Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 19, 1912, Page 4

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Borwich Zulletin and Goufief, 116 YEARS OLD. GUARD THE CHILDREN. The frightful murder of Julia Con- ner in New York and the finding of the dead body of Nathan Swarts will by no means end that case. It will end it as far as the law is concerned, but it will long linger as a terrible lesson to parents to use their utmost persongl efforts to guard their chil- dren alid not leave them to the street Subscription price, 130 & week; S0e a mouthe; §6.00 a vear. Lntered at the Postoffice at Norwloh, Conn, as second-class matter, Telephnme o.n-- lletin Businees Office, etin letin f‘“""“ nosns l“-l. .vhc'll lll- Norwich, Friday, July 19, 1912, Have The Bulletin Follow You Readers of The Bulletin leaving the city for the seashors, moun- tains, rural resorts or for Kurope may keep in touch with doings in town by having The Bulletin sent direct to them by mail for any period desired — days, weeks or months. Hundreds follow this plan on their annual vacation and returs fully informed as to what has been going on during their absence. Orders should be placed with The Bulletin business office. ————————— H. K. SMITH'S RESIGNATION. The resignation of Herbert Knox Smith as commissioner of corporations did not come as a surprise. It was known he was in sympathy with the third termer's cause and had been for 4 long time being of the last of the (olonel's tennis cabinet who had de- cided leanings towards the former chiet executive. This is substantiated in the statement issued by Mr. Smith when he said in resigning to become affiliated with the Bull Moose party, “The progressive movement includes prineiples that T believe in, and that 1 have earnestly tried to further, so far as I eould during my term of fed- eral service” This means that Mr. Smith has been with the administra- tion in the past three years, but fail- ing to support it except wherein it corresponded with his view He con- tinued to carry out “my policies” re- gardless of directions or desires of the =dministration. The alliance of Mr. Smith with the new movement only further serves to cement the convictions that have ex- isted that the great principle of the new movement is the protection of certain big interests. Others are thrown in for setting. George W. Perkins's support of the Colonel means the influence of the great Harvester trust, which the Colonel protected. Mr. Smith was the man who suggested that the trust shouid not be sued and was with the Colonel in his schemes. He also advised him that it would hardly be advisable to throw away the great and friendly influence of the #o-called Morgan interests. Mr. Smith thus well allies himself with princi- ples he believes in, which he says are principles of the new movement. His course is consistent with his tutelage. SPELLING AND WRITING. One of the elementary branches on which from indications too little stress is being put is spelling, along with which writing might well take a prominent place. The need of cor- rect spelling warrants it being made en important part even of the high schools. When a pupil leaves grammar school he is supposed to be able to spell anything and everything. Whether he can do it or whether the pursuit of higher education removes it from his memory has not been fer- reted out, but it is astonishing what poor spellers and writers are turned not only from grammar schools, from high schools and colleges. Strong evidence of a lack of training »r inefficiency in these branches is at hand. It is true that some can never seem to learn spell correctly, but are ighly efficient in other studies, but such an important branch special attention ought to be directed. Bridge- port hopes for a betterment in the re- turn to the old-fashioned spelling book and the Telegram welcomes the step taken there as follows: “The news that pext term will see the old-fash- oned spelling book restored to its an- clent piace of honor in the public schools of Bridgeport will be welcome to parents who have long been dis- tressed by the vagaries of their off- spring in dealing with the commonest | English words, and also by the pa- tient teachers who have been required to do the impossible while phonetics but held exclusive sway. Of course our progressive’ friends will bitterly la- ment such a reactionary step, but the. plain fact is that the methods which seemed s0 beautiful in theory have | failed in practice and it is absolute- ¥ necessary that the children should earn to spell” SHOULD CHANGE REGULATION. The recent decision of Secretary Nagel concerning imbecile children who have been brought to this country by naturalized parents im- poses a greater obligation on this ntry which is already heavily bur- dened in caring for aliens who are mentally deficient and who are both in the harmless and the criminal class. By the ruling, which admits such children to this country, an added drain i{s placed on the taxpayers and it opens an avenue which will be con- tinually increasing that load. Such Admissions mean that these people sooner or later will become a hurden uponr the states in which they locate, Large numbers now crowd the hospi- tals suffering from mental trouble and in New York 40 per cent. of these were forelgn born, and at the criminal in- sane hospitals the foreigner represents over 44 per cent. of the total number. In the Interpretation of the law, to whieh Secretary Nagel has won over the other officials to his view, it very probable that the pi er stand under the law has been taken, but such being the law, the greater is the need for its betterment. It points out a very weak place in the regulations from this country’s standpoint. It is quite evident that the general atti- tude Is not favorable to bringing the idiot offspring of Europe to {hese shores (0 be cared for and place great. er axpense on the shoulders of the tax- payers. If the decislon becomes final some turther legislation is needed. The English papers pay strict at- tentfon to royalty. They announced a short time ago that Queen Mary wore a borrowed raincoat to a publie func- tion, and the queen never thought the paragraph was horrid! Any little woman can start a rumor that ten thousand blg men cannot stop! the | is | for their care and protection. As flendish in its purpose and result as the killing of the child in the town of Sprague last summer by a moral pervert, the murder of the Connor girl is only what is liable to happen to hundreds of others. Such dangers exist on every hand for the children who are allowed to roam at will and accept attention from strangers. This 18 only to be expected when children become bold and fearless from their freedom to conduct themselves as they please and lack the guiding Hand of proper parental oversight. The lives of the innocents should get more care- ful attention, as from mothers who worry when they are out of their sight a4 minute. The following of the advice given Swartz by his father proved one of the best endings to a life of crime. It saves the public the detailed review of the gruesome crime with its ter- rible features without detracting from the lesson. It also will have its effect upon the plan of paroling prisoners in the metropolis. Swartz had been in the toils of the law and was on pro- bation when the crime was commit- ted. He proved to have been one who deserved the full penalty and no leni- ency. ANT!-TUBERCULOSIS WORK. One of the sources of valuable aid in the effort to stamp out the white plague is the Red Cross society and itis movement has been given a coun- try wide impetus through the medium of the holiday seals, the sale of which has ralsed large sums of money each vear. For the past four years the plan has been carried out with in- creasing results each year, so prac- tically a million dollars has been ed for the anti-tuberculosis cam- paign since all derived from the sales goes into the work of preventing con- sumption. In 1908, the first year of the cam- paign, there were sold thirteen and a half million seals, which was nearly doubled the next year. Last year the sales reached 32,000,000, and the print- ing of the seals for the holiday trads this year is under way. So great has the interest become in this movement that seventy-five million stickers will be struck off according to the new de- sign and the sales will be extended to practically every state and territory in the country as well as in Porto Rico, Canal Zone, Hawaii and Philip- pines. The American Red Cross society {has the co-operation of the National Association for the Study and Preven- tion of Tuberculo: in the campaign. The seals are widely dispersed and everyone can have a part in contrib- uting to the fund which has startea such a commendable relief in behalf of humanity. EDITORIAL NOTES. Why discuss the plural of bull moose when there is but one? For a hot weather job, that of swim- ming teacher has its attractions. Happy thought for toda Most of us can find fault without taking our hands out of our trousers pockets. | In joining the church at 78 Hetty Green has demonstrated that wealth is not the all satisfying balm for the soul. nything is honor- isn’t a sign of progression, The sentimen able in war” but the Colonel will not throw it | down. Many of us remembe: the Path- finder,” but as the fi republican leader he did not take the path to success. The clergyman who familiarizes | himselt with the hobbies of his pa- rishioners knows how to get close to their hearts. While Horace Fletcher Conner’s slayer will prevent his being seen in every city of the country with- |in the next few days. The new party w ical club and make a campaign re- {gardless of expense. It is a. move- ment well backed with funds. revive the polit- This campaign year is a announce that the more goats. There many goats in the The Kansas City | “What Kansas reall bad country were count ountry, time needs never so before, | to Journal says: v needs is not an- | other Roosevelt administration, but | more harvest hands and less Stubbs.” Democratic hindsight shows that | had the two-thirds rule been abolished Clark would have been the nominee. Foresight would have worked better. Roosevelt claims it because he refused to break bread with Lorimer that unseated him, but he hints not at what his breaking faith with the people did. The weeds protect twice as many flies and mosquitoes about a place as the garbage can draws, but the sani- tarians do not command us to keep the weeds down! No wonder the democratic conven- | tion was strung out so long. Col. | Bryan was receiving $1,000 a day for his reportorial work. Bryan has long been ‘interested in mon After considering all of Theodore's The late Wm, T. Stead when he was well impressed by & man handed him a trovsers button. This was his em- blem of full manhood, 'and he once handed one of his buttons to the Czar of Russia, This shows the folly of human ex- pectations: The husband expects his | wife to be a valet, nurse and tallor; and every wife expects her husband to ! be a carpenter, a burglar alarm and a national bank, When Munsey sald the Colonel is starting |on his semi-annual dinner there are | plenty of politicians who promise to outchew him. It's the same old stor Jim | O'Rourke and Dan O'Nefl are still fighting to see who:is boss of the Con- nectieut league The finding of the body of Julia claims a western man asks: “Did Roosevelt write the ten command- | ments?” His conduct shows he plays with them more than he lonors | them, “I am going out at ten” said Forshaw, finishing his cup of coffee, and laying aside his paper, “I may be back to luncheon and ¥ may not. It is quite possible that I may not.” “Amen,” said little Mrs. Forshaw to herself; then, aloud, “What would you like for luncheon, dear?” “Chops,” replied her lord and master, after @ moment of profound thought. Then he rose and left the room. A second later the door opened. “The hashed mutton will do.” His wife took up the paper with a sigh of content. She knew now for certain that he was not coming home to_luncheon. Forshaw was a man with a liver. He had a thousand a year, a house in Chester square and a pretty little wife—earthly goods which, if in the Dpossession of you or me, would per- haps seem desirable enough. But Forshaw had other pououians —he had his liver and his art. His art, be it known, was “Realizing” —by which I mean that he spent his life writing fictional romances of a realistic type, and finding his own ma- terial. Often and often he would spend his day within the purlieus of Westminster or the bystreets of Canning Town. He had slept in a ward, and he had been brought home from an opium den by the police—minus the notebook and his purse. He was a conscientious realist, in fact, and had he been watching his own grandmother burning at the stake he would doubtless have made notes, presently to be incorporated in his ledger under the letter “G.” Forshaw even carried his realism in- to the little affairs of life, that is to say, he was always poking about the house, observing things and making himself a nuisance to every one. Still, he was a conscientious man, as I am about to prove, and if he exacted from othegs he also exacted from him- self. The novel he was writing required a scene in a doctor’s interior—not his anatomical interior, but just his con- sulting room, Instead of sitting in an armchair and smoking a pipe and imagining it, like a comfortable, ordi- nary mortal, he determined to “fetch” one, As you cannot, however, walk into a medical man's consulting room, photo- graph it with your mental camera and walk out again without ceremony. For- shaw decided to pay his two guineas and go as a patient. In this way he would also “bag” the doctor, his per- sonality, hig dress and his belongings —all sure to turn up useful as copy some day or another, i He knew no particular doctor to ga to. He doctored himself, just as a man doctors his dog. “You see, I know all about it,” said he, when people suggested medical ad- vice. And he fancied he did, but as a matter of fact he aidn't. It was a bright morning and as he walked down Harley street he exam- ined the door-plates little and big. He was choosing a doctor just as a woman chooses a silk or a child a sugar-stick. “Dr. Thomson-Thomson,” read For- shaw Thurtell, “Palmer, F. R. C, 8.”* So many double-barreled names he had never seen before. Also he no- ticed that in Harley street you find a mixed collection—a physician, a sur- geon and a dentist often inhabiting the same mansion. “Ogden-Blower, M, D, M. R, C, P* he read and paused, attracted and re- pelled by the name, came into the field too late to win, he seemed to be a prophet; but when he says Roosevelt has a better chance of winning the election than Taft, he ‘!uuhs like a faker. What difference does it make wheth- | er there is a hell of fire and brim- stone or not, when every dyspeptic knows he can create a condition which distresses him worse than any con- templation of that. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. Motor Vehicle Law. Mr, Editor: From a news item in to- day’s paper I see that you are not well posted as to the provisions of our mo- tor vehicle law, which was passed by the genera] assembly at the January session of 1911, and which went into effect January .1, 1912. This law gives non-residents who have complied with the laws of their own states, relating to the registration of motor vehicles and their operation, the right to use our highways without complying with the provision of the act relating to registration of vehicle or licensing of operator. The state of New York gives other states the privileges they give hers. or instance, I can usge a car in New Y state twelve months in a year, | being registered in Connecticut. = Re- spectfully, ' C. H. OSGOOD. July 17, 1912, A Typographical Error. Norwich, Mr. Editor: In my letter to you this morning regarding milk, my statement should have read “in regard to bacte- ria, at our last test it was less than 10,000 (not 1,000) and other milkmen | en show the sagge.” A MILKMAN. Norwich, July 18, 1912. Bumper Crops Help Prosperity, Free Trade Prospscts. Not Mr. Editor: Business is booming and booming all along the line, not be- | cause the democratic and republican platforms promise to kick up more trouble by further tariff tinkering, but | because the foundation of our nation’s prosperity is the soil, and the soil is doing exceedingly well this year; bet- ter by many millions—yes, hundreds of millions—than ever before. Prosperity comes to the masses as soon as it gets | its start from its foundation, the soil. | The tide, “back to the farm,” that has been running higher and higher these past few vears, has increased the acreage of the leading crops, so that a New York financial paper in its weekly report says: “Corn, wheat, oats, barley, potatoes and hay will yield in value this season $763,000,000 more than they did in 1911.” The same paper, and others equally as expert, flgures that the increases | will be as follows: Corn, 280,000,000 bushels more than last year, or $950,- | 000,000 for the entire crop at present prices. Now corn price is high, it also costs | the producer high to raise and market | it, and. without the much abused rail- | roads at least 700,000,000 bushels of it would never reach a prompt market. I suppose the single tax mind fellows | will tell us that a reduction of the ariff on corn will make it so much cheaper for us, but they will quit talk- | ing reduction when you face them with the solemn fact that the $950,000,000 | 1s spent for the good of the entire bus- iness world of America, Oats promise an increase of 220,000,- 000 bushels, potatoes an Increase of 60,000,000 bushels, Still with this enormous increase in these three sta- ples, the incresse of population in the large centers has been 18 1-3 per cent. greater, according to census reports, nml the demand still exceeds the sup- . "ue great politieal partv wants to reduce the cost of these and all food | articles to the masses without consid. ering the producers in any way what- THE LION'S DEN[ : SRR R | Tribune. *“Now, this man” thought Forshaw, “ought to have a personality. The ‘Ogden’ he has taken from anywhere. It 1s in the choice and combination that we find the touch. We may say at once that he is not a self- effacing man.” Yet he paused for a moment in he tation. There was a Dr. Freeke-Free- man that rather tickled him, and a Dr. Boerhave-Parton across the road was simply shouting to him to come in and be killed. Like Susannah amongst the elders, he remained for a moment, pulled this way and that. ‘Then he made up his mind. ‘Is Dr. Blower at home?” ‘Dr. Ogden-Blower is in, sir, you an appointment?” “No, but there is my card.” “I am afraid, sir, it will be impossi- ble for you to see him without an ap- pointment. I will do my best, sir, but I really think it would be more satis- factory if you were to make an ap- pointment.” The only occupant of Dr, Blower's waiting room was an elderly gentle- man. He was reading Punch, and he had spats on: other things, too, of course, but the spats somehow struck one most foreibly, which was not an argument in favor of his powerful charm and personality. Presently the door opened and two female forms appeared—people quite of the middle class, and evidently from the country. They sat down diffidently on the grand chairs, a mother and her daugh- ter in the group of pernicious antemia. “The doctor will see you now, sir,” said the servant, and a moment later he found himself in the lion's den. Dr. Ogden-Blower was a little man, round, tightly buttoned up in an ill- fitting frock coat. He was» very much on the “spot,” was Dr. Ogden-Blower, and he sat 10 on the case of Forshaw promptly and with decision. “Sorry I can’t give you more than five minutes. If that won't do us we'll have to make an appointment.” “Thanks—stand like that—just so— one moment, while I listen her: S, lie on the coach-tender, therum. Then he begun questioning again, seeming quite to forget that the five minutes were long expired, and his luncheon was getting cold. “I think it right to tell you,” said Forshaw at last, “that I have made use of a little subterfuge.” Have “What's that? Oh, I thought you were referring to a drug.” “In this way: my liver is a hit wrong, I think, but there's nothing else the matter with me. In ‘fact, doctor, I'm a traitor in vour camp. I am a novel writer. Forshaw is my name.” “See here,” said Dr. Blower, who had taken a seat at his desk, and was about to write a prescription, “I am a very direct man with my patients. When one gets a case of your sort it's better to speak man to man—there’s no use in shuffling, not a bit. Are you mar- ried?” “Yes.” “T'd have sooner told your wife, and she could have broken the fact. “Broken what fact?” asked Forshaw, across whose face a gray tinge was coming like the veritable shadow of death. “That you-ve cirrhosis, and got it bad.” The doctor turned away and scratch- ed his chin; this sort of interview is always painfully difficult to terminate —Buffalo Enquirer. soever., I say reduce the cost, which is not exactly right. They wish to re- duce the tariff on all such articles, for- getting that the hundreds upon hun- dreds of millions received for the farm products. goes almost immediately into all channels of trade, and in an indirect if not direct way enters the pockets of the city workingmen in all branches of | industry. ‘Were it possible to cut down the -millions of value of these crops by tar- ift reduction, who would be the gain er? It would be the man that alread has a great plenty, and is not worr ing about idle spindles, closed foun- dries and shops. The loser would be the mechanic who now gets good steady wages supplying the markets of our land with the arti- cles that the crop raiser needs, wants, and will buy, if he can market his crop at a profit, Strike a blow at his pocket, once been attempted by a so-called Canadian reciprocity bill, and is now threatened by a tariff for revenue only bill, and you in quick order cut off the as has very hand that fPedfi vo The cost of ing is gh, we all know it; but is it not as high in free trade countries, in comparison with ten years ago, as here? If I can )edd rlghl, it is. Has wages increased .in comp; on with living cost this past three years in England as it has here? I fail to find anyone that claims so. The whole thing in 2 nutshell is that the $763, 000,000 extra value of our crops th season is the impetus long sought to start us on a wave of progress and prosperity, unequalled in the world's history; but the impetus will die em- bryo if the natural start is killed by everlasting, devastating tariff tamper- ing. The past has always found it so, and the present will prove to be no ex- ception to the rule. Never mind the sweet talk of those business disturbers who again have gone back to the same old plan of “tariff fr revenue only.” Can a sane man stand up before a sensible audience and call himself a progressive when he progresses back- ward to the same old rot in the rut, democratic fallacy of tearing down the bridge over the river you must cross before vou learn to swim? Yes, my friends, the tide “back to the farm” has set in, and just let the farmer have a shadow of ‘a chance and it will swell and grow until the high cost of lving will be solved by the supply being equal to the demand. Bumper crops are a starter, free trade prospects are a disturber. Have a care ho i nourish a viper whose only mission is to sting you. C. B. MONTGOMERY. Conn, Packer, Reward for William Jennings. Maybe Mr. Bryan, after recovering from his labors, may be induced to f: vorably ‘consider accepting the por: folio of secretary of the Whole Shoot- ing Match in the next cabinet.—Dallas News. We'll All Be Journalists Then. Uncle Joe Cannon says that when the government begins fixing prices of things he will advocate placing the | minimum salary of reporters at $5,000 a year. Uncle Joe must want to see reporters abolished —Washington Post. A Sequsl Expected, Having brought his autebiography down to the present time and thereby run out of material, Mr. La Follette has stopped writing, But he expects to keep on making trouble.—Chicago Hard to Convirice Bob. Probably Senator La Wollette has discovered by this time that he stands no chance to be nominated.—Knicker- bocker Press. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA time and time | IDEAS OF A PLAIN MAN Tt is no harder for me to believe in Hope in Death than it is to believe in Love in Life, Of the two the latter is the greater mystery. When I look at Nature, steam-engine forces, measurable,” as seems so pitiless. “Nature, red in tooth and claw, apparently has but one end in view, to rend me limb from limb at last. When I look at the world of men, with its grinding mills of business, its with her “huge, dull, im- Carlyle says, it all whiripools of politics, its merciless am- bitions, its iron laws of economies, its soulless corporations, and mindless states, I wonder how love, so timid and yielding, can live a d If T did not know lovs tough al- mightiness, I should join in Omar's cry: “Oh Thou, who didst make, For all the sin wherewith the face i of man Is blackened, man's forgiveness give— and take! man of baser earth Intellectually considered, love is a waif, a pilgrim and a stranger, a low glowing of Nature's procreating force, It is therefore that only simple and believing hearts can understand love. | It is a continual miracre. The learned and prudent, the clever powerful cannot guess it. “Surely these profane adventurers shall not desecrate the crag-fretted | summits of ‘mpus.” NEW BOOKS. The Psychology of Salesmanship, by William Walkes Atkinson; 246 pages, cloth, gilt stamping. Price $1, postpald. The Elizabeth Towne Co., Holyoke, Mass. Knowledge is the key to success v\l!h the salesman, as with all others. Mr. Atkinson claims there are two all-im- portant factors in every sale. It mat- ters not whether goods are sold over the counter or simply on paper. It may even be that one man is selling his services to another. These two factors are bresent in every transac- tion: the mind of the seller and the mind of ‘the buyer. The successful salesman must know how to use his own mind. He must know how to pre- sent his facts with force and convie- tion. He must be able to judge of the best way in which to approach him and tell his story. A salesman may have the very best goods in the world d vet kill his chances of making a sale r)\ the way he greets or appeals tomer. \;mnv-n practica suggestive book directs the w to make most any conditions. It s the value of knowledge and tact from beginning to end. To be master of this book is to be a mas- ter of The fiare of the bandanna to the Bull Moose is like the wave of a red flag. Hoods Sarsaparilla Cures all blood humors, all eruptions, clears the complex- ion, creates an appetite, aids digestion, relieves that tired feeling, gives vigor and vim, Get it .r‘la\ in uxual liquid form or chocolated tabléts called Sarsatabs. RUBBERS This Winter WEAR HANDSOME Blazer Coats to close at $3.25 from $8.00 each. A few left at The Toggery Shop 291 Main Street, Norwich, Conn. CAN YOU .INVEST $1.00 where you can get more | comfort in return than from a Hammock ? Secure one | now at CRANSTON'S Of course we have better ones if you wish to invest more. City of Norwich, ;Water Dept. Office of Boar Water Commissioners. Norwich, Conn., July 16th, 1912, Water rates for the quarter endin June 30, 1912, due and payable a this office Jaly 1, 1912, Office open from 8.30 a. m. to 5 p. m., and on even- ing of July 20th from 7 to 9. Additions will be made to all bills remaining unpaic after July 20, 1912, Office_ closed Saturday afternoons during July and_August. after July 20, S T WARD T, BL‘RKI},’ Irite Cashier, FIGHTING DERVISHES OF THE DESERT A Thrilling Drama Produced in Egypt —l—AUDITO R IU M—Ilil— ‘ Feature Picture 4 HARMONY BOYS' WHEN ROSES WITHER QUARTETTE Vitagraph The Porteous & Mitchell Co Two Days for the Final Clean-up of Factory Ends FRIDAY SATURDAY The two magnets which have attracted the crowds that have made this Factory End Sale such a phenomenal success are the fresh, desirable goods, and the substantial, positive savings which you cannot help but make on every purchase. Buying Factory Ends is just like putting money in your purse. First, prices.on many lots have been reduced to close the lots out,:for everything must be cleaned up by Saturday night. Time is precious. Come before this Sale ends. FACTORY END PRICES on Wash Goods, staple and novelty Fabrics, short lengths and full pieces. FACTORY END PRICES on Silks, both black and fancy, in all this season’s newest fabrics. FACTORY END PRICES on Domestics — Cottons, Table Linens, Towels, Toweling, Pillow Cases, Sheets, Bed Spreads, Etc. FACTORY END PRICES on Draperies, Curtains, Screens, Etc. FACTORY END PRICES on Dress Goods — Whip Cords, Serges, Mohairs, Bedford Cords, Etc., newest designs and colorings. FACTORY END PRICES on Women’s Wear — Millinery, Waists, Coats, Suits, Wrappers, Petticoats, Corsets, Muslin Un- derwear, Etc. FACTORY END PRICES on Summer Underwear and Hosiery for Women, Misses, Children and Infants, FACTORY END PRICES on Gloves, Handkerchiefs, Ribbons, Laces, Em- broideries, Small Wares, Toilet Articles, Etc. The Porteous & Mitchell Co. Rugs, Hammocks, Porch S FULL SET TEETH FIT GUARANTEED Gold Fillings . sfiver Fillings Pure Gold Crowns . Bridgework ' Our prices are within the reach of all wi NO HIGH appreciate good work. Unhesitatingly we | PRICES claim to be the only real painless dentists in Norwioh. The ease with which we perform difficult work and the enmtire absence of paln during all operations is a revelation to those wh have had work of a like nature dome hy the ordinary ,old style guaran teed KING DENTAL PARLORS, 203 Main St. 9a m to§p m Telephone. The New Rose “Sunburst” At Reuter’s Don't Make a Mistake and overlook our stock of Carriages, Concords and Business Wagons. All work high grade, at medium prices. We are making a special drive on Car- riages this year, W have equal facilities for producing fine work in paint- ing and Paper Hanging and Interior Decorating. Our prices are low and consistent with good work. We earnest- bifes £ t. A few big ly solicit a share of your ha?;‘;ff.flfi..‘ el ohen, » AdNAE 106 GRS patronage. land cars. The Fanning Studios, M. B. RING 31 Willow St. Norwizh, Conm. Horseshoer and Repairer. THEEY 13 n0 aavertising medium Ia l“ 18 no 2av !ml’ m."! r - | Ba: n! eu ’ B T Sincas reamty o TR Aol e ."u? e resha .

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