Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 17, 1912, Page 4

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s " BE A REPUBLICAN. an idea as that of C.-B. Mont- will not appeal to the rank dl the republican party, or,! any party. His argument 'flm be futile to injett a into the (state < campaign ' to make grouble -and tljnxel ‘rudubi Sausé, holds Edod as |V Mfted to the botiom and each and n mnfl ticket. What treach- | voter to support his nufil o and ' then leave It to . in, the presidential and throw th' electlon to the iy of the parties. Buch W Have' no’ bther result. | The ¢ absolutely no chance for the | Aiird party and every vote that is cutl “who go on their ticket In-| lh 9huwu of the democratic who ‘Btand committed for things against ‘which those 4 \:‘?mflm for the add- to :fll., a8 many oth are doing, hang togeth Ive republicans and advo: hich is donsidered so im- ! A tbe organization which £ood for the coun- r and f dm-u t’o Kkeep it up. The § cause amounts to simply ‘one man and doing ‘as he - What ll":ua-a is ‘action tothe welfare of the : placing in office men jve a regard for their word, and the people. Bishop pf Bt Paul Bizés up the third- | when (he I tell 18 out of a job s job and cAn't ket a job he : a- 10, teil the people in %u#hwm —ov mux. When | just laugh | 1 lent sees the control of na- but the governorship has | do with, that. It will be | “to throw aside the great or of ‘the progressive fivuudqxrnm third-party tickets and us Colonel, colors and be a repub- 0ld the dqntry'l as well te's welfare, AT SEAT OF 'rnoum.:. v:l;ld when there is ul d done to des| ;'Z mwuw to learn . ch & ttin, %fiu mom:ll:h- . It is Decessary to g9 | L the trouble and clean | iz llul. or remove rague, in Aus b to such an extent that fiy- t needed. brick, stone or con- ks along the river front - The pavements and made of granite blocks. table or'animal matter “exposed to files, and the itly cleaned during re are n_drains 1o attract breed files.”, example of what can be & real desire to over- 4 It ‘would be possible for K as*much attention g0 taast an conditions i8 dome in fl Bome such ?flm must be will be accomplished. Ailth ahounds * there will be o f1y whick will propagate and y. until the dpen vaulis the garbage barrels covered the 1 heaps removed, The x fl 01 means the exemption u :flhtn be ob-~ "IO FOR T'HMELVES. Wffectof the | Vermont and elections s being feit through- it the country in the many reports ng interést in the third- hould. 1t is evident that no good ame from his action and attitude g out ‘the entire campaign. It | shown, that ho is advocating o dan- eun- for those who have any for the country’s interest. Ver- ahd Maine have both shown that of votes for the third- _ ly means throwing thém qni #nd alding in the, election of Wil- h a4 the bringing of free trado upon ‘sountzy. % even among some ‘who the Colonel near at home, Indications from afar. are thelr effect, Bxamination has a8 ‘intd thé cause for Robse- #plitting his party, his real object . for belug the director of the new par- 1y, and the welght is. againet him, they ure slipping away. from "His hypnotic spel! ana realize that he | Bas nothing new to offer, and, on the | ‘mm can do so much harm to from lwhich he 15 drawing #t, The gctlon in Colorado m.‘qnum republican strength Progressives, and figures ffom the coast show that the attend. nce ‘at his addresses fs much lower .| alleged murderers, | duty for the benefit of the future: It cause. It is mot strange that| NORWICH BULLETIN, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1912 PURGE NEW YORK. 8 far ns getting hold of the partiei- pants in the Rosenthal murder in New York, all has been accomplished, though it has taken two months to secure two men Who played an im- cleared for the prosecution of the par- tictpants, but these trials are bound to suffer from delays and postpone- mie s, It is interesting to mote what | @ small part the police of the metropo- ug have p the brunt of the work falling on the district attorney's | office and tarough the persistency and determination displayed there will the | accused be presented for trial. Eyery | éffort to defeat sueh an end has ap- | parently been made by the metropoli- tan force, and therein lies its own undoing and the bringing to light of | the charges of graft and collusion with vice, which has long been hinted at but against. which it was Impossible to have any action talen, The wrresting of the accused/murs derers ought not in,the least to c.use’s a let-up in the purging of the police force of its conditions. They should | very offieial made,to pay for the; ”"Q‘ he has\ played in the system whiclt| Sanctioned the axistence of such a Tof- ten state of affalrs. New York I8 due | for & genuine cleaning up, and there is | | then need for placing in office men |,y .- who Wwill maintath it, or conditions | similar, if not worsg, than’those sur- rounding the Rosenthal case will de- velop with the least inclination to | wink af it by the police aud officials. _ "GOING TO COLLEGE. At this season when the college year is about to gpen there are'aiways large | numbers who abe in a position to en- {er collegd and have the ambition to| add to theif"education for future hene- fit, and -yet are undeclded as to just | what direction they wish to pursue: it. THis has been the situation with many clears ofté when least expected, and the opportunity .18 invariably Bet education gives. ol In attendatce At college one ‘tnust realize that it 1s a'time of golden opportunities andf that he must full appreciate the adyantages which he | is securing and hold himself. strictly to js a time when he’should see things as they are in actual lfe, with the ma- ture eye which looks before ‘and aft- er, In contrast with the yiewpoint of | his pigh school days, when. the re- spousibillifes which come with growing up Were not so appdrert, Hg should fake his _t#aining in the_college so effcctive fhat In the early years there- 0f he will he able to see the path be- forg him which.he best can follow and which sults his tastes. He must be prepired when opportunity speaks and none can)be more so than he who makes the most of | Knowledge is thote it he will apply | there are blenty of openings walting EDlTORIAL ‘NOYES. ; . “Give the coyntry to the enemy save thé state” Is a false republican slogan. Puiting Huppy thought for today: man's Lapit. The ‘man who. mbes_troubld way usually wishes he had’gone ?ls o!her halt ‘alone iy i The most reluctant to hang up his straw hat will be the que who has Just ‘figured {h a bargain sale. “The moose hunters herder are reported to be enjoving the | best luck throughout the west, | | ,Governot Wilson has no fear of the | hoodoo 13. He would probabiy 1ike to | L arrange to bave the election on No- vember 13, The weight of Bass in' New Hamp- shire has donsiderably decreased since Roogevelt pulled his forced catch from the political péol. trout fishing is good in Maine than in politicd! discussions, As an ex-president, the net ha shown the people of the m they were all wrong in their detesta- ' tion of Benedict Aoy 3 In holding oil lands sufficient to sup- ply (the navy for twenty-five yéars, President Taft has done something. for thel country ‘the people ought to ap- preciate. The republicans of - Connectleut | should/ realize’ that the prosperity of | the state's industries is of more. im- portance to them than the satisfying of old grudges. With the capture of the last ef the | Allens, Gyp'the Blood and Louie,"the brominent criminals of|Jate are accounted for, It's well to keep them in reach. The sale of alcohol By Russia..r turned a net profit of 600 million rou- bles i 1911, and there were 25,000,000 people suffering at the same time in the five famine distric portant part therein, The road is now | Pital 4nd’it is not strange, bot the situation | the seventh day, either. At the end of | because of the added asset which the |fant over to Blink his advantages, | Period. In the early sixties I was a Ereen | “bare” siin on? | himself to his task and’ ontain it, .m:”:;‘i“-"’ury ol ity West Hart- oft tirings whtil tomorrow, is 4 lazy [O€ mY 1 Maay emun t"onnecllcul folks are | fair dealing, But they ald not. more interested in the news that the | fon ‘that | Letty | Otherwise he could ndt have come, for, besides being ill, he was only a few months old. ai Even the hurried doctor who receiv- | evervbody | ed her figticed flectingly that the moth- | somebody er seemed quite without the haggard |agreement the questiol | anxiety which most mothers exhibited | 0f Buster was left until he Should be | be the mafter- wi | when they brought their spring to e treated. She hard | case. She was could not go. “I think,” said the doctor, can eure him if you leave him. be, 38 a week in that particular ward. Your namé and address, please. Irs., Herman Whiteley,” <\ THE PERSONAGE e —— His mother brought him to the hos-|2 foolish “Bess-um's-heart” guie as|{man nature half-wrong customd and though she were just an ordinary wem- n. Strangely enough, nobody ‘said what you must use if you are going to build. aggressively waited for to dare m! say. alling off- | quite well. counted $8 from her purse, held the|cannot tendant and rose. “Thank impersonally, and went away, {at each other and at the bady, ny,” remarked the attendant. “She did- their bables! It's a rather pretty onme. Wrats ¥ nam, | the report ¢z The attehdant frowned. “That does- she said. ' “Come along, Buster, | hf jand we'll find something for you to eat | that'li put fat on your, bones.” Buster. hefore. th was something gallant and about him even in his weakness: that won people over, “I never saw a 10 months old baby before that had common sense,” ters particular nurse, declared. doesn’t make unnecs Ty trouble. other day that he must take one food during the week. She did not come on the second week the hospital sent a bill and if came back stamped “No such Pucmber.”, Somebody from the hospital |s e street to in- ve-éxlma and /,came back | cynically ng. “No Mrs. Herman' Whiteley, no No. 229," was the report. Tounce that we have been most artist- feally stung.” |\ terest that evening. stood regarding him after hearing of is desertion, and with a little rush she LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Tributes to Norwich Men. iniseences of Norwich thinty years tgo, some of jts pro his former home, to spend He was intérested in me, and offered m my my expenses ff T would go to ratory schqol and college. In 1819 'M I was ‘teaching school in my native town he urged me to come tq Norwich and assist him In his real estate business. 1 complied; not as a ‘matter. of) choice, but as an expression titude to him for what he;, done. for, me. He had at that /tinle nearly two hundred houses and| tenements, located in all parts of the ing road and the city collecting rents, lu’pflr‘l end- 'ing repairs, etc. Soon after ar- was huvlly‘ mortgaged, and 1 was as 'his clerk also, because of arrange- ‘ments which I dd not need to explain in'a sense responsible to the officers | of some’ of, the banks, espectally the |Norwich Savings soclety. 1 became ! {acquajnted fn a pusiness way with such men as L. W. Carroll, Amos W. P?anuce LewisA. Hyde, Costello Lip- | pitt, John Mitchell and John Brewster | of Ledyard, men of a noble type of character, influential and highly re- spected citizens. . On several occasions there were complications in my un cle’s financlal relations with the banks, when these men might readily hav suspected me of dlshonesty and un. They | were extremely kind and considerate | in_their treatment of me, and I shall | always hold them in grateful remem- | brance, for thelr kindness. | While I resided in Norwich, at East | Great Plain, I had as neighbors Asa Backus and George Gould. They were | fine neighbors and kind to the’ new- | comers, At .that time Horace Whita- | ker wag a frequent caller at my un- | cle’s office. ‘been ! ussociated In business In Not- Wich, Mr. Whitaker had gome west, ‘Tmade a fertuse, lost it, and returned to Norwich, One day my unele said | tolhim ou have had varled experi-’ ences and fortune; what part of vour life do you looks back upen as the hap- piest period?” The instant reply was | Whon T was just married, had a snug {home of my own, and was earning i £ood. living Rev, Dr. Leonard Woolsey Bacor | was the pastor of Park church, and | |one of my uncle's neighbors. ‘With | his characteristics courage and eners iy, he. ipstituted a crasade against | Sunday txcursions down. the Thames in the steamer Ella. The proprietors | {of that boat, or perhaps some of the | excursionists in part, as a joke secur- | ed Dr. Bacon's arrest for riding out | one Sunday afternoon with a_friend | in a carriage. A few years ago I heard Dr. Bacon's son and namsake, a pro- fessor at Yale, relate /the incident of Norwich, England, has'had a f1o0d | this season which washed away 52 Rridgges and culverts. This appears to be a sloppier Norwich i3 capable of having: Canada has had a wet season, an in the nelghhorhood of Manitoba it | rafned for. five weeks, In England | and Canada the summer of 1912 might | bo called “the sunless summer.” A Rochester paper apologlzes for a typographical error In printing “heo- dore Roosevelt,” and vemarks it would have been '‘more considerate to have made it “meodore” or ‘ladore.” The cause of excessive rain in Eng- Jand !s believed to be the presence of during the summer of 1912 and the greater consequent evaporation. tHAft' 8n his previous visit there by | The republicans of Malne will make muny (housand, The speakers wip |Of themselves lnughing stocks 1 aft- “mre following him are making teling | ©F Wresting thelr state from the dem- r’l!lfilfil! sgainst his claims, and in | 0CTals they assist in throwing the ad- Pennaylvania an adjustment has been | MINistration of the natien to Wilsen, | thidg of the guestion of eleetors, All x W, T) ks tends 1o the belict thaj the peo- | il the Colenel deeiaring that he ime’than our own | 80 much jco In the northern Atlantic | his father's arrest at a legislative | hearing in the capitol, at Hartford, on Sunday observanfe, and attribute the arrest to the prevalence and exercise {of the Purltanical spirit on the part of “hristian people in Norwich. | T was interested in the Otis libra- founded by one of my mother's un- ies, Joseph Otis, and often wished | {that 1 could ald in perpetuating and enlarging his gift by a liberal contri- bution, { My, family found a very el { coption in the Second Congregationa. church, and held Rev. Dr. W. Palmer and his wife in highest esteem. | During my residence in Norwich H first hecame acquainted with that no- ble Christian man, Nathan L. Blshop and na friendship ‘was formed which continued through all the after years. 1 found that he was indeed one of ! God's own children, and in educational matters he was always a helpful guide and inspiration, | Parden me if I ha ve written too |mueh, Print only so much of it as| you see fit, but do not omit my trib- | | uie to the memery of these men who | sayin, on!” Buster had passed his second birth- dhy whie o vistor;aaw bm g looked ught myself explahiing’ fo him the'again and and came agaln—-and when| ogs 3 e e 38 e Chiongo for her home in dis. | Women from the factories and drive fnstead of another that,he preferred.” vg:t city n‘e took thula',:vSt‘); i;:w There was no call from his mother | From that time on he was to be her 'y ‘Sulyy, ez itfle oty 4o the was ad ves | 08 1k that ‘the. women Umselves diant as Buster himself when she lect the hospital. Thé ward wherein Buster had reigned wis strangely still that even- trses performed thelr tasks si- Even the children were quiet, d nurse 'in the ward, With compressed 1ips, moved about swiftly. “I'beg to on- |Once she ‘hesitated by the littl Buster had gccupled so long; and ing out &, They: surveved Buster with new in- |infinitesimial’ wrinkle from ‘the snowy Already he was |coveriet. Then she patted the pillow improving in flesh and iooks. He waved |and then she hurried on With her head one fist airily at the head nurse as she |in the air. If she had not been pital nurse in uniform you would hate sald k?.t“turl were tolling down her #xabbed him' up and hugsed him with | cheeks.—Chicago News, 0 1o Now, IDEAS OF A PLAINMAN Why ldeals Will Not Work. T city from Fast Great Plain to Spauld- m:’f:?.’,‘,‘:,t“m" . g ) from Occum to Trading isn't. Cove. 1. traversed ‘all the stréets of | jdeafist. For the part of the. soul rival in Norwich T founa tha;t Mr. Hall eriticl: things was in financial straits. His property ::"c':; bl gl The prum ‘which will work. ‘But, in a way, trn(h| They had in eariler davs ||’ Yours t W, H, HALL West Hartford, Sept. 18, 1612 | were so kind to me. Teddy In Doubt. Mr, Bdiiet In the eanvention ha g earefully preserves errespende: ! ple are ing fov themsolvos agatn, | ©TeTU1lY 1 his eerrespendence, |, “p . "Voines, Wednesday, the tem- | & eopy of the letter which he says | T At "0 L EORIET ke col- | Wit Mansey inelude the price he | Governor-elect Haines of Maine wrete | gnel's face was steaming, ' palg for the New York Presg in his | NiM 18 requested by the commen pee- The men whe listened te him were | © 9?7 In the sirong Tepubligay felisw- g of that maper he sees u way of | | conteibutions 1o the prepFessive par- | 'l wander Buti moosism whick he vould | /i ) entertain al and a muititude | era flutteri { cried put for him to take | Wit Hu. coat and sail in, in spite of the | ely humid temperature he re- «d in his characteristic way, b So the weeks went on and lanc. |search for his mother was unavailin od at the baby on her knees a3 she |She had laid her plans too carefuil answered questions and descrived the [Only the most shameless prevaricator young and rather pret- | would have dared say that Buster still |is. a compromise.. A man is half an- | v but her cyes presented a hard sur- |needed medical attention, for he was |gel, half aust. So is all he dovs. fake beyond which the inquiripg glance |fat and rosy and his chuckles enl: ened his ward. sonage. He was pointed out'to visitors, |ghey would work they woud mot be who cooed over him. idealss Every resident of that hospital knew |+ — ! that Buster should have been Sent to she told |the Foundlings' home months before. Him, ~i228 Blinkstone stfeet” ShelA hospital owes a duty to.itself and| be expected by half heskiatingly toward the ai- | waifs that sre thrust upon it. Yet the you.” she|word of bamishment was never ‘spoken. Buster grew and -with him grew his The attendant and the doctor léoked |charm, his all pervading happiness and (Fun- |cheerfilness, focaar) Tuddp et s red doctors had a way of stoppi next republican candi Idua ¢ good-bye OF Talse a Tow, us | in to see Buster before taking up frosh | EOVErNOT.” And he is—A heonid Senti- the others always do when, they leave |burdens. Then :they were seen to|nek emerge from a frolic with him smiling| ; instead of frowning as they had when| The Shore’ Line trolley ad the doctor from |they entered the ward. Nurses reck- | Féached Deep River, it is safe fo as- Tossly evated discipline to moments to_him. im.. If. they admired him Iy the chief nurse of the ward always got _nervous pady in: the Tespiial.caiied hitn ot e rell Bl Everybody in/ the hospital called him ter and tell him.how swi & e meek was out. There | gother lovable he was-—tell him Facher | the, Shmage done by bi s | e e e e nincy| tieship in Newport harbor, - but “just to him, “Maybe I haven't got a shirt He knew his hat was in the ring, ting along so old that it isn't easy ana by the coplous way he was sweat- e ing, perhaps, thought his shirt might | t0 be. Mr. Editor: Kindly permit Some rem- | e in_the clothes wringer. d ally u, grateful tribute t N M AL Ry and especi gratefu ute to | “clothed and in his right mind"? Or, mfacat citizens of that | did he Irmagine s movks on & hot day, | Mnder him, 1s mighty goud luck for to keep himself cool, might have a PATtY.—Weterbury American. goes to one of the polls in If he 'Cl. he wouldn't be an 1 _—} is p{_’““” the thing which will M‘ wos We get alone, get on and get things dmev bending and twisting truth to —= tions. B conditions consist in faulty hu- decaring institutions. These are the bricks and mortar “Thou art Peter, the Rock, and upon By tacit | this Rock will I bulld my church.” And of the disposal | that is what has been and always will any church. The church is built on human na- fure. But religlon is butlt on the ideal- ist. Ttisa , & vision, Whatever 1 done, whatever e fact, Hence do not be alarmed when tom He had become a per- | tht your ideals will not work; for if OTHER VIEW POINTS m— s to provide for Our Postmaster Gaylord said last spring: “Judge John P, Studley v;m te for having a few| Sume it wili reach Middletown in time. Visitora _admired | Possibly the continuous highway and o Tashibrit, :he continuous trolley to the sh Il dawn on Middietown at the sa d hovered about and tlm:—nldd;ev.‘own Press. e would pick up Bus- = and alto- Mr. Mellen may not relish pdying for &/ Fall River line steamboat to {he stern of a bat- think of the advertising worth of the demonstration of the solldity of the — steamboat! —Proyidence Bulletin. Those who are go anxious, and mot altogether disinterestedly 0, to oust them back into the bosoms of their families,, perhaps, fail to reckon with are unwilling to return.—Bridgeport Telegram, Mr. King in the new expanded Sec- ond district,. Tolland, Windham, New London and Middlesex countles, is we:i wn all over the state. He is a man X kable eloguence, of large leg- m.uve and other public experience, weil| qupiifed for 'taa. dulies of the place—Hartford, Courant. Here's some dope for the supersti- tious: On the 14th day of ‘the ninth month’ (9 plus 14 makes 23) the Allex outlaws and the Rosenthal murderers are caught. ‘Of course, there's a sim- liar combination in every month, bt this is the month and the day on which they were caught. Waterbury. Republican. Sklddoo'{— ‘ Veterans of the Civil war are get- each- ous hand, smoothed an 2 hos- to find one to run for office as it used with & long and hofiorable ‘war rec: "eddy | ord, but still Hearty and vigorous and To get one ll je Judge Studley, with strong legs for political running HEATRE DAVIS THELT Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday ROBERT HENRY HODGE & CO,, in the Sparkling Play-let BILL BLITHERS, BACHELOR FINE GOE & RICHARDSON Something Deing All the Time. CLAUDE AUSTIN, Comedy Juggler. PHOTO-PLAYS, The Deceivers, Paths Weakly, No. .35 Thro' Dumb Luck, Grouch at the N Seashore. The Great' Baseball Story, RUBE MARQUARD WINS. Matinees at 2.30. Prices bc and i0c. Eveningg at 7 agd 8.45. GET THE HABIT. work toward the now perplexing prob- lem of governing themselves. ‘At pres- ent a city cannot illce bonds for some local improvement Without going: to the‘legislature for permission. It re- celves a, charter only to finid that its provisiops conflict with other law and -there is almost a constant cla: of authority. This will continue until the cities are given home rule with power under a charter to regulate *many things - peculiar to themselves o | @nd which cannot be satisfactorily de-’| clded by legislators who know nothing about them.—New Britain Herald. BREED THEATER “Broncho Billy's Escapade” MR. EARL P. COLBY in Illustrated Songs AUDITO ———-_—* Bailey and the Teare Sisters Tuesday and Wednesday : PECIALS Dboxes stating that “Th cause of women suffrage.” young men who cause? Springfleld Republican. ) and away their best by Hon. Br; R¢ it i function ‘ot that | “o5" which sees moral| The republicans ‘home rule for cities, atists define truth as that| portant, and if carried Opening Display TODAY OF Modish Wearing Apparel AND THE VERY LATEST MILLINERY During these first days our window displays will be The styles | shown here are most cor- changed daily. rect in every way. ‘When he Some people were shocked at the Amasa C. Hall, had | chilly gwemhu, he may be compelled | 81¢ in a New York theater of cigar- for the ’YUIIH’* ptan who' 18 'tHus equipe ::{;e_:ednom hu-lne;- in Baltimore and w exchange his “bare” skin for a seal- e ped. ettes stamped “Votes for Women” in skin. ege Cigarettes’ e remainder of his_life. | One Who 1s Watching the Teady Show, | &T® exPressly manufactured for the Norwich, Sept. 16, 1912, Byt-are oke cigarettes to be abandoned as unworthy of the It seems a harmless puff.— in the Second district the republi- | cans have with a wisdom rare in poli- ties named Hon. Willlam ‘A, King, far an. He will be Xf\auud n F. Mahan of fow. London, And if the men of the idealist | Gecond dlstrict vote intelligently there Of course.he | pught not to be much question as to whom they will coose—New Haves have adopted & plank in their state platform pledging This is very im- ut would do much b all municipalities in their CREAM BISCUIT When you “dump” your old fire do you dump it into an ash pan? And then strew the . floor and the cellar stairs with ashes when you * carry it away? Wouldn’t a deep Hod — big enough to hold the nhzc easy and cleanly to carry-—-be better? Crawford Ranges have the Ash Hod. @ It “catches all of the ashes and can be emptied without spilling. size as the Coal Hod beside it. and only Crawford Ranges have it. e - o the illustrated pamphlet. With Mr. G. M. Anderson UM 2 %, Comedy Singing, Dancing 'andMusical e he e ".'..!..:'x.' "ioe Sdvertis- §iam batrer g colummns Ibs. LIVE ; il .%m:-}zsc SHOULDER POT ROAST, Ib. .. ... 1 Fresh Ground Hamburg Steak, Ib. 1214¢ ‘LAMB CHOPS, Ib. .......\ . Same This feature is patented The Single Damper (patented) and the Oven heated in all parts alike by the scientific Cup-Joint heat flues are other Crawford trouble and money savers. Send For Sale by M. HOURIGAN, Norw WALKER & PRATT MFG. CO., MAKERS, BOSTON ich Agent.

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