Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 3, 1912, Page 12

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CALAMITIES OR BLESSINGS ‘ (Written Speefally for The Bulletin,) |falrs than seems developing in our Saturday’s Bufll{etm glves me my |country tod.ay.‘ Itl wol:l!ld appeg: that text for teday. A sentence in that dlsrevga.rd of all else u.nbone 0:;2 issue of the paper announced that | individual preferences has become calamities often preved to be blessings | prevailing metive lw!th ’lghe promlmel?t and nothing i so bad that it mignt | Politiciens of the day, To an on-look- not he worse. er it seems !olchllglah, ;(z ux:l?asm That reminds me of an instance that | D16 SO WHIMAE. b srErial, ot JECliioqnysttiaes watn el e, fx‘xmm‘;f}i,clags s::\d e‘we may satelg trust (Shcler Justhis Bty whag hel hg(ohowev‘er the several parties may considered unfalr treatment. He was| 4 i lod B4 dew motiver, the Bation TLINEE oA kD, ST AV "c_"\fillx:n;nd gm? on its rou‘nd.ations of Z::I(l‘y lfi;fl;\cfi vl;lu('i\ v:g:ulfs. trifle 00| ¢\ th and right, end cannot be over- Roused | £ y from his lethargy bu necessity, he ob- | thrown by the spirit of misrule and tatned an appointment in a much larg- | Yiolence s,l: p}ain:y !hovlm Lo tsome (t’t er city and the greater demands made | the preucht facsionm i ‘e: Ly hu by increased work were met success- | Predict that not many years hence, the fully until both salary and reputation | sarnphim ok ANE Wil have Deoaees Y, were greatly enlarged, He used to|Source of laughter, and we shall won- say in later years that he needed to be | 46T Bow it could ;W.r h?,;;e Vzeeu bt kicked out of the rut into which hews“,l;red, ;:3‘;‘::,; k?o’:xl;: ;fich is be- had fallen, and that nothing better s £ ‘hool affairs just now ever happened to him than being | m’fl Sfilm &n;}‘; ‘:' w?;ixfi tah‘;y ';‘égm ion f " oo, | A1 e C. % g::’c:zvn out of his previous engage volved. Many are claiming that an “FIRE AND STRAW’ A Settlement Worker's Mission N THE HIGH COST OF LIVING vs. HAND-TO- FARMING FOR LOSS AND FARMING Bulletin.) | chance to wash into them. But there s a difference between men and clams. They exist under different Couditmrlls n (Written Specially for The After all has been said about thehigh cost of living;—of the cost of high b and with quite different objects : g Z living, whichever way You v\.u;t :0 {’,‘;t view. It doesn't really matter much| i read not long ago of a young clerk, :“d \‘“‘lii;"'gfné"':}] n‘g‘?{“fi; ?s“d“g;‘l‘;, it,—the fact remains that it does if a slant of the wind and a chauge | who through mistaken orders collect- | o 2 and never will hurt us id, now, never d e farmers half as much as our heedlessness. to receive proper care or education. “We shall certainly have a generation of numbskulls,” lamented the pessi- mists, “and no good can be expected of the tides staryes a few bushels of clams. But it matters very much if men and women supinely waiting t‘qr what luck may happen to send eir ed much more than the proper pric for goods delivered by him. On re porting at headquarters he was told | of the error and praised for his| Heedlessness; that's one word for i i | from any such arrangements.” uch . '+ | way, end up in the scrap-heap of in- | sharpness. it Al v & e 5 A it Shiftlessness 1s anon}er Sv{]g‘;}_‘ cowypetence and failure. “You are surely not intending to | ilmsrxx}x“'inurn:'nd:ho:r]nda?r;xl:;;e“:(‘iflrx;f comes to about the same thing. \dence | We can’t forsee everything, it is true. | let it go uncorrected!” exclaimed he | JMOWE I B0 FRY o O e Ty wightedness is another. ImprovidenCe |, " o cay forsee some things. And|in surprise. er come ag 3 is still another. am glad my children are old enough And there are scores of phrases, it is not only within our power, it is to be out of it.” iy “Certainly I am,” was his employ- a part of our plainest duty to use all er’s reply. “I am in luck for once. sianey and ruds, 6, XSS \i° soms |iho foresieht we have_every least| CThon T ghall vetumm and make 1|, umnember some Of (he Commenis METZ ROADSTER, $495 “Hand-to-mouth,” y and faintest blink of it,—for the avuid- | good myself,” answered he. Aok gy Ryt Motz oo p el 2 € parts of New England. H“aé)pyég;— ance of injury and the seizure of ad-| “Very well, if you do, you need not ‘f“‘_;g]‘”l“x:lg l(ll\]'.- t(\\'(n”i{;nu#éi(rr;‘u[tl\:‘ir?: 22 H. P, 4 cylinders, friction drive 90-inch whe@lbuse,“nn]:!f;rs to l(fl"p, ; “Oh, at we : sure and get a demonstiration of the “METZ,” before you buy. It is the cheapest car of its capacity because it is the least complicated and the best for the same reason. Drop us a post card if interested or call heard in the Canadian provinces. never mind now; it'll be all the same a hundred years’ hence;” haven tnwe 11l heard that, over and over again: one management. She was a little child at that time, but there remains | in her memory the laughter in her own the time keep our eyes lining‘and cur brains bubbling. Oh, I know it seems useless at times. We do the best we Notwithstanding the threat, he did refund the overplus, and admitted when questioned that he had forfeited can, the best we know how:d—we hlsvelfiloe in consequence. 1i“f";f“::f:‘l“ti;'(;'P:;\_:,!;p(f‘;om’:‘. O;fl;;‘ng STEBBINS & GEYNET, Norwich. RS TEY . | weary our minds with worry and v e 1 you take an offer from me g ;i % : i- 5 Where there are so many ““{Iy ’z_ tire our muscles with strain to raige | then?” was the next question.” I want | “"lf\':' “(.),ZP sfi'f.;'d :?;I'd rl;,i]::t;tvlt‘“ pa‘i{'o WM. CONE! South Cu.nterbury nonymous words and phm?—:i,sgnig)ly some crop, and pouf! along comes a|some one as trustworthy as you have | SWAar, Was 3 3 = vey a single idea, it is frost or a hail-storm to nullify all our schoolhousé could stand securely on 3 shown yourself,” and the upshot of it ;% p . ank as g vhi certain that the idea is a re,tIher: 3‘;’;; work. Whereupon we say “Oh, what's | all was a better position and advanc- If,"fh ‘;,l g,t‘n‘d hl'l_r,‘,l.“]'\'\:.\vll“:‘éhg:l “hwl';g eral fg,twm}"sf{:aflm’;\;fiag; to coin | the use?” 'Well, dear hearts. ot e e 3 Placed. . No man could hold in check 3 ITZERLAND” the abit o " . |1the use of the winter storms whic| t many seasons ago we were all|¥ e Ny Rt ML i AMER[ words in profusion unless the thing| .. " 3 sweep over the mountains? |grumbiing at the failure of the ijce |50 Many enjidren. - Thex wenld oveh CA’'S SW they stand for is common. | run the neighborhood and destroy all peace and serenity. So much money wasted in- fine school furniture! The old desks were good enough.” The | poor old man made himself miserable and also all who listened to him. What was the result? Why he used to come nd stand opposite the schoolhouse 1 don't know; you don't know; taney're { mighty unpleasant while they last, not only to men and chipmunks but also to the oak trees which thrash and twist and shiver in the blasts. But, somehow ,the oak which stands up against this sort of thing for a life- time, which resists the hurricanes crop and the advance in price which followed. Many families found out the possibility of making themselves very | comfortable without ice and have clung to the practice ever since. So the high price of coal made way for the fireless cooker, which is now consid- ered Bo great an addition to many a N | don’t want to be understood s :’;’in‘ or even hinting that tm's vica is peculiar to farmers. I s‘hnuldn; say, judging from the experience O some sixty years, that shoemakers and blacksmiths and house-painters had the ailment as bad as any human be- LAKE TOXAWAY, N. C. TOXAWAY OPEN 17 INN JUNE : i A and watch with delight the orderly when they come and spends the fair | kitchen, reducing expense and labor, | 3¢ sing in and out of the build- { Ings could have it and not stagnate t0| 3.y, ganding its roots down deeper |and adding comfort and pleasure to |, ncS Passing i and cut e % Including 40 new Bathrooms, death. ' But the old hymn truthfully { &%, o0 o2 hranches with added | the housewife's routine. The same is | n& and before his death he 8o de-| 575,”00 lmpl‘ovemems remarked that “Other men's failures ighted 1 ingi aises “ Golf Links, 20-mile Lake Drive 5 I3t | fiber—somehow the oak swhich does|true of so many other similar things. | l;:fh_“ ’13:“fi:25;25. ”‘,‘;fl‘{rni:; Ofwoz‘llg d will never save YOU.” It wou T.% | this makes a great deal better timber | Is the potato crop a failure? Does thivk /5 Bele Bini talic that! the: pros mtanbggbflf );m':ge”:};fl?"shn‘fih be | than the pithless poplar down at the | meat go skyward in price? Has the A % everybody else in the ject was all his own. Now don’t you think it would be well to wait for time to decide wheth- edge of the sheltered swamp which never fights anything stronger a4 suminer breeze. wheat crop fallen below the average? | Always the remedy is to be found in| some equally good substitute, in PASSACONAWAY INN, York Cliffs, Maine Seashore and Country Combined 1 cured while we remained infected. i than Sending another man to the dentist or r e i irs ¢ z0- A charmin; icturesque resort, directly on and overlooking the ocean, will never stop my toothache. = the improved health which follows a fr:znllm 'L‘,‘,’w;‘33‘°"1“;‘0“‘?§,,3“2’1"; prr ek iiabined with every known Summer ]ms!imf o kit b B badentto aay sun- | 5 Tou snd L Qopb kol What the:plane] et loe rions gier ey | from the impartial stand of an out- [§ GOLF, TENNIS, BILLIARDS, SOWLING, AUTOMOBILING, GA- t certainly PP v |Of the Universe-Molder are about us True it is that we fail to see how | 1o = . R s flieAhaneka Wead 2 biassed observer that we farmers h{‘:\:)‘(' or for us. But, whatever they may be, | such things as the present famine in | Si0crr 1t Beems 10 me e chances : RAGE, BATHING, FISHING, SAILING, FINE ORCHESTRA the disease much too generally. all of us, thank heaven! But too many of vs. § e Probably there is some extenuation for it, in a good many cases. We quite as likely to be for progress as for failure. The theory is a right one | in the interest of progress and econ- | omy, and eventually will prove its claim. it is our part to make ourselves into fit timber for His building work. 1f the farmer were simply the slave of the farm; if he werc what he is solely to raise crops anid make raoney; China can be proven a blessing. \‘\'e[ are told that the death roll there from starvation is still in some sections daily greater than that caused by the loss of the Titanic. Nor is it easy to On direct line to Portland and the White Mountains Opens June 27th. For booklet address HOLLAND HOUSE, Fifth Avenue and 30th Street, New York farmers, more than any other OfdSr|i ne girc he plows anl hoes were | understand how that great marine digz f L Ao TR bosr S e “;Ee:f GEORGIAN TERRACE, Atlanta, Ga. of workmen, are expose POELEMA-~ ore important than the Manih.:cd he | aster can in any way be regarded oth- | oo WHORR ! e 4 3 s i - ) o ne vhich no |3 i ol X v = « 3 N e 9 r 3 suc! Headquarters for tourists from all points &f the compass gencles and happen-chances which 10 | i 1 otentinlly endowed with,—why | erwise than a direful calamity. But|Loned. Their number is such as to q . degree of foresight can reasonably ‘be expected to predict and no reasonable exercise of precaution can forestall. "rmnmo the charge of political favor- itism, then there wouldn’t be sc m dif- ference between men and clams, after | ali the world is large, and its progress is HOLLAND HOUSE, 30th St. and 5th Ave. R We can't know, in April, that there are to be crop-killing frosts in June and pitiless droughts in July and August. Bven if we did know before- hand that they were coming, Wwe can't roof over our farms with glass to protect against the frost, nor irri- gate them adequately against the drought. It would cost more than all our possible crops, with fences and tarms thrown in, would be worth. So we have to take our chances against these and other unescapable accidents. It isn’t wholly unnatural that we should come to feel, at times, as it we were really such helpless pawns in the big game that it didn’'t matter much whether we moved or stood still. Such a feeling, however natural, is, nevertheless, not to be commended or excused. The mishaps we are ex- posed to do not justify our mistakes. When we are playing the game against such veiled mystery as that which we call Nature, we know, at the start-off, that she is likely to surprise us with unexpected moves. When we pick up our hoes and get out our plows to be- gin the annual set-to with her, we know perfectly well that she is likely to have something up her sleeve, She may met, it is true; but then again ghe may. And we have got to wait ti!l we find out before we know. Tak- ing chances is part of our business. We can’t avoid them if we wanted to; we don't expect to avoid them, if we have any sense. But losing chances is NOT a part of our business. We have legs to get around with; hands to work with; brains to plan with; and will to stiffen our backs and keep us up to the firing line, when we have once taken our stations there- on. It is true that a great many clams manage to make a living of it lying still in the mud and doing noth- ing but keep their mouths open for what Providence and the tides muay TWO WOMEN TESTIFY What Lydia E.Pinkham’s Veg- atable Compound Did For Their Health—Their own Statements Follow. New Moorefield, Ohio.—“‘I take great pleasure in thanking you for what your =7 Vegetable Compound has done for me. I had bearing down pains, was dizzy and weak, had pains in | lower back and could not be upon my feet long enough to geta meal. As long as 1 laid on my back I would feel better, but when I would get up those bearing down pains would come back, and the doctor said I had female trouble. ILydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compoung was the only medicine that helped me and I have been growing stronger ever since 1 commenced to takeit. I hope it will help other suffering women as it has me. You can use this letter.””—Mrs. CAssIB Lroyp, New Moorefield, Clark Co.,Ohio. Read What This Woman Says: South Williamstown, Mass.—‘‘ Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound cer- tainly has done a great deal for me. Be- fore taking it I suffered with backache and pains in my side. I was very irreg- ular and I had a bad female weakness, especially after periods. I was always tired, so I thought I would try your med- icine. After g one bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound I felt 8o much better that I got another and now I am a well woman. I wish more women would take your medicine. 1 have tald my friends about it.”” —Mrs. Romser Covr, Box 45, South Willlams- town, Mass. | their plows They'd both “take what was ¢ ing to them” and let it go at that. But we are not the servants of our farms, nor even of our horses and cat- tle. They are all for our use, anl to be used for our own saies. Farming isn’t in itself the end of farming; the years don’t go round in an endless circle, one after the other treading the same monotonous ring, like a padding horse in some sad cir- cus. Life is the end of farming as of all other worth-while human activi- ties; and Getting Somewhere is the order of the Great Ringmaster. Not merely getting our farms somewhere, but getting somewhere ourselves. Us- ing the farms as tools or servants or roads to that end This view of the farmer's life and opportunities and objects does not lead to slip-shod farming. It does not permit or excuse slip-shod farming. It demands and compels the very - best farming we are capable of. us to farm as diligently strength, suffices; ientifically as our brains can discover; as practically as qur experience directs; as devotedly as duty ordains. It has neither excuse for nor pa- tience with the eternal worriment which makes some farmers grey before their time: nor with the flabby im- providence which leads others to let everything go “at loose ends.” Indeed, it is more impatient of these last than of any other sort. For the man who throws away opportunnities is more contemptible than the man who wastes strength seeking impossible opportunities. The impossible of to- day may very well be possible tomor- row. And who shall know when that tomorrow is to dawn? But there is no tomorrow for opportunities wasted. They take their place forever in a dead and unreturning yesterday. I'm not thinking, while writing this, of the habit some farmers share of leaving their mowing machines over winter in the last meadow mown, and at the end of the last fur- row turned. That form of shiftless- ness has been sufficiently preached against. I'm thinking of the more general habit many have of shirking responsibility for the future; of ig- noring it; of practicing a mere day- by-day method of living; of tr g to shift their own duty of foresight on the shoulders of others, or on the lap of chance. As | think over the farmer neigh- bors 1 know or have known, it seems to me that there is nothing which has heen more instrumental in holding many of them back than their habit of heedlessne; They waste time in hunting for mislaid tools; they waste strength in failing to plan their work ahead; they waste energy in doing over again work which, rightly done the first time, would have needed no repetition; they waste money in the failure to. take advantage of todaj opportunities against tomorrow’'s needs; they waste their own lives and the lives of others by refusing to use the think-stuff in their heads to its normal working capacity. As T've said before, I don't charge farmers with greater remissness in this respect than other men. Those on whom the tower of Siloam fell were riot worse sinners than all oth- ers in Jerusalem. But they were kill- ed just as dead, for all tint. nd it wen't Lelp our case a litde bit to ve fome other class reforin. We shall be serving ourselves better o cast the heams out of our own eves than tc be constantly pointing fingers of scorn of motes in others’ optics, TII: FARMER. Accounting for Wealth. A blind man, blind from birth, who never earned more than a guinea a week, pas just died in England, and left over $5,000. His blindness pre- vented him from reading the get-rich- quick advertisements. That is one way to account for it—Brooklyn Times. Middle Name Is Nerve, ‘When one considers the littla time he spends around the office, it is diffi- cult to understand how Roosevelt, nervy as he s, has the nerve to walk up to the cashier's desk every week. ~—Philadelphin Inquirer, What It Amounts Toe, The Bull Mooss movement shows signs of degenerating further Inte nothing but a hull-headed one.—~Frovi. dence Journal, not always marked by financial gain, Bown Ni,%éhgfh:fisfm:!wen?: {al\(';‘r;:l Awful, indeed, was the experience of |5 % Gt of v mbare. and, @i~ the Titanic, Dreadful, indeed, is the|128 & board of five members, and, ai- thought of fellow-beings dving thousdnds because of lack of food, but if by these fatalities the world roused to generous response and mor careful provision for the future forestall the recurrence of like astrophés, who shall s that dead have died in vain? Apply the same rule to the present muddle in politics, and few of us cz imagine a more disgraceful state of af- by to cat- | these | vided party-wise, their squabbles have ialready branded them in the opinion o 11l high-minded citizens. Problems S| will arise in our affairs which will © | cause criticism hewever they may be settled, and perhaps the expenditure will not be immediately lessened, but time will eenvince us all, I hope, the right way is the best way, and that 7 {in the end the right will prevail. AN IDLER. LETTERS FRO Tolland County HEBRON Endeavor Society’s Lawn Notes of the Outing Season. The Endeavor society soclal at Mrs, X green Wednesda) X rink’s evening. Ice cr tunes were told, netting the society good sum. There was a shower la the evening, when the young peop had to adjourn to the house, wherc they had a pleasant time playing ete. i ss Olive Smith of Hartford is ti Secial— m, lemonade and cake were sold and for- 2 in M TWO STATES USQUEPAUGH Recent Outings of Local People—Mrs. Potter Leaves the Hospital. Mr. and Mrs, K. Crandall and son Lloyd of rly spent Sunday | o, parents, Dr. and cher from Provi- en spending several a Kenyon and daughter An- Je Die were callers at Point Judith Tues- day J. 8. Lamond and family and J. K. Lamond and family spent Wednesday 1o | 2t_Narragansett Pler. guest of Miss Genevieve Little Wendell Phillips of Richmond was .e M. Jones has been vis- | @ caller in this village Wednesday. ristine Frink this eek. Hen Garbutt of Providence spent Miss Eleanor Lord was a visitor in |2 with his wife and daughter at Hartford last Tuesday. test cottage. Mr. and Mrs. Birdsey of Meriden Able to Leave Hospital. are at their summer home in this : place. | Mrs. Hattie Potter, who has been Hawley Cummings of Exeter was a Parade street hospital, has recent visitor in this place | h roved as to be able to Leslie Crooks was a caller here re- | > here to her sister's, Mrs. Sarah | Frankli ss Victoria Crooks was a caller| Benj. Bray of Lafayette spent Sat- recently at C. H. Porter's. urday night and Sunday with friends Horace Porter, who has been ill for | here. 4 a long Hioe, is Tailing guite fas | _TFred Ripley of Providence spen Mrs. Eno and daughter have return- unday with his family at Rest cot- ed to Bristol after a short stay in th! place. Washinaton County, R. 1. ROCKVILLE Among visitors at church last Sa urday were Prof. A. B. Kenyon, and daughter of Alfred, N. Y., Mr. and Mrs. daughter of Westerly. ar Mrs. Nathan B, Lewis of Kingston was the guest of Mrs. Emory C. Ker yon Tuesday. Prof. O. L. Burdick and family are wi¥e Charles P. Palmer and tage, Miss Annie Kenyon spent Wednesday with friends at Slocum. J. 8. Lamond was a visitor at Wes- terly and Watch H Tuesday. Amos H. Kenyon of Pawtuck with his parents over Sun . Mrs. Flora M. Kenyon spent a day recently with friends at Slocum. ‘Wm. Aldrich and Mr. and Mrs. AETA Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Aldrich of North Stonington spent Wednesday with Gideon Palmer and family. t- nd A motoreycle driven by a petroleum engine was patented as far back as n- | 1885. entertaining guests from Stamford, | S i ] S! i LES! Conn. aR i puad PILE ! P“_E Pl La Verne Burdick of Boston and his sister, Miss Jennie Burdick of this| WILLIAMS’ INDIAN PILE OINTMENT place and brothers Arthur and Edw: in | will cure Blind, Bleeding and Itching Piles. and family are spending a week at |Itabsorbs the tumors, allays itching at once, Quonocontaug beach. | acts as a ponltice, gives instant relief. Mrs. Harold R. Crandall has been {For sale by all druggists, mail 50c and $1.00 geriously ill for the past week. Eugene dick”spent Sunday at Vial's creek. Saunders and Gorton Bur- WILLIAMS MF6. CO., Props., Cleveland, Ghie | For sale at Lee & Osgood Co. STEAMER BLOCK ISLAND DAILY SERVICE Until Sept. 3, to Watch Hill and Block Isiand A. M. *8.30 10.00 11.05 12,30 Norwich ..........Lw. New London . Watch Hill .. . Block Island ....,.Due %29 1 10.4 114 1.1 Noon P. M. *Daily, except Sundays. Two hours at Block Island Sundays. A M. P.M.-P. M, *2.15 **3.15 3.40 440 5.00 6.00 6.30 7.30 P.M. P. M. 5 | Block Island ......Lv, 0 | Watéh Hill .......... 5 | New London .....Due 0 | Norwich ..........Due **Sundays only. Two hours at Block Island Sundays. SPECIAL EXCURSION TICKETS Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays July 6 to September 2nd Inclusive WATCH HILL A% Adults, 80c; Children, 25¢, 42 HOURS AT WATCH HILL, AND BLOCK ISLAND A%, Adults, 75c; Children, 400, 134 HOURS AT BLOCK ISLAND. Bhore Dinner Houses and Bathing Peach near landings at Wateh Hill and Block Island,' Fop further information, party rates, apply at office of eompany en Norwiah Line Wharf, New London, Neorwieh to Ocean Beach and return: Adults 40e; Children 25c, Tickets include round trip trelley frem New Lendon to Beach. NEW ENGLAND STEAMSHIP CO, E. L. DOTL, Agent is the most delightfully located hotel in New York. FUNERAL FLOWER in artistic arrangements. A specialty of Lodge and Society Emblems. (WHOLESALE) REUTERS (RETAIL) FULL FIT GUARANTEED Gold Fillings . . Silver Fillings . Pure Gold Crowus Bridgework NO PAIN | appreeciate good work. elaim 1o be the only real Our prices are within the re S T TEETH .$1.00 up .50¢_up -$5.00 5N o B I of all who | NO HIGH Unhesitatingly we | PRICES painless dentists in Norwich, The eamse with which we perform difficult work and the ent absence of pain during all operations is a revelation to those who have had work of a like nature dentist. All DR. JACKS ork guaranteed. IN N, Manager. done by the ordinary old style DENTAL PARLORS, 203 Main St. 9a m to 8 pm Telephone, Fishing Tackle SPECIAL — Steel Rods $1.00 Steel Rods ..........$1.00, $1.50, $2.25, $3.00 to $5.00 Split Bamboo Rods . .........75¢c, $1.00, $1.25 to $5.00 Casting Rods, Trunk Rods, 7 pc., 15 inch Joint Rods Reels ......oovveennn....25¢c, 45c, 50c, $1.00 to $4.00 Jowel Bait—Frogs, Wooden Minnows, Success Spinners, for bass or pickerel. Bearings, Featherweight, Tri-Part, etc. Etc,, Bait Pails 12 ft. x 4 ft. and 20 ft. x 4 ft. Sinkers and Hooks of all kin Seines. ds THE HOUSEHOLD, Bulletin Building, 74 Tranklin Street Don't Make 2 Mistake‘“ : and overlook our stoek of Carriages, Concords and Business Wagons. All work high grade, at medium prices. We are making a special drive on Car- riages this year. Automobiies for rent. A few big bargains in used cars. Agent for Over- land cars. M. B. RING Horseshoer and Repairer. DR. C. R. CHAMBERLAIN Dental Surgeon In charge of Dr. 8. L. Geer's practice duriag his last {llness. MoGrory Buildings Norwich, Cema BICYGLES REATLY REDUCED PRICES. Indian, Excelsior and Pope MOTORCYCLES 6 h. p. Thor. Twin. .$100.00 4 h. p. Indian Single $ 75.00 Sold on easy payments. C. V. PENDLETON, 10 Broadway Summer Millinery A fine assortment of latest styles In Hats. Come in and see them. MRS. G. P. STANTON, 52 Shetucket St. Qs

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