Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 3, 1912, Page 4

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dorwich Qé letin wad ¢unrit-". PR Sy At we the dead wn B (5 et WILSON GETS NOM when the we eady o give ats at tima and things went anted H after rsisen The a time it w appan wever, an, since tk rary delegates INATION. up in despair ore broke the just as Bry- @ thorbughly an eight-day t fight and credit of the n hardly be rey had fafled Dilkins had cut him He g safety razor. ing piece of cutl If—and with & red at the offend- ry while he mopped ety o when he Tost earn: |his chin. 'Anyhow, he reflected furi- of the westerner's quiet work. Through. | 2UslY: it was enough to make a fellow out entlon there has been a | ChOP himself inta bits to be irritated Senals TN 3 3 1 Wiias been # by such a nolse ”'"" Businees Office, 488, ward Wilson as the| “prom the windows above the noise ! : :Ldbuu ! Ty "L Blty the. pa The | floated to him, Or, rather, it dashed ey 2 Mars his candidacy, to many [and shot and sireamed—for there was Telephone 210. syl \e backing it re- | no doubt about the superior lung ca- | m Bryan. Once it was made | bacity and energy of the young wom- " Norwich, Wednesday, July 3, 1912. | Bryan could not force or [ AN Who was cutting m&a) capers with t ¢ ) no. one had no — |t : o SEiercn 1 INUNG the v B0R r and been obliged to Ihe Cireunlation o} The Bulletin. The Bulletin has the Inrgest elr- culation of mny paper Easte Commecticut, and from three to for Umes larger than cthat of any Norwich. it fu delivered 800 of the 4,053 houses in Nor- and read by nimety-three per ||} In Windbam || elivered to over 500 houses, in mans and Damlelson to over 1,100, and in all of these places it is considered the local dafly. in to over cert. i of the people. five postoffice districts, and sixty |! CIRCULATION 1901, average - .42 June 29 8,283 ¢ th | s h and the fonds made = r eccomplishment NORWICH'S A mew Sailiset cal yea y tima th 9500, wh the establ yartmeat -°n h | IWR appar FIRE should come “he repiacing ratos teo =overne Quim rured and n-nv there will who will be making it loop t provide a sensation, | The commerelal spirit which rules | men of forty eut of business ax w | ess certainly deserves | electro- cuted | ak which yper moment started been properly mpossible to check L and wagon, and the ba N ik delegation, which LLE D A vacillating part In| -~ sy hig friends knew joined the vote | thought of the vocalist ment above, for he w: ake ( o was such would hav the party forces, expectation f would "he tim, n THE ARMY APPROP which his point that sense of his injurie conversation w tribes against her he was, he hor selection a ark the vice no one migt impressed with what in_th Dilkins sald t broad is one thing s free will agged from Dilkins minded ly had only good will man who natur born of wis- | for his neighbors and was imbued Wit o welded to- | the spirit of live and let live—but he but 1t was|would be dad-binged if he b a of the most | fAIr jury would es : swatted with a brick the woman who rdly be x| sang or mailed her a box of poisoned er con- point his friends ted that he nd applied soothing bever- rship to the ind words and distracted e for such a the conven- ~ to RIATION. guments about bu it his dislike gre base! summe in spite Most of the singer's work seemed to of the army|be scales and arpegglos and long was vetoed | 4¥aWn out singlo notes that she at nan Hay of | tack every possible angle, to a frazzle and hurled out finaily to affairs has|janguish and die upon disturbed atmosphere. Force of gravity dragged them down and into Dilkins' windows. Then he would rush to tho ertures a relent- and shake his fist wildly t was found hirds vote to rning torment im, e. He liked he liked e cafe where framed pic- thorn tairs whe THE BULLETIN'S SHORT STORY. HE HAD SUFFERED ——— e e e e S—— — got started on one of his cycles of thought relating to the woman vocal- ist. They were always glad when Dilkins got interested In anything else to take his mind off his troubles. Therefore, the most captious could not blame him for his frank interest in Miss Miller the night she came to the card ciub to which Dilkins belonged. Miss Miller was slight and doll like and as bright as she was pretty. Dil- kins simply eibowed the other men out of the way and appropriated her in a most high-handed fashion. If she had all the various things Dilkins ted out and pressed upon her at jper she would have expired on the Dilkins did not observe the nervous demeanor of Smith and Jones, two of his best friends, who watched his pro- gress with Miss Miller anxiously with palo faces. When Dilkins chanced to mention where he lived Smith clapped a hand to his brow and leaned against the wall, but Jomes bent forward breathlessly “Oh!" cried Miss Miller, gazing eved into Dilkins' adoring face, * vou live there? So do I—I'm staying with my cousins, the Benkses, while I'm taking vocal lessons. I've often wondered it 1 disturbed a | the building with my practicing?” | Jones closed his eves and waited for | all the things to happen to Miss Miller at Dilkins had promised fur(ou!l\ | quring the past winter. What he | heard was this is honeved tones: | “Disturb anybody? I should say | not! I'm delighted to haye a | | chance to tell you how I've enjoved | your voice—it is beautiful!™ News IDEAS OF A PLAIN MAN Did you ever of things son at all, that vou always have done them or everybody else does them? for instance, do you wear a a Stiff collar? Why do you con- r feet all summer in uncom- eather air-tight casings? Why do vou go on living with disagreeable | ¥ do you eat when you are ou keep on doing for no re that Wh or fort do you go on working for bore you? Wh lec- tures V) of esso; I\v-nrv [ do you attend R in_his hinese,” gives us will do us goos unk has a big of the prow look see” its way. nese They | may e never inquired whether these op- he b fare better than oth ck k to enter the domlcile. t oc worse luck than other familes. pted the principle of promptly he required results. customs ? ing as one thing in the world to do? Anty Drudge mor The Bride democratie much t was a clothes las . Follow Fels-Naptha on the red and green-wrapper. en, There ls t water., is to be t Fels-Naptha used Anty Drudge at a Wedding. “‘My present is a homely one, Dearje, just 28 a box of Fels-Naptha soap. But if you use it in the Fels-Naptha way, it will lighten your work and bring happiness than any silverware or bric-a-brac.” “Thank you truly - low your advice faithfull Anty Drudge. I shall fol- dir do all Woman’s work is being made easier. Take the weekly wash, for instance. used to be an all day job, ! woman getting up at morning to heat water for boiling clothes. Now, she washes with Fels-Naptha soap in cold or lukewarm water, and the whole washing takes little longer than half the time of the old way. It the the with 5 o’clock in . No boiling, no steaming suds, no hard- rubbing; and the clothes are cleaner and fresher than ever before. longer a lot of Then, too, the when washed with mending saved. ections for wusing smment s sometimes made that Fels-Naptha soap will 5ot wash greasy dishes, pots and kitchen utensils withont But those who understand how Fels-Naptha their with lukewarm or cold water. kitchen work regularly _Chicago | p to think what a | or for the silly reasons | and eat what you don't| | money when you have money enou | Why ‘do_you keep up acquaintance with and devota time to pecplé who cen is built in order the viewless demons of the air collide disastrously with it when | To | irred to mark wheth- without such screens have Tn a word the Chinese have never | | effictency, | which is, that means to be chosen for a given purpose should be thoss which 1 and econom- 1s not most of | ting others, and | Tsn't do- | pleases tbout the hardest Wednesday The Last Day of The Big Live Wednesday night will see the wind up of the big sale which has been running for two weeks. They have been two weeks of value giving such as this town has seldom seen. animated this sale, has come to stay, and in all ways The Boston Store will lead in live service to a live com- munity. We give below a short list of Fourth of July Wire Sale The Live Wire spirit, and holiday time specials. Home comfort, largely in the ver: plete line BAMBOO PORCH SCRE offer Screens made from HAND PAI heavy cords and ga The “V in color tificall Awnings for day more e in can hang Upon the porch, mer, you will is made than the CREX GR by 36 inches to 9 b pose We also hav 54 inch ar standard we PORCH CHAIRS OF HANDSOME DESIGN AND GOOD QUALITY, PORCH CHAIF PORCH CE PORCH CF For verandah and of HAMMOCKS in both the PALMER HAMMOCKS lead t looking and co: buttoned and ta: COUCH HAMMOC! the new See may be low HAMMOCK STA AWNI Have you a good flag? ¥ the Fourth DOR! it is cool, e right cloth, complete with them the heated during of furmthwx for the porch. the porch shady ric of the b Size NTED ¥ SCRF m ndurable. size wh need a RUG 33c to $8.9 e the CREX MATTING ee d inch. If you wish a Rug diffe e equipped to make them at very mod AT LITTLE PRICES LIVE Wi LIVE WI LIVE Wi ATH TAIR awn A fortable, selled, and a COUCH ered, if de HAM ired, Ir hammock, tc 1sed UNITED STATE FLAGS But it at the least money. ALL WOOL BUN $3.15 STEAMER WOMEN neck beautifully trimmed with lace A var leather. trimm $3.15 to $16.50 DRESS TRUNKS $4.25 to $21.00 LIVE WIRE SPECIALS FOR THE FOURTH FROM THE PEADY TO WEAR SECTION S SHIRT WAISTS of f MIDDY NORFOLK BI 75c and $1. L\’ $3.4 to §21.00 TRUNKS, in models and with the 1 i em LIVE WIRE PRICE 69 term, andah, and we have prepared a com- ‘ouch Ha mmoc ke $3.50 and $4.50 2c a dozen to 25c each BREED THEATER THRILLING WESTERN FEATURE Sing Lee and the Bad Man MR. WILLIAM WISTER, English Baritone Norwich —lIiN—AUDITO R I U M—Iliil— EXCELLENT VAUDEVILLE BILL ~AND— No. XV OF THE ANIMATE D WEEKLY ~ HYDRANGEAS for porch or lawn at REUTERS which has centers Always in the Public E E-M-F “30” The car that is standard in every respect. and cool. We des of bamboo, Thoroughly tried and not found wanting. A high grade car at a reasonable price. Long wheel base, demountable rims, fore door, fully equipped with silk mohair top, speedometer, prest-o tank, windshield, robe and foot rail. Ask the owner of an E-M-F “30” what the car does for him. A WRITTEN GUARANTEE FOR ONE YEAR. Call and see the car and learn more about it at the Imperial Garage Chestnut and Willow Streets. RE PRICE $3.98 RE PRICE $5.25 RE PRICE $5.75 DAILY SERVICE S STEAMER BLOCK ISLAND 07750 Watch Hill and Block Island $5.50 SPECIAL EXCURSION TICKETS Fridays Ju September WATCH BILL &50%, me hlAND RET Adults, 50c; Children, 25c c 4/, HOURS AT WATCH HILL. 134 re D Mondays, Wednesdays and AND HOLR AT ELt $4.45 $6.00 $8.25 $9.50 ound tr NEW ENGLAND STEAMSHIP STEAMER GARDINER Leaves Norwich (Hall's Wharf) for the beaches week days at 1.15 p. m. and for Ocean Beach only at 7 p. m. Sundays 9.30 a. m. and 2 p. m. CO. er high or low sistent with Bes wear arming Blouse and are i soft Dutch collar fety of pl which belted with patent Dr. Thomas Jeffersor D r Smith's 9 Store ed in the latest styles LIVE WIRE PRICE §3 DERMA VIVA THE IDEAL l‘A(.,h WDER | 1 mm . F. C. 3EER, TUNER Shon~ (1 122 Prospect St Dr. F. W. HOLMS Dentist | Shannon Bullding Annes, Room A. Telephone 533. 104 | _THER® 15 no aavertising medlum | Eastrr. Connecticut squal to The Ruls letip Lus Business zesulls Ing mediu THERE s ne aave Eastern Connestieut 1stin"Tar Dusiness resuly -

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