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NORWICH BULLETIN, tion 'of such improved dwellings..... as may combine, in the utmost possi ble degree, the esentials of healthful ness, comfort, social enjoyment, an economy.” The “poor” through legal dicta in this part of the world, then excluded these receiving public aid.. Ta all of the foregoing suggestions or provisions, students of economics should give careful attedtion, for they have accomplished that which almost if not every other philanthropist has sought so hard to reach and failed—a practically immortal charitable trust whose beneficient force is not alone self-sustaining, but increase with each ! advancing year. ’60°s The squalor of London in the | need not be detained by the present THE GREAT ENCLISH CHARITY London’s Poor Profiting by the Gifts of George Peabody the Danver’s Grocerboy. ilverware Offer! Wonderfu land to America,” a full-page cit of the Monarch, the Empire's then greatest | man-of-war, bearing the coffin to Port land, Me., accompanied by an Ameri- can battleship. At the rear of the Royal Exchange, the center of the money market of the world, in old London, stood the other a tall-hatted American who had a million dollars in a copper mine With WELCOME izona and had come to London with “Thus the last funeral honours were o : ¢ y on their first foreign tour. | paid to the memory of George Peabody, é:”n:erxhaenduy!;‘e:e\‘?;l ;F(r:re‘eln!:ggisxll L:itlé r tide of the party was & promi- [ whose mortal remains were atlended | railways and the awakening of ‘civib o ax aun ry ap to the grave with more pomp and cer- | emony than were ever displayed at the | i burial of a private citizén.” And when nent L.ondon banker. They stopped before the only statue in the vicinity, pt that of Welling- responsibility toward the- wretchedly housed,. whole sections of the city | were torn down and hundreds of wor We have recently secured, for our customers, the very finest Silverware ever given for laundry soap wrappers ton. It was ze. showing a man | the statue behind the Exchange was | [ S : seated with ¢ his face kind- | erected but a few days later, thc dedi- | thY families made homeless or forced T : Iy to a rem 2 catory address was made by him who | (9, Fe8OrC 10 alleys, courts, garrets, and or any other kind of merchandise. B Yo e e L. o aosared | means, so dfd reatals advamce—and it So beautiful and rich is this Silverware that it is utterly impos- - body.” ihn & Deronet, end’ to sive dins ths| Toa almost providential that "the sible to do it justice in a newspaper picture. 3 = : 4 Peabody millions came to the resc We have therefore decided to almost present you ONE piece Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath— | ]bul he declined both honors, believing | them inconsistent with American citi- | zenship. of this matchless Silver. For we know that when you’ve seen a sample you will never be satisfied until you have collected a complete set of ‘“Welcorhe’’ Table Silver. This offer includes the following : Silver Butter Spreader, wrised, Just at that time. The trustees determined to confinc their efforts, for a time at least, ‘o | carrying out Mr. Peabody’'s sugges- | nd after a vend:hg in- tingly who Yet who of this day and gencration Hoh 'of better housing Tor fhe 'Worth © been. among his own country folk can talk : on yortuy Silver Tea Spoon, Silver Child’s Spoon, Silver Coffee »ndoner gulped | for two consecutive minutes concern- | POOT- These were included between Spoon, Silver Orange Spoon; Silver Salt Shaker, Silver the paupers and families whose heads earned not exceeding $7.50 per week, | These foundations have never been | modifled, and the consequent broad Pepper Shaker. Amazingly Fine Silver ing his life?. Why Peabody Gave..- Some sneer at sentiment. Yet it was answered, as he ed the party to the could desert them, for hopeless after that, perceptibiy and raerely turned a nearest plac deemed . Amer the most be- | Sentiment that animated young Pea- | ‘;mq gl_upendous success can be quick- and & England's his- | body—the memory of one of the trage- | Iy indicated. 1In 1864 a block of téne- n 2 N g Ly - b2 7 dies of undying affection. When he | ments of 112 rooms was built in the When Y"“hget,abghznpse dfi,lh‘-‘ Welcome 5,’}‘}']“?"“2 had begun to get on his own. as the | Whitechapel distriet. The next yea sayatoncet at it beats anything you ever saw. e Frencl : design (La Corona) is sure to captivate you. And think aying here has it, he grew to love the | anothe but a different location, | uar- of it, this extra-heavy silver, made by Rogers, is only woman he ever wanted to marry, | Was erected with 632 rooms, and others is { They gidinot rany because of reasons | have followed in various sections of anteed — actually. GUARANTEED — for TWENTY- that have never reached the public, | the city with all permisable activity | FIVE YEARS! there have now on twenty-four | 7 blocks of perma- | 1dings and 300 cot- ' iron and brick rooms, vear by yvear, until been constructed, enormous estates, 2 nent tenement bt toges, all of stone, contain 14,312 and the shock of it all made the man the greatest philanthropist of all time, unless his plans be blundered awry, | which now seems most improbable ofter their test of fifty years. Many, many years after this woman | these structure: But You Must Act Now! This offer, being very Special, is limited to just a few - days. To take advantageofit,itis absolutely imperative that you act promptly. Rush your order forward. le C g A Humble Origin, a had passed from his life and ne had [all high, light and with modern > 2.0¢ come, after an absence of more than { conveniences and comforts conform- | W twenty years, to see the village of his le to the time of erection. | Ho to Order oupon printed in this advertisement ether with two Welcome Borax Laundry Wrappers and 11 cents in stamps. Vour favorite piece of There for cleanly play-yards All the early block are large the children. first struggles, he confilded to a friend, likewise an old man, “After my disap- as an ap- 3 z‘!‘d‘ lh'*l like | pointment long years ago, 1 determined | had good laundry, toilet, bath and hot- siiver will be sent to you, pre —by retur: il. And we % sdied in Lon- | (o devote myself to my fellow beings, | water facilities in common with pri- Braiine you fhatyon Bilbe dulighted A ddeas letlorts | eading | and I am carrying out that decision to | vate coal ranges, gas and running cold “WELCOME"—Lever Bros. Co.,Cambridge, Mass. oted to pictures latest are private, ater. In the the lavatories large buildings the best of my ability.” which of To House All London’s Poor. rture e Dan- issue of Dec. caption ai roomy tenements and apartmernts all the worthy poor, except paupers, of - | the greatest city ever built by man. ¥ larger buildings are composed single rooms or flats, with coal ranges gas, and running cold water, and with ster Abbe iy e course, is true of all the cottages. ‘o nd the inci-| Itis reckoned that his benlficence | which full-size bath tubs are added.; e dep. of the | will then be housing in suitable, light, | In American English, all of these | : eicome Dorax Jdoap For 40 years, New England’s favorite. Con- tains more borax than any five other New the 5¢c | By the time Mr. Peabody was fifty- | access to continuous hot water, to & W - —— —— ¥ s 5. 3 d S us 2 England Soaps combined. “WELCOME two years of age he had become good bath and a suitable laundry. makes clothes clean and white, keeps the washer’s e and never injures the hands soft and wi BOILS—PIMPLES—ABSCESSES wealthy importing merchant ‘of Bal- e timore, Philadelphia, and New York. Comfort For the Poor. clothes. It lasts 20 per cent longer than the Gl and was at this point that he lef! There is a garden back of every cot- | c;‘mmn v harfi;wf J?"I‘ A‘nd. above al{%‘:d ha All E n 1 Bio ] rica, 2 ¢ p cing hot y *h in fr 3 me saver for the laundry woman. Sold by vidence of Impure od and a | America and opened a banking houses| tage, a shrubbery patch in front, and all grocers. Buy 6 cakes mow and get your besides these there is a small piot ina Silver. partnership with the large common garden alloted tc many. Morgan, among others, London in Run-Down Condition. in ofJ. P. | father 2 blood ihecamenytbin, iy | mnder the name of George Peabody & | this last at a charge of some seventy- | el & 3 cftent siantals "‘nr?_p)an_\' In 126: :w sm‘r_:_lg%oznlnh« g}gnmms Rlea r‘hnalhls Sllilp\piipld at Pz - Sritish nation by giving $750, o a [$5. per ton rough shrewd busine: s for help, and the safest, sur fund for the poor of London.. In 1866 | management. Out of the weekly wa Silverware Coupon Igs SRR IDER frenady Avee SR and again in 1868, he added $500,000: | of the head of the family—whick ave- | New Premium “WELCOME"—Lever Bros. Co., Cambridge, Mass. 4 i it Pl 0,000 more was pald to the | raged last vear $5.43— but fifty-seven | Free' Gentlemen—I enclose with this Silverware Cou- It Is a combination | same work in 1873 by his estate, mak- | was taken in rent, room by room, while Book Ready— . pon two Welcome Soap Wrappers and 11 cents in 1 ments of aoq | ing _a total of $2,500,000. the average rental of all the flats, cot- We have just published a hand. stamps, for which please send me (without the oil) and tonic| . Lhe Wise old man conveyed this|tages and rooms was but $1.26 per some Booklet, picturing twenty- Name of piece wanted the blood. Vinel stremstheng | SUM. enormous for those days, and | week. There are 986 single rooms, 2,736 LS s R = the s R e tile brcans, e eats fenh® | then and since the greatest sum ever | apartments of two rooms, 2033 of three Pleces. All canbe seciired with o S i el s ¥ | contributed by any individual to any |rooms. while but 151 have as many as Welcome Soap W A appetite purifies and enpriches the At - 5 elcome Soap Wrappers, Any blood: creatss strength. charitable purpose with London or|four rooms. The lowest price for a woman can have a copy of this R e s ctisssssoten lary lang of Altoona, Pa.. says: | England asits object, to aeelf-perpet- | single room is fifty cents per week, ‘the Booklet just for the asking. B - i . 2 e T EeNE ati y of i highest eighty-three cents. For two Oty . cocne covnas coresn cvsess covs svosss assess soat r since childhcod, I have been | U2tin& entit »i five trustees, one of & 5 S. (=01 dtlicate,.and my blood ;poor, thinjand | 70 fa alwaysithe, Aerican ambas: | Tooma,. the . Jowes: " Ia. pielily asven devitalized. Nothing seemed to help | sador. wifhout restrictions of any |cents, the highest $1.50. For three me until 1 took Vinol and it has built | character except _(hal he hoped they | rooms the lowest ig _mne(yvfi\-e cents e T T e | would soinvest the money that ‘there- | and the most expemsive $1.88. For a We say positively there is nothimg | Sult would be appreciated. not only by | flat of four rooms the least asked is : % lik Tol o purify and enrich ine | the presentbut future generations:’|$1.88, and the most expensive brings | donations thereto by Mr. Peabody were | in a hundred yars after thai—wh One needs only Took into the faces of blood. and build up weak, run-down |@nd the provisions that there be always | $2.13. The cottages, of five rooms, |3$2,500,000 (plus some $130.000 received |can all be living in the Peabody es- | the little children—and on my tour people. If it should fail in your case |& Ti&id exclusion of any influences like- | bring from $1.96 to $2.45 per week—and from another source several years ago) | tates, as they z called, at half the |around some of the buildings the We will return vour money. Broad. |1Y to impart to the fund a character | these are near the heart of .the city. the Trust has expened no less than §8,- | rent we should have to be paving else- | youngsters all seemed to have hair o way Pharmacy, G. G. Engler, Norwict either sectarian as regards religion, or Now, one must add a fourth, at least, | 807,000; and every year there is a sur- | where, or the Trust will have to stop | tow—to realize that these people I T gt exclusive in relation to politics; and | to these amounts, which inciude all the | plus earning of mnearly a quarter of a |its building operations, or leave its | been put uvon the road to financial | P.S. « SaralSaive 30 tinie the last restriction was that the sole | taxes, before he can procure guch ac- | million.tTwo more enormous blocks a | structures empty. dependence shrewd old Amer der X We guarantee it | dualification for “participation in the | commodations, .everthing considered, |a cost of approximately $800,000, will | th s n at his hear - | benefits of the fund shall be ascertain- | elsewhere in London, and the ouserva- | soon be opened, and if the progr: | The Many Who Have Benefited | one of his bi rs s, he almos e=Ta T DO YOU XNOW | cd and continued condition of Iif- |tlon of the directors of this vasi enter- | that has obtained for the first half | I need hardly refer to the effect of | - laughed in the days of his man ISR s S i such as brings the individual within | prise, housing a population of over | century of the Trust be maintained in | great boon upon the 21,000 peoplc His prayers have been answer ho s Dl I o eat gplave your | fhe escribtion (in the ordinary senss | 21.000 souls, on the average, is to the | the second half, when the centenary of | who can thus take half their reni mon- | eq and his o s marching o1 shoes tapped api heeled? you don't word) of the poor of guendon: | effect that it is better for these people, | the Peabody Donations comes aloound, | ey and devote it to other necessit 1 Duke: of vire i8 chairman give us one trial, then you will know ed - with. moral character and | whose morals, industry and conduct are | there probably will have been put into | and comforts of life. Every recader is er fund, and the SOV EH Vd S good concuct as a member of society. r;?ulreidt_ln lhe of a]:l high rltrr;]rr. to pay ;v' gugr_lnme enormous sum of over | competent to see the evolutionary ten and J. P. Mor CRE 3 z thig relatively small rental than it is to 00,000. That would provide accom- | ency. The uplift to ambition and em- | ntlemen of o Gogodyear Shoe Repairing fhe Peabody Aim Bive (HE Bnee: quarters O UIRS anti i) ABaHotn Tor & HBarier O n il o | nlation o Fromendonr it At eds tha | aoradt o alor and debt to com- | Astor, i an M. P and ' independence. | serves also { transition from an expatriate | fort, convenience A. VALLIN, Prop. ° 86 Franklin Street Mr. was to invest Peabody intimated that his idea the money “in construc- | for in spite of the fact that the total | London peeor nqt so accomodated. And 517 i is certain that it is better for the trust, | the poor—and then there won't be any Why Physicians Recommend Castoria unlike Soothing Syrups, Bateman’s Drops, Godfrey’s Cordial, etc. Thisisa good deal for a Medical Journal to say. Our duty, however, is to expose danger and record the means of advancing health. The day for peisoning innocent children through greed or ignorance ought to end. To our knowl- edge, Castoria is a remedy which produces composure and health, by regulating the system—not by stupefying it—and our readers are entitled to the information.—Hall's Journal of Health. ASTORIA has met with prenounced favor on the part of physicians, C pharmaceutical societies and medical authorities. It is used by physi- cians with results mest gratifying. The exteonded wee of Castoria is unquestionably the result of three facts: First—The indisputable evidence that it is harmless: Secend—That & not only allays stomach pains and quiets the nerves, but assimilates the food: Fhird—It is an agreeable and It does not comn- It is perfect substitute for Castor Oil. It is absolutely safe. tain any Opium, Morphine, or other narcetic and does not stupefy. Letters from Prominent Physicians Addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher. The Kiad You Have Always Beught and which has been in use fer over 30 yeasrs, has borne the signa- ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has beea made under his persomal supervision since its imfancy. Allow ne ome to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imi- tatiens and Just-as-goed”’ ase buwt Experiments that teifle with g and eadanger the health of Infants and Children —E xperience against Experiment. GENUINE CASTORIA Bears the Signature of Dr. W. L. Leister, ‘ol Rogers, Ark., says : ‘‘ As 3 practicing phy- sician I use Castoria amd it very much.” Dr. W. T. Seeley, of Amity, N. Y.,says: “Ihave used your Cas- toria for several years im my practice and have found it a safe and reliable remedy.” Dr. Raymond M. Evarts, of Santa Ynex, Cal., says : ‘‘ After using your Castoria fer ehildren for years it annoys me gweatly to have an ignorant draggist substitute some- thing else, especially to the pe- tient's disadvantage, as in this case. I enclese herewith the wrapper of the imitation.” Dr. R. M. Ward, of Kansas City, . Mo., eays : ‘‘ Physieians generally do not prescribe proprietary prepa- rations, but in the case of Castoria my experience, like that of many other physicians, has taught me to make an exception, I prescribe your Castoria in my practice be- cause I have found it to be a thor- oughly reliable remedy for chil- dren’s complaints. Any physician who has raised a family, as I have, will joln me in heartiest recom- mendation of Castoria.” Dr. W. F, ‘Wallace, of Bradford, N. H,, says: ‘I use your Castoria in my practice, and in my family.” Dr. Wm. 1. MoCann of Omaha, Neb., says As the father of thir- teen children I certainly know something about your great medi- cine and aside from my own family experience, I have, in my years of practice, found Casteria a popular and efficient remedy in almost every home.” Dr. Howard James, of New York, City, says : “ It is with great pleas- ure that I desire to testify to the medicinal virtwe of your Castoria. I have used it with marked benefit in the case of my own daughter, and have obtained excellent results from its administration to other children in my practice.” Dr. J. R. Clausen, of Philadel- phia, Pa., says : ‘“The name that your Castoria has made for itself in the tens of thousands of homes blessed by the presence of children, scarcely needs to be supplemented by the endorsement of the medical profession, but I, for ome, most heartily endorse it and believe it an excellent remedy.” Dr. B. Halstead Scott, of Chica- go, 111, says : “I have preseribed your Castoria often for ii:ants during wy praocsice and find it very satisfactory.” Dr. William Belmont, of Cleve- land, Ohio, says : * Your Castoria stands flwet in its class. In my thirty years of practice I can say I never have found anything that so filled the place.” Dr. R. J. Hamlen, of Detroit, Mich., says : I prescribe your Cas- toria extensivsly as I have mever found anything to equal it for chil- dren’s troubles. Iam aware that there are imitationsin the field, but I always see that my patients get Fletcher’s.” Dr. Channing H. Cock, of Saint Louis, Mo., says: “I have used your Castoria for several years past in my own family and have always found it thoreughly efficient and never objected to by children, which is & great conmsideration in view of the fact that most medi- cines of this character are obmox- ious and therefore difiicult of ad- ministration. As a laxative I consider it the peer of anything that I ever prescribed.” @ Dr. L. O. Morgan, of So. Amboy, N. J. says: ‘I presoribe your Casto- ria every day for children who are suffering from constipation, with better effect than I receive from any other combination of drugs. Dr. H. J. Taft, of Brookiyn. N. Y., says: ““I have used your Casto- ria and found it an excellent remedy in my household and priv- ate practice for many years. The formula is excellent.” Dr. Wm. L. Bosserman, of Buf- falo, N. Y., says: “I am pleased to speak a good word for your Casto- ria. T think so highly of it that I not only recommend it to others, but have used it in my own family.” Dr. F. H. Kyle, of St. Paul, Minn., says : rds me plea- sure to add my name to the long who have used and ¢ your Castoria. The lients being known through e printing of the formula & wrapper is one good and reason for the recom- dation of any physician. I know of its good qualities and re- commend it cheerfully.” ASK YOUR on AAAAAAAAAAANAAAA AN AMAAAAAAAAAAAAAA A A A AN PHYSICIAN