iceficld, the mention of which quartermaster general; Col. James N. Allison, assistant ¢ mmissary gemeral, Daniel W. Arnold, quarte | the account ed, and a di shudder. He took a photegraph of an enormous berg sighted by his vessel two days before the Titanic reached that poeint. Semebedy asked i | s——————— HE LATE PHIL ARMOUR of (| was foelish , and how so huge @ ship, with its steel hull, eould be agree with him. that Pierpont Morgan that cost $5.60 each. bacco from Havana and has it special- Of the two men May Nolle Stacey Case. The trial of Edward arge of bigamy rah Palmer of this city u field ¢ us that. It was pelar ice, and these bergs were u theusand years old e gets the to- in marrying 'Sa comes up in London you will get a clearer idea of its densi- iy and impact. Nothing built by the n resist an igeberg of that kind. 1t simply slashes or pulver- |izes whatever it hits, No landsman ate the hardness of polar making good london Monday night that State At years of ex- torney -Hull had sald he expected to nolle the case for lack of evidence. A Smart Man. Bryan says that not as active as the dexil, but all de- ust bow it sounded when —Hostog Adyectiger, that comes with We are the oldest maunufac- state and believe NORWICH FALLS or the CLUB HOUSE GARS are the best ones made for 19 'RAPHAEL & SON | |HOW TO VOTE BY AMERICAN MACHINE | Dwight S. Tweedy's Body Found Hang- (721 Men Register Their Balolts in 3 ing in Spindle Shop—Once in Livery | Hours at Brockton—On Exhibition | R Business Here. at City Hall. | Trea: er Fredevick E, Nickels of the American Veing Mac in the hallway near the city office and will also be there today. |had many visitors who investigated s workings and admired the ease with which it was operated What it can do in speed was shown { by the statement of the men with it who said that at a straw vote election was s were recorded in Brockton, where the machine | being shown, 72 | in three hours. men who did the voting had had no_previous acquaint- ance with the machine This machine has no curtain, but | pair of wings by the side of the key board and exit bars insure the secrecy of the ballot. The baliot labels for each candidate for office are arranged in aiphabet order in vertical coiumns tlon label showing the office for which thege candidates are nominated. The machine s set so that by the turning of a button the voter can, ur der each caption, vote for such number | of candidates as there are oMces to be filled. after which each column is ocked against further voting. A cress (X) appears In | for wiom the vote hus been oast dome by raising the exit bar, the vole on the corresponding registers, There upon he can or vote anoth split ticket. An independent vote for a name net neminated is accomplished by turning | er one or more the lower butions ur | offten labels as desired, opening | space below containing u strip of pa { per on which the candldate’s n plced by means of stic | writing it with a peneil, 1 | the machine bur, thereby closing ihess spaces ar | removing the candidate’s names sight 6f the next voter who may ¢ exit Bar permane 1 crosses for . every ¢ andidate maehine ready for the next veter A st are to be voted on individnally. Questions or referendims, voted for individual | button under Yes o Na, them, the machine will turn | two minutes after the ballo ceased. him. “What ought we to give | the one upon his ri; Deep River; harge of Vice President and | Scott R. Benjamir hine company, one of their rachines was on exhibi- on all day Monday at the town hall clerk's Arthur N. Nash T. Armstrong, New EMPIRE VOTING MACHINE. Agent Hamilton Had One on Exhibit at Town Hall Standard and 159 chine, was here with ona a clrcle at the left of each button turned, showing demeonstration of the machine Before registering hls vots, which fs N Laf i machine and | can change his entire vote by reversing the buttons, which act cancels the vota ballot steps within the space in the machine and has the which are ar- ranged In vertical and ho| the names of the candid office for which each is running vote straight or scratch, NO EVIDENGE of the payment of a bi me is ers, or by n leaving o Veler raiges the exit hind the eu rtain behind him m sire to vete for independent eandidates in the same caitmng. The raising of the and leaves it Uhere Iy reperds all ‘the throws | the indicators back and leaves the light tieket is voted by turning a button in the first vertical celumn, which will record a vete for all candi- | dates nominated for that party. This locks every button excepting thase in the last two columns, whera questions | | party row of pointers. all dewn to voting position straight party ticket down a poimter over candidate he wishe: leaves it there. There are spaces the top where independent can_be written in, When all the poinis de 1 ed down, the voter registers his voie turning the curtain thereby registe vote and locking the machine against further voting until the entrance knob bas again been raised by pointer, but turns 8 they appear in the iast two columus, may he by turning the By an arrangement of linotvpe slugs with the names of the candidates upon t a com- piete’ printed list of the voie within Lettnee, Radishes, Piepiani, Asparagus, Dandelions, red are turn the election here was a venerable and benevo- lent judge in Baris who at the moment of passing sentence on a prisoner con- | sulted his associates on each side of s ras- cal, brother?” he said, bending over to . “I should say | three years.” “What is your opinion, brother?” to the other, on his left, T should give him about four yehrs” “Prisoner,” said the judge, “not de- siring to give you a long and severe term of imprisonment, as 1 should have done if left to myself, | have consuited | my learned brothers, and 1 shall take is a public shows the totsl vote cast at all tim but the individual votes are out of view and cannot be the proper keys in the hands Superior Gourt Cases. this morning for a continuation of the PROT. ASFARINE SITAH, being Bessie A Button, admr., and Murnhv Rros, vs. 186 Maa B, & St, Norwich Sickness “Weighty Feeling, Gas and Sourness Leave N\ in Five Minutes. RE'S THE BEST don't 1d nervous get ablets any from {ption for stomach dis- writien risings 8o Limit Following i g him of in Pineapple Juice - Rallion’s TYPEWRITING Has Become An EXACT SCIENCE W is so convincing as a ca of \ convenience of | our Commercial Depart- | 4 The Shetucket Harmess WM. C. BODE, BRGP. 283 Main Street 5 ¥ 4 . / N NOVELTIES ABROWS, MOCCASIN SWEET GRASS BASKETS LEATHER NOVEL INDIAN And COWEOY DOLLSy WATFCH FOBS, INDIAN POST ’ CARDS, ETC, AT Mrs, Edwin Fay's - Norwich, Conmy Hack, Livery and You furr:h the mnncy;: we do all the rest, The Thames Loan & Trustfo. The Bank of Friendly Helpfuiness een Deans, FRESH EVERY DAY Peepie’s Market 6 Frankii STIN HOLDE Prop fords and Pumps. Tan Dull Leather Vici Kid, Fargusunmlarbmm FRANKLIN SQUARE SPECIAL A FEW DAYS Sherwin-Williams Paints " Spider Lawn Mowers Fertile Seeds N. B. All of above are the best of - EATON CHASE to Weddings A fine assortment of cut glass at popular prices. The PIaul=Cadde| (o. Jewelers and Silveremiths, PLAUT - CADDEN ns and Carbon Paper. ATTIE L. JEWETT. Stemegraphier and Shorthand LL'bAp:ns prices now. DECORATING are P, F. MURTAGH 92 and 9 Wost Maln SL& Harnesses HAND-MADE AS WELL AS THlf BEST GRADE OF FACTORY WAR NESS AT BOTTOM PRICES.y ' Frankkin, Square. . arantee our service to be thy ho most reasonable prices MAHONEY BROS., Falls Ave WITEN “you wi ;:‘:s “pefore l':: Dlgibc. Bore m better thad R e e g | weydid