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ch @ulletin ‘a_ufiaf. T at Nerwien ter. Caliss . WILSON ON TARIFF. the campalgn of Governor he decided to make but and not to tour the industry was ¥ ;hm:vldd repetition is the the repul acientifically revised. RAGING DIVORGE. in this contract - terminate death of love on either side; e and maintenance of chil- \nsisten t & feklations has:not ‘the courts being busy with | .q ¢, §99 613,000, These w0 people, May | yging sugar in their coffee. g majntain thé contract with regard than others do the more stricter one, but it Ms the 'ex- " ample which their action throws upon ' the world that dpes the harm, for it a3 mfi-lhnmuol this kind {n It* {8 directly ‘against public, Policy and threatens the safety of the Nk GETTING AT HIDDEN CASES, Much valuable advice has heen giv- en by people of prominence at the congress at Washington this Many {deas of value have been | advanced for the betterment of the ~ human race In various ways, such as mu; care of the children, san- and organized effort for the stamping out of disease pr keeping it At as low a state as possible. Unques- tlonably much good will result from the ideas which have been presented by some of the ablest men in the country. 4 As an ald to stamping out the white plague 1n the country Dr. M. E. Lap- han of Highlands, N, C, urges a eampaign in which the United States shall take part and by getting at the concealed cases In the young, result in its eradication. She holds that “f the United States should spend & million dollars this next year for the detection of concealed cases of iwberculosis, we should not only make . an Investment yielding large Teturns % m money saved, but our ability to 0 S tect concealed tuberculosis would be more generally diffused throughout S the profession. With immunity thus established In case after case, it grad- uvally will be extended to the masses, and tuberculosis will take its place among other extinet pests. Tuber- ctilosis is rooted in the children—we must therefore begin our attack with them, and by producing immunity in them cause tuberculosis to vanish.” Anything which can be done to check the disease In the young is evi- dently getting at the seat of a large part of the trouble. It is a step which ought to have general endorsement. ‘The bull moosers can't see any re- publican party; and the prohibition- ists can't see any bull moosers, or republicans. Their latest address to the voters is: “The fight is now be- tween Wilson and Chafin. Nothing will save this nation from the calamity of a democratic administration but the election of Chafin.” We used to ask the democrats how many varieties there were of them; but now we have Wilson republicans and bull moose republicins, the dem- ‘ ocrats are coming back at us good and strong. There may be a Taft demo- cratic league, although they have not yet announced the combination. The railroad company didn't relish i Groton's desire for a betterment of the railroad crossin) in New Lon- don. but there's no doubt as to who + would be injured most hy the taking of the steamboat lines to Stonington. There's no danger of such action, any way, Roosevelt didn't m: headway in Missour e very much He found the people wearing Taft badges and they | mir were wearing them when ho left, NORWICH BULLETIN, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1912 ISLAND’S SHORT - CON- investigation of length into conditions at the Rhode Island state prison a change is to take place, and in addition to a new warden there will be a new method of sellingthe [ product of the labor of those confined The board of con- = ==={ trol and suppiy in that state has suc- A%e @ week; 300 & | cceded in annulling a contract with & . Chicago concern for the shirts made at the prison, & contract which had several years to run at a remarkably state was losing money by the contract, and in the past easury suffered # Merray|to the extent of ome hundred thou- The unreasonablegess of it 1s recognized when the firm with which the contract was made agreed to the unnullment the first of Decem- within tbe walls. rs the state sand dollars, This means that the hereafter at the Rhode prison will be sold by They will be highest bidder, which will mean the best price the market affords. This is It is mnecessary that the prisoners have work and the product shirts made Igland state sold to the This means that the s.ute’s business in that connection at least will be done as a business man would do it, and the importance «t advantage. many points of view we have to have. I guess you'll have to admit that we all have & point of view of matrimo- ny; and a point of view of piety; and a point of view of politics; but our | points of view do not often affect any. body seriously unless it does our-- selves. It geems to be the points of View which are necessary to knit and | weather in June and August, when hoar frost is infrequently the order. The | growing_season opened with copious | rains, which were followed by a severe drouth which prevented to build character. Everybody may not be conscious of the importance of the point of view from which conclusions are reached; or that the kind of con- clusions we evolve elevate or degrade | germinating until late; and then fol- Jowed ample rains for crop-maturing; and while tender crops poorly most all hardy crops show an you and me. It is necessary that we should be well grounded in the princi- ples of honesty and justice early in life that we may be able to reach con- clusions which are tenable and en- nobling. If we appreciated the value of our points of view, perhaps we should he more careful to get some- thing <reditable from them. s a longer one of it is easily seen when the change will save the staté at a low estimate $150,000 over what would be received for the same goods under the an- nulled contract. It is a method which should be applied to all public busi- THE SURRENDER OF MENA. Nicaragua has received important assistance from this country in the trouble which has been brought upon it through political Intrigue. In the surrender of the rebel leader Mena, who has heen causing all the trouble in an effort to gain political favorit- lieved that the death knell prostrated, tion was sounded. Cer- ‘Wete closed, and therp was | tainly a lesson has been given to ‘of W unable to get | others of his stamp as to what their : was conduct in the future should be and in accordance with the | what can be expected from this coun- under which the democrats | try. A 4 the democrats now_beligve | In taking Mena away from Nica- bo | urif should be operated. It came | ragua and keeping him away from the to free trads that the|ed to Adniiral Southerland, his life ptry ever wants to get,- and the | Nicaraguan troops, for he surrender- remains for the voters [ was probably saved. When the time to dispose of his case, how- " Whether he be in Panama ‘or the maintenance of a pro- | elsewhere, it should be made plain to him that this country does not wel- ‘come his kind. trouble in the Latin-American coun- all that Is bsing.said against | tries is often stirred up through such ing of dlyorce cases | men quietly creating trouble and rais-| erylng for sufficient sen- | ing funds and munftions' of war to it which will check it and turn it | embarrass the gowernments. There K te -direction, it Is unfor- | are always certain interests who are e such marriages as was | willing to listen to trouble breeders tly reported from Los Angeles|and it has been freely claimed that revolutionary prenutplal con- | much of the Central American trouble from time to It| has been started here. The exclus- ion ' of such insurrectionists from the ll have any dontrol over the | country will keep away either may enter upon an- | which we can well afford to get along e, and elther may Incur | without, both for our own good and responsibility; that the | the welfare of the republics to the " 'sihultaneously | south. party, which | evs Insurrections EDITORIAL NOTES. Roosevelt is booked an attraction Skirts are to be rufiled this fall and the manglers will mangle more than © 'There's one fashion which Paris can but never will take from us. That Il Moosette hat, i e S The John Arbuckle estate amount- So much for people Happy thought for today: ing disturbs the family and makes life profitable for the undertaker. Madero set a bad example for the Mexicans and now he asks for ten millions. to suppress the revolution- In view of the prevalence of divorces the matrimonial knot is no longer clas- sified as a square-knot. A couplet from a western progres- “The Lord loves a cheer- Seven cents is too much Candidate Wilson has gained eight pounds since he was nominated. His admirers think he may have a double- had a balance $500,000,000 last vear under Taft. A change of administration will not im- If It is possible to keep Mona Lisa Petersburg art gallery and overcome the straying habit, why not keep her there? The bull moosers are trying to con- vince the country that the republican party hasn't edegry enough left to de- cline to be killed. The battles of the future may liter- where many of them seem to be at the present time. doesn't seem as if the Colonel used always to speak of his friend | “Dear Will” He beat Aunt Delia by just one word. What is to be sald of republicans | who follow a bull moose to the de-| struction of every principle of gov- ernment they have ever stood for? A bull moosette says: ing mind bespeaks the wisest man. Oh, promise me!” that kind of & man is worth 30 cents, “The chang- A promise from Commencing Tuesday and alternat- ing, New York and Boston will con- taln more baseball enthuslasts to the square inch than the rest of the coun- try combined. The bull moose electors in Kansas and Cilfornia who would compel voters to vote for the enemies of their party, believe more in trickery lberties for the people. The prophets of today do not com- One says there Is to be a future generation of men with- | mand respect 500 vears all men will b Roosevelt call reciprocity law | nd wrote the presi- the school of experience disproves the- ories and establishes doubts. Youth dreams of conquering worlds; but age knows that life is mot long enough to conquer ourselves. In front of all there is to know, the wisest man is ready to accept with complacence the fool's cap, What man thinks he knows cuts more of a figure than 'what he | really does know.. It is only in our| conceit we can sit down and think we are wise. Men have been a long time in trying to find out the part color plays In nature. There is no doubt its great- est beauty is in service, not looks. The flowers which dr not need the service of insects do’not have large or brilliantly colored flowers. Insects and birds are directed as much in the affairs of their lives by color as are dogs and some other animals by an acute sense of smell. The night- blooming flowers are almost all yellow and white; and all other colors belong to the day. The insects change the colors of plants by mixing the pollen of different flowers and In,ghis way also new forms are produced. Insects know their flowers from their color and form; and a bird will recognize its mistress from the color of her necktie .or walst, rather than of her hair or eye. Green, the prevailing color in nature, is soothing to the sight, as also is the blue of sky and water. ‘We cannot tell why highly colored Ii: ards became regarded by man as ven- omous when they are innocent of of- fense. The color sense I8 strong in man and tells him when things are ripe and often when poisonous. Some of our color Impressions are thought to have been of simian origin. When | hear most of the phono- graps playing 1 wonder how I ever came to get one, and I say emphatic- ally to myself “If my instrument play- ed like that I would send it to the junk shop.” My phonograph seems to sat- isfy me, and these other seem to satisfy thelr owners. We puhl: e think our talking machine is the best; and I am disposed to admit that it is. As life is principally made up of vaude- ville performances I get a surfeit of that free, hence pay out little money for it. Since, to equal its recommend. ations, the machine must make a stat- ed ni of revolutions a minute, I see that it does it; and as there is a ‘wide difference in the sounds whioh is- ‘sue from the various vibrators thréugh constrained different horns, 1 have feit ed give attention to and to pro- cure what for me does best work. The phonograph is an agreeable in- structor if used to present the Best in music, song and recitation—a splendid home ‘entertainer. I do not impose ft upon my neighbors, or wear out their nerves and patience with something they don't want to hear, There is tact and judgment in using a talking machine. Everybody does not think that home should be & place of comfort, not a show-place. I have thought if inde- pendence of character was more com- mon our homes would look less like museums and more like places of rest and joy. You may think it is a mat- ter of taste; but as I think of the various homes I have known, it seems ‘lo me rather to have been a matter of no taste. Utility should be the ruling thought—the real slogan of life. The man who can employ most servants is not greatest, but he who serves most. Which is most beautiful, think you, the thing which is most ornate or most to look at are usually too numerous and too dusty. Being a slave to things is not much better than being a slave to habit. Harmony of color may contribute to harmony of spirit—a house full of bric-a-brac doesn't. You see—~where everything in a house spells comfort, there comfort is found. As the season is drawing to a clos: the garden appears to have more but terflies in it than ever. The cabbage and turnip butterfiies, the frult and the nectar seeking butterflies, flit about every day, because there is more in it for them. The Monarch and Aphro- dite enjoy the little sunflowers, and A!“]m;lhu 5‘1““ llhfl l!lill‘!::y and fennel.‘on an e Mourning Cloak and Punctua- | tion butterfiies just enjoy the bruised | Bromises lght work and rea and mashed fruit under the pear tree: which a yellow Jacket occastonally dis- putes their right to; and the young of Papilio philenor have suspended them- selves on the Dutchmen's pipe to spend | PeoPle the winter; and there they will await | mmediate d the warm days of late May or June, to| wake them and stimulate them to flight. There is no doubt the inhabit- | - ants of my garden exceed in mumber|In Some line in which he could in- the lation of the city of Norwich, brawls and accidents and _tragedies & there as there are in this civilized com- munity. Among the lost and found of my | garden is a single dahlia named State- | liness, which came from a Gloriosa | seed many vears ago. It is a lons- | stemmed, large, terra-cotta bloom | that comes white with terra-cotta- edged petals occasionally in Septem- ber. The parent plant had a habit of now and then presenting itself with | snow-white tips to its petals, when from the plainest flower it became ory of the garden. | out _disclosing its | beauty that every grower did not dis- cover why its name was Gloriosa, but a few of those beautiful, never to be | forgotten blooms came for me, and T tried to see It some of its children would mot permanently take on the admittedly the It was so cha for four scientists have so declared, a and testing Darwin's declaration, B scientlest hus suce sraphy and the y reflected on the visu - Images Tt seems as if we ail had to have| | points of view. This is the one thing | | which is compulsory without seeming | day to be tyrannical. 1 do mot know how | such an unus Frost has always mystified man and been more or less dreaded by him as a ban, and rarely considered as a bless- Few people realize that Jack Frost is older than Adam; that, in fact, if tradition Is correct, he lived in Jotun- heim before the god Odin appeared to rule the earth. He not only works every month in the year, but every | day; but the riches he hoards the sun makes him_ generously! spend for the benefit of those he annoys outside his legitimate realm, the portions of the earth. The vagaries of the frost are charge- able to the interference which would stay his raids upon the gardens and blighting and blackening | of the landscape. which still feel the Influence of the sun keep the frost from shutting down upon the earth, for he always hovers over this fair sphere, and the warm air forces him to move in currents like the tide; and warm sandy and rock- laden soils hold him up, and the pro- tecting follage keeps him off; he blights and blackens gardens anl | fields in streaks and spots until t] cooling earth turning away from suy yields to him the mastery. 'he most wonderful manifestation of the sun’s power is shown perhaps in the large rivers of warm water which circulate through the great oceans, th: Gulf Stream which rushes north from he tropical seas, and the Japan cur- rent in the Pacific ocean which skirts our western coast and gives rise to the chinook winds which sweep away the snow in the great northwest and opens there sometimes earlier than It dawns in New Engiand. These air-tempering forces marshar- ed by Old Sol and charged with heat meet the icebergs of the north and say “Thus far and no farther,” and they hold the frest in check with such force that aleng “the Atlantic seaboard the black frost does not get in its work for several weeks after it has blighted the interior, and doubt- less it is the warm water on the north slde of Cape Cod which helds the fros: back longer than it does off the south ‘where it gets in its work first. The Gulf stream is 40 miles wide, _— queer old world and the | lives in it the queerer if | appears to get. The college graduates are all about with their diplomas and their hopes—they “know what they know”; but if you should meet any of them at the age of fifty it is doubtful | if one of them would “know what he knew”! The college of youth fills us with knowledge and confidence; but ‘perpetually frozen and even persons and houses. may, he says, be classed with the In- nimals in this respect. It is only b taking a day as the unit of time t ety four hou 13 happening every -four hours. B e T o] e goum.ry every year, and one-half of cessary; but when we con- sider that the clvilized n: estimated to be scratching lion matches & minute, and the care- lessness and negl! marks the walks of life, this does not seem so excessive. The official t of this country show that every busi- ness day the property destroyed reach. es half a million, and that threo lives are lost and seventeen persons seri year, and in their manufacture many thousand cords of dry, straight-grain- ed wood is used. The heathen appear to have made no mistake when they gave to fire a demon’s name. SUNDAY MORNING TALK WAITING AT THE PLATE. Hugh Fullerton, in a contribution magazines, has been telling us that no team ever won & was not a “walting In baseball lingo the batsmen must make the opposing pitcher “put ‘em over in the groove.” parlance they must wait a suitable | opportunity betore trying to hit the useful. Utllity seems to me to be the | handmaid of beauty. Beauty is that beauty does—not just hanging on a wall. The art of art is simplicity, not fillagree. Things that are just pretty to one of the pennant that If we may be allowed to make a {larger application of this philosophy, let us say that many of the balls that life sends on our gen- eral direction are not really suitable for us to strike at. are impracticably far from the plate. Many would make a good hit impos- ‘We must learn patiently to | awalit occasions. Many of them 1 think of thi nessing the way choose their work in life | times seems as though choice were | largely on the hit-or-miss principle They rush into all sorts of ventures without that preliminary matching of | their talents and tastes against the | work proposed ,which is 80 essential | to_permanent success. | Many a boy bids goodby to school the allurement of a job that through family necessity, but too oft- | made the f3llowing reply | en he leaves against the desires of his \dazzled by the glare of a few ollars. He does not stop to consider how much better he might serve his later career by finishing his ! education and then deliberatly choos- vest his whole life. ~Of the multi- large proportion patience or intelligence in the career that later grows emerous \and distastetul. Those of us who are older cannot employed little eagerness to be through with school o sees in the present School days, all too short at best, should be jealously guarded They are to furnish invaluable_equipment for what is to 1 Life is like a great beautiful building whose foundations cannot be laid too strong. A great educator replied to a young man who asked if he might not skip a_considerable part of the curriculum: “It depends on what you make of yourself. !to make an oak He takes a hundred | | vears ,when He makes a squash He mawes two months.” from Intrusion. ‘When God ‘wants The same truth walting that means preparation d | intelligent appraisal of one's own pow- ¢ | ers In the presence of advancing op- Nothing conduces to hap- Al or- | piness more than a job that suits into cluded | which one may throw himself out & remainder. ope in reproducing the | portunity, distances, and A degree of caution __THE VAGARIES OF THE FROST ¢ (Written Specally for The, Bulletin.) A neighbor remarked to me the other “We've had a frost every month |in_this year, haven't we?” 1 replied, “and that is not i ual phenomenon as most | persons think in this latitude, since I have known it to happen two years in uccession, and think it happens once or_twice in every five years.” What made New England exception- ally cold in 1913 was with a depth of 1800 feet off the At- lantlc coast, and in volume exceeds the flow of the Mississippl river a thousand times. It keeps the ocean water along the coast warmer thaa | the atmosphere until near December, | 8o that it is safer to bathe in the sea | in October and November than in| April and May, and it tempers the air 80 that the harbor of Hammersfest, the most northerly seaport in the world, is never closed by ice. in | But the frost is romethinz man can never fall in love with, although he has to admire his crystalline work seen in the snowflakes and on the lace and fern-frosted winter window panes; and the mists and rainbows which re- sult from the eonflicts with the sun. Old Sol cannot unseat Jack Frost from the mountain tops, where he| piles up the glaciers and creates the | conditions which produce great rivers that irrigate the earth, assisting to promote the crops which he 50 regu- larly blights. He has & hand in the streams which rush down the moun- tain sides, cascading into mist in which rainbows play, and evaporating into clouds which bedeck the mountain- | peaks and picturesquely dash down the mountain side for thousands of feet.in flerce, isolated storms to be admired by those who witness them. But the Anglo-Saxon has learned how to turn everything to profit, and in many ways he has made even Jack Frost appear like a good thing, al- though the ancients pronounced him & demon. fairs on the frozen surface of the| Thames for revenue; and these social { winter meetings on the ice gave rise to the winter carnivals with ice pal- aces in Canada, and the racing on the | ice which has been semi-occasionally ! witnessed upon our own Thames river | in midwinter; Saxon geniug to turn things to profif has grown the present ice trusts an cold storage combinations which are severely taxing the people, who are in- voking the power of the government to control them. { Ages ago London held Frost and from the Anglo- | it When you come to think of it, the ! vagaries of the frost are nothing to ! the vagaries of man, who turns every- | thing to selfish ‘purpose with a frosty | regard for the way in which it affects his_brother man, or his own future| well-being, in which he has little faith. | The frost we could not do without, any more than we could do without the | heat. These are the points between which the pendulum of life swings— | ‘between low vidration and high vibra- | tlon all our fortunes He. And after all, we find with Emer- son, that “Nature is no sentimentalist | —does not cosset or pamper us. must see that the world is rough and . surly, and will not mind drowning a man or a woman, but swallows your ships like a grain of dust. The cold, inconsiderate of persons, tingles your | blood, benumbs vour feet, ireezes a, man like an apple. The dieases, the elements, fortune, gravity, lightning, respect no persons. We THE SUBSTITUTE. in choosing. & small wage at first, | may opened intp a long and satisfying career. ¥ easily be excused if a door s | In an age when a premium is placed on quick and even meretricious suc- cess, the young man may well exercise restraint. Let him look | for a business or profession whose | Interest shall Increase with the | years, enlisting all his powers are [of body and mind and spirit. may safely wait at the plate while sundry wild balls cut the air. By and by there will be a good one to hit. Then he can set himself, “grab a tde hold” and line her out for & home run. THE PARSO: IDEAS OF A PLAIN MAN CONSISTENCY. To be always consistent one must follow the crowd. There is nothing stable in opinions that are not mould- ed by custom, institutions, and fthe established order. Now, these things are all mixed with fraud. ' And_therefore consistency is largely fraud. & Whoever will love the ‘truth and go where it leads must needs be often inconsistent. For truth is as large as the universe itself, while we are small and can see only a bit of it at g time. Truth is like a diamond of many facets, we get gleams of it now and then, and sometimes the ray is yellow and sometimes red. Let us nat be alarmed if life seems one thing today and another tomor- row; both are true, for life is mani- e ———— . Dr. Hartman Says: Write to Peruna Testimonials If You Want to Know the Truth. The following letter was received by Dr. Hartman through his regular cor- respondence: notice the testimonial of Mrs. Alice Bogle, which you give in your last article. If I should write her do | you suppose she would give me further particulars? I have heard it said many times that such testimonlals are fakes; that they are elther absolutely fictitious or else the people have been hired to write them. I have been in- clined to write you a great but these stories about patent medi- cine advertisements have discouraged me from doing so. I am afflicted with catarrh and should like very much to find a remedy such as your article de- scribes.” any times To the above letter Dr. Hartman My dear Madam:—I do mot wonder that you are confused and have lost lall faith in advertised remedies. “There has been so much said against them, so much controversy concern- ing them, I am not surprised that some people have lost confidence in | them. 1 wish you would write Mrs. Buxle,“ as one woman to another. 1 wish you would ask her whether she has been hired to write such a testimonial, Whether her testimonial represents the truth. 1 hope that you will remember that she is & housewife, like yourself, that she has something to do besides write letters, that she is a woman of mod- erate means and cannot afford to write these letters and pay her own postage. I hope you will enclose stamp so_she can answer you without loss to her- self. Mrs. Bogle is a very estimable lady and no doubt you wili both prof- it by being acquainted with each oth- er. Should You conclude to try Peruna for your catasrh I would be very glad to hear of the result. I can assure yon that no use will be made of your let- ter, except by vour written consent Mrs. Bogle very kindly consented. to ; ks 1 | have me use her letter, which fs my white, but of scores of plants grown |¥a8 Put In equally graphic form bY | reaeon for doing so. and you will be one never did. It is not strange that | ETetident David Starr . treated exactly as she has been such a freaky hablt as this made the | Jarger provision for | “poopie recover from chronic catar anclents belleve that plants had gnard. e to the Cape of Good HoDE |y, take Peruna. ' fan spirits which prompted them to trip to the Isle of Dogs {about that. Some sur Indulge in an unexpected manifesta. - | o are reported almost d: | ton of taste in adornm Now wa| There is a waiting that is only inde- | thousands of them in m know plants are animals having eves, | Al ey B emibietp il Peruna s for sale at all drug stor SPECIAL NOTICE—Many persons are making inquiries for the old-time Peruna. To such would say, this formula is now put out under the name of KA-TAR-NO, manufactured by KA-TAR-NO Company, Colum- bus, Ohfo. Write them and they will be pleased to send you a free bookle o=o=o=é : PRECISELY what you want in clothes at precisely the price you can afford to pay — that’s what we’re ready to furnish, There is such a thing as paying too little for your clothes, just as some stores ask too much. LEGAL NOTICE. mon_Council proposed as an Ordinance of Norwich, Connectfcut, EP) Common Couneil. Ordinance Relating to Traffe Regule- Be it ordained by the Court of Com- mon Council of the City of Ner- s D a the right-hand faster moving venic| Section 3. Vehicles over L to the It turning o the 2 A e ar the right-) ticable. 7 We don’t give you an opportunity of buying the O «ind of clothes thaf will not serve you right and we don’t ask anything but a fair margin on clothes that we know to be right. o= Kuppenheimer Clothes for the app;uval of critical men because they’re priced right and made right— —that’s the big reason they make so many friends; —why this store has come to be known as the “home of fashion. Any—and every new model—at all prices—for every income—every physique, $18 up to $35, with Overcoats and new Fall Suits in new browns, grays and the popular electric blues. $20 and $25 NEW FALL HATS, SHOES AND FURNISHINGS ARE ALSO HERE IN BEST STYLES AND MODERATELY PRICED. iThe Manhattan 121-125 Main Street The Leading Store mn Eastern Connecticut devoted exolusively to Men’s, Women’s and Children's Wearing Apparel ) o) —— () ——— [} fold; and if we hold to yesterday's truth to the rejection of today's we fall into the error of little, safe souls. The end of consistency is the Phar- on st %l roniwa from Bath RIGHT OF WAY. nBthelln 12. The driver of & vehiels, g -- has ‘h passengers; 5 Tnunn- DEFINITION. i e Special at | (o] o () ————— (-] — | hier conditl rankin sqaare, i or corporation ‘sperating In yiolatlon of any of the this_or more than Aty ALsternien feh, Conmecticut, Sept, 8, 1918 : 'n.“n\wu and foregoln ok it . city Clerk and of Y comtaon Counstt 0 Always for Cummins. Senator Cummins is a progressive for Roosevelt and a republican for re- election—Boston Globe. Strange Coincidence. And, come to think of if %\F Fawkes day.—New legram. The amount of coal consumed in the city of New York in 1911 amounted to 19,000,000 tons. N The end of open-mindedness is won- der, Svorshlp and the freshness of the At & meeti: "l soul eternally. getlon day, D bosed as Ab Ordinance of Through the agency of a gooi in South Lordon 60,000 people are pro- vided with a substantial dinner every year. FALL, 1912 OUTFITTING OF QUALITY MEN, BOYS and CHILDREN We announce our readiness to furnish our trade with the Best Clothes, Headwear and Haberdashery the world produces, and we respectfully solicit your favors. Vo 7,58 ey 1, s amended 'shall elf, or his servant or agen' gervant or agent of any ion, have intent to -'5: r sale or exchangs, or e L amended to read as follows: L hapsetor as in ul:;. inued in effect for tion to the City o him 'y cents for reco h ren; 5. All ordinanc nances incon d parts of ardi- Nt Herewith are here- " Conneetiont, Sest. 3, 1915 foregoing is & true The above an copy of record kr(hmd of the C LEGAL NOTICE. h Norwich, Conneetleut, T ilerk of the Court of ¢ Clerk and 1Y Gmmon Council. R b '4 3% the Court ine SrO il "ot the City Two-thirds of the sctusl ost of sprinkiin other substance ¢ ro This is more than ever before the store at which to buy Reliable Clothing and Men’s Furnishings The main point that stands out above all others being as laws. of this 8t o sprinkled. nd same a0 1prinkied, o oea fronting on the part of and_awsin roportion to the { the frontage of ma e of #ald sires always, “Best Value Possible for the Price.” THE F. A. WELLS (0. “Good Clothes Store” ness hefore the publie, fh dium better (han thro ing columné of The