Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, May 31, 1913, Page 12

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ETIN, SATURDAY, Over 8,000 Assemble For Memorial Day Ceremony — .= Borough Gay With National Colors—Oration By Hon. Samuel O. Prentice—Crowd Acclaims David Hale Fan- ning, Town’s Generous and Modest Benefactor. MAY 31, 1912 Eur your, (Written Specially for The Bulletin) the most absorbing interest, and in Continuing on a different tack, uml“f,'lf;;:"“ga = excel. And STICK TO IT. general line of our last week's talk:— | 1t is true that farmers who win ex- | | ceptional success are usually excep- | | €an very well imagine that the tional fellows. = Why, even in facial |man who tries to raise a little corn characteristics and appearance, no 8nd a few potatoes and some oats and two are exactly similar. It's the rarest | & bit of hay and a ch of buckwheat thing in life to find two men, even |0n a hilly Connecticut farm: who has among a million, who look quite alike. We all have noses and mouths and a flock of runty and harbor a small orchard and keeps a few hens sheep and Spanish war; Angelina Parissean, Ed- na Adele Sharkey, Agnes Vivian Mec- Laughlin, Helen Estelle Bicknell, Bl- len Rathbun Prior, Ruby Avis Gray, Mildred Olsen and Vera Ellen Mc- Broome of the Civil war, The grandest celebration that Jew- ett City ever saw was the unveiling and dedication of the $15,000 soldiers’ monument Friday. Bright sunlight and clear skies made everybody happy and not a single incident occurred to mar the many pleasures and cere- A monies of the day, Crowds arrivea| _ Formal Presentation. on every train and the trolley ser- | Chairman George A. Haskell most | vice was taxed to its utmost. ably and in words which fitteq the 2 requirements exactly, presented the A Splendid Parade. monument to the borough. Warden J, The marshal of the day, . D. Bal- | H. McCarthy, in characteristic hearty | lou, started the parade promptly on |and cordial manner accepted the shaft, calling attention to the final fruition of his hopes from the beginning of the project several years ago. time, and assisted by his aids, Arthur Briggs, Wallace Payne and Arthur LeClaire, conducted the affair with signal care and precision, so that Jew- ett City, with its three thousand vis- Hon. Samuel O, Prentice Speaks. Chairman Haskell then introduced Judge Samuel O. Prentice of Hartford as the orator of the day. He said in substance: The Invitation your com- mittee extended to me to be present upon this occasion, and to participate in these ceremonies came to me as a voice from my home land. 1 ¢ t, indeed, claim to be a son of Griswold, but I was born only a short distance across its southern border. There [ spent my youth, and there my fore- fathers, for several generations passed their lives. The invitation came to me as a call to duty not to be denied lightly. icate today is mot one which confines its tribute to Griswold’s sons. It has been conceived in a more generous spirit, and, as its inseription proclaims, extends its recognition of honor not only to those of this town, but to those of its vicinity also, who have offered themselves for the service of country. It thus reaches out to the neighborhood of my youth, and pays its tribute to not a few whom I re- war, one of them from father’s roof. Brave to Do, to Dare and to Bear. _under _my In speaking of t ich deserv our recognition he said: It was the willingness to bear whatever might b fall expressed in an acc call of country, which loval and heroi nce of the marked the DAVID HALE FANNING itors, saw the finest parade in its his- h spirit. The Issue might tory. Fully eight thousand thronged |be death in battle, or in hospital or the streets along the line of march. | camp; it might be the loss of limh or eves, and they're all set at about the |Milks three or four cov same general angle. But there are | couble of pigs: who trie minute yet unmistakable differen a little of everything his neis in_them or in their relations to each |® turn out a single crop other which enables us to tell Bill! ze,—1 can imagine that Jones from Tom Robinson, the minute h a farmer may find, the sledding 6.0 e on-him. mighty hard. I can imagine that Dont vou know that, mentally, we |the same farmer. on the same farm, are all just as individual as we are fa- | MIERL grow independently rich breed. ; sically ? ing d horses for a market whic Sy S gnpically never has enough ¢ fancy Each one of us is different from all | [OWIS to opulent chicl ar the rest of us, in face and figure. ' rais six-tons-to-the othy 18 please to note, cach one of 1 is | men and other n‘nl[mn}- exceptional in some points of 100ks. fford to buy it;—if Each one of . likewise ,different £he Dol arl o bty from all th st of us in mental any ese lines make-up. That is, note n, each = = T one of us is excep al in some point ectly true that exceptional oF TN | s comes only to exceptional men. po The point 1 want to make is that Now, let’s carry that idea out to a (MOSt of us are in some ex- reasonable and sensible conclusion. 1f (CCPtional men: that farm ffers an You're hiring men to dig a ditch and 2 for kindred there comes along two applicants for for ng our individuali- the job, one a pallid-cheeked, thin- | that any one of us can armed, spindle-legged weakling d | do some one better than the av- the other a wny blacks of a ge né t there A very, very chap, you'll hire the last. You'll eith- |V rgin of chance for each one of er let the litie fellow or 'Il set | US to an exceptional success ,if bim to shooing t. of | fne OBy (we Wil worlc Al the line of #rden o sotue which e |OUr exceptional capacity do, a'll glance a ¥ e i 'h‘w B Hiied o | They call farmers “a crotchetty set”, Toske ths aitch dirt fly while the othe en bless us! We aren't . half er one is exceptionally unfit for that]'crotchetty” enough! We are alto- sort of job. Likewise, if one of t ether too much inclined to drive our hired men has a natural taste for ma- |business along the ruts the crowd hs chinery it is he whom you will leave {Made. We arc, most of us, doing s in charge of the new gasoline engine, |the rest do.—not as our own abilitie when you go away; not the clumsy |Would suggest if we would test them hand who cam't plow half a day in a |Out. each for himself. We raise oats sand-bank without breaking the plow. | Pecause the other farmers of the town | o i raise oats, Or we try to grow pota- What I'm getting at is that no two |10€S the way Smith does, because of us are exactly alike in our tastes | Smith seems to have unusually good | aid our cipacities, In our likes and ] 1uck” with: the = tubers Yet the our dislikes, any more than in our |Chances are nine out of ten for any eyes and noses. Most of us are utter. |Particular one of us that he'd bet- 1¥ unfit, mentally as well as physical- | LT leave both oats and potatoes alone 1y, for all kinds of work. He's @ |and o In for some other thing which mighty rare man who can do anything |he's naturally fitted for, as that same or everything and do it wall. At the [Smith is for potato-grow and as | same time, he's a mighty rare man |lhe town bunch are not for oat-grow- who cam’'t do some one thing better |IN8- than the average of his fellows,—if he e only knows what that one thing is. If every other farmer in town w Now do you begin to see what I'm |bullt exactly like you in mind and trying to express body. then you'd all be wise to do the 3 me thing in the ne way Bu We talk of “farming” as if it was |ihere aren’t any two of you alike, and like bookkeeping or horse-shoeing, all |YOU all know The gre joke of and always one kind of work. It {sn't |2ncient mythology was when Her- The word covers a variety of occupa- |CUI®S Who was especlally constructed tons as wide as the world and as|to Kill lions and dragons and hyd diverse as the needs and possibilities |2nd the like, fell in love with Omph: OF the Hve continents |and tried to thread her needles for Obe han raiseé potatoes up = fnjber. It isn't so much of a joke as it Maine. He's a “farmer.” |1s a tragedy when the farmer who was Another man ralses kumquats in |Madé to grow berries—and wh ild Yiorida. He's a “farmer’ grand ones worth big m if One man breeds horses and an- |he'd only stick to them—wh ather grows cabbages. Both are ke a living runnin ilk “farmers.” Or vice versa, when t ;rn J. H. Hale raises peaches by the |d2iTyman who understands cows and teain-load, and Clark of Higganum |¢20 do ything with them, tries to | ruised hay at the rate of six or eight |MARAEe a Potato or a tobacco farm tons to the acre. You'll observe. Both “farmers | e In the old comic opera it was as- One man keeps sheep and another |®orted that the true function of pen- N Bhos Bonh ocmaus ology was “to make the punishment One man .to whom anything that | it the crime” grows along the brook s just a weed, | The highest successes in a makes money keeping a dairy and sell- | 8" be achieved only by mak ing butter. Another, who couldn’t |Tarming fit the farmer. tell a mileh cow from @ helfer, turne | AN, since there are so many kinds 2 meadow into a marsh and takes |0f farming .this isn't so hopeless a 20,000 a year worth of water-cress off | 145K, after alil THE it. Both “farmers.” Personalities. {and a When a man goes in to buy a suit| Fmperor William of Germany k of clothes, he takes some pair- to get |forbidden any paintings dealing with a sult that fite him. He doesn't try |the Franco-German war to be | to clothe a thirty-six leg with twenty- [€d in the forthcoming ilee eight inch trousers, nor to button a |hibition at Berlin, and in 2 thirty-two inch coat across a forty- (those of Anton von Kerner, two inch chest. {brush was employed to glorify t When a man chooses an occupation, | lcadi ncidents of Sedan and a life-work. he would do well to s 1 of the German empir: lect one which fits him and which he But the empe will fit gone so far as to cease I Lots of young fellows think they are | ual review of the guards not made for farming But what do which continue mean by “farmi That's an- 3 of the Frenth. - question | When Vershcha - |er ,had an exhibition W. H. Campbell thought he was |realistic s not calculated to make a farmer. And |1870 the old r forbade his sol- he wasn't meant for a Vermont farm- | Giers to go and see them on the ground er. But he has been the most phe- [that they would inspire a horrow of nomenally sur 1l Dakota dr; nds | war. farmer vet discovered. It took a good | In the Staffordshire district of ¥ many vears of testing out in rallroad |land is Rudyard lake, which gave its machine shops and butter-tub ame to Rudyard Kipling, for it was tories before he found his re ISna nlente. thesa ihut Vamng Lotk But when he found it, he fillec iwood, a designer in pottery factory | first years of work were failures, be- (at Storke, met to marry Miss Mac- | '# had mistaken his calling. |donald, daughter of the Wesleyan h'he didn't think the ti i n & n't think so at time |Methodist minister at Lurslem. From | vas cut out for a farmer,—for a |the place of th meeting came the grain-growing farmer on the wide, inovelist's Christian name. The two semi-arid plains of the great west.And |other daughters of the Methodist min- when he got there and had put his |ister in the potteries married the a exceptional talents to their proper use, |ists who were to hecome Sir Bdws he was an exceptional success. Burne-Jones and Sir E. J. Poynter Oull ARl SvaE Wa T5es - of Thiel Paley, the theologian, had an in- | where farms have been sold because |BCRiOUS method of warding off the they wouldn't return their ownen o |time wasted. When thinking out a living, which same farms ,in the nmew |PFODIem he betook himself to the owner's hands ,have developed into |IVer bank with a fishing rod. He {never really fished, but he found that Ipeople who thought nothing of dis- | turbing hie thoughts would keep at a | distance 8o as not to disturb the fish. fine properties. "Almost invariably the explanation is that the new owner has given up the particular kind and method of farming previously carried on and struck out on some new line | TO Bive color to the ruse he had his suggested by his own pecullar ca- |Porirait painted with fishing rod in pacity. He has not kept on doing what every one else does, as every one clse | does it, but has has gone in for the | Interrupts the Harmony. thing which he, individually, has found | Can hardly hear Colonel Bryan's he can do just a little better than the |beautiful peace utterances for the crowd. inmfie made by hurring workmen, the ——— world ove! driving rivet inio new It ssoms to me here is the broad |battieships.—Ne York Evening Tele- rule which should govern us farmers 8ram. in our choice of work:—First find out what particular sort of farming, among the thousand sorts which offer, {s the one for which we are best fitted; the one which we can do ,not easiest, but best; the ome in which we can take Used to Real Bombs. Paris will have to bestir herself if she hopes to make life as live, Alfonso as he finds it back in Madrid. —Washington Post. Protect Yourself Ask for Agu-iligily Nutritious and Convenien -ain extract, in powder form—dissolves ul than tea or coffee. Used in training athietes. The best diet for Infants, Growing Children, Invalids, and the Aged. It agrees with the weakest digestion. Ask for ““HORLICK’S’’—at Hotels, Restauranis, Founfains. Rich milk, with malted in water—more healt! on’t travel without it. Also keep it at home. A lunch in a minute. Lanch Tablet farm, also, ready to eat. Convenient—nutritious. | | | tor | impairment of health, or perchance none of these things: but whatever the unknown future might have in st i bilities gathered thickly a Decorations General. The decorations all along the streets over which the parade moved made one unbroken continuation of waving al act, and claimg for it flags and bunting, not a single resi- honor. dence or business house failing to Teaches Lesson of Patriotism. show its : Ay | Your purpose in er s this mem First Division. ; $trom ita et first division is th that of he n. The Plainfield Athenfans. You, by it, seck to pieces, P Lawrence K teach the great lesson of patriotism Fifth “company,” Coast 3 |and the nobility of self sacrifice for Norwich, in command of Capt country’s sake, Fach passing hour liam G. Tarbox:; Thi company, |1t will stand here proclaiming its mes- C. N. G., of Danielson, Capt. E. sage and its lesson to this people in Darbie, commanding; Third compa: the most public manner possfble. Co: y, of N ich, in charge | We cannot but appreciate the vast- of « George E. Church. Major J. |ness of the debt which we, a great, A gberg was in charge of the en- | prosperous and happy people, owe, and re military escort. Local and {in the fullness of that appreciation ans and G we are here today to express some W | measure of it. We are here to com- | memorate the lofty spirit which in- spireg men, humble or exalted in rank or etation, who labored ungrudgingly and vallantly for us. In closing he said: Their work was well done; may we, and those who shall follow u interpret aright and ke to our hearts the lesson of their Second Division. band of John' River, Con el Cha oclety; ch Hol; lives here attempted to be iliustrated, Polish Name so: : and prove ourselves worthy of the mixisocisty sifpiunesn leyelo great heritage which has come to us. and twenty-nine omobiles | et Chi On the Platform. Court of I | On the platform were nearly 200 anning, of Wc | guests, including Anne Brewster Fan- the orator of the day; borou | ning chapter, D. A. R, and Falth town offt mon! rumbull chapter of Norwich, with mitt C. M r- | their regents, Mrs. W. R. Burdick and Andrew Philli ., | Mrs. Will L. Stearns. nufactur Incidents of the Day. o The school children who sang, were haicher, | served doughnuts and bananas by the 3 St B teachers ang several Children. Mr. Baer & Siaen o Wiz |and Mrs. L. G. Buckingbam. decorated liam Johnstone, Rev. E. M. Anthony and Judge H. H. Burnham The following guests Fanning: Rev. Ct and Mrs. E. P and all loc G guests ang chose to ride, all fr Provic and a ine. mach At Fanning Par he park, after the f. J. H. George of vises began with M. he Star s of school en under direction of ssor George. Rev. E. M. Hayes’ Address of Welcome wddress of welcome was deliv- h erest to all, He said amily retnion and | he extended t st of olcomes to her loy sons and their nany friends. He rought to tic the importance and slemnity the oc- casion and pointed ouf the many e THE SOLDIERS’ MONUMENT ditions that were a matter of fo tho tobpiaits. . Heagehe.d the platform, which was so attractive B oLy e its flags and bunting. Mrs. G. nanly: tov thalp hanor gy A. Haskell had the oversight and ap- et o pointed all the committees for these emblazoned in lett | arrangements. Mr. and Mrs. Haskell annals of the town | entertained Mr. Fanning and his out that the ground | guests. udge Prentice was entertained by ceremonies were t e was holy Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Ballou. ground, as it ha from the town's earliest history, been dedicated | As the parade passcd over Lishon to the twin virtues of religion and ;bridge Miss Carol Bliss and Trene patriotism, Havey strewed flowers upon the waters He then said: What manner of wel- {of the Quinebaug. come shall we extend to him fhe most | The day closed with evervbody loyal son that Griswold ever pro- |Pleased and happy. but among them duced? i 11 none was mrn;(-. Nelaaerz v":’m Mr. i i nning. He said on leaving for his \E:i.—v';’:a::,(;,!; f::mnq Acclaimed. |},mq in Worcester: am a little £ = then steppsd tired, but I am happy! It has been and bie bow and smile were | truly & grand day with great applause and a rousing | cheer from thousands of throat | Wauregan House Serves Dinner. The Rev. Charles G. Elde The following menu was_splendidly of the Unity church of Worce |served by Davenport of the Waure- spoke for Mr, Fanning and gave a |2an house, Norwich, to eighty guests. short sketch of his life, both here and | Assistant Manager Joseph Bland in Worcester. He had the liitle Bible \Ihad the dinner in charge: ent on the table before h ng prizes gt Cream of Celery Soup s Rt e el Vol au Vent of Oysters Roast Turkey, Sage Dressing Hashed Brown atoes 1e monument was unveiled by Ver- Mashed Tur )8 Lols Tarbox and Kathleen MeCar- Tettuce, French D two Civil war descendants. Then Macedonia Irult George A, Haskell followed by twelve Neapolit Ice littlo giris dressed in while carrying Abaoiod Cille Pt wreaths and basicets, approached the moniiment, the children under direc EMecient work was done by three tion of Mrs, [, l. Buckingham, Mr, |Norwich police officers detalled by Huskel] placed un Immense wreath, the + Chief George Linton, "They were Ser- gift of A, A, Youug, upon the steps |geant John Kune fcers John Dono- of the monument, and at (he sides |yan and Bernard Keeuan, The crowds each litile girl placed 2 basket of fow- | were ordarly mboul the sireety and at ery and u wreath, As they all stood |the park, in positien they were ll\llllhfffihhcd by Warden MceCarthy expressed gratl. George H. Prior, The children were |tude to the eontributors, (he commit. selec 1S cendants of soldiers of ae Individu y and 8 » body and to some w were Fihel Tyler Mor. | Mr, Fanning, ihe daner, gan, 4 Coloniai war descendant; Daisv | Jn 1904, at aboui ihe ilme of (he Young, a descendant of the Revolu- | dedication of the Anne Brewster Fan- tionary war; Rose Beateise Orumib, of | ér, D, A, R, bouider in 4 haj tho war of 1813 Doris Myott, of the Pacheus, Wildam Johnstons and Jos« The memorial which you ded.- | pyS0%, GrnSr, Arba_Browning, their | member as volunteering for the Civil | s | August 1911 I The management wishes to announce a slight for next Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, and take pleasure in presemting abloid or Miniature Musical Comedy, approval, the “The This is a complete show in itself, lasting nearly an hour. Pretty Girls, Funny Comedians, Good Singing and Dancing. FOUR THOUSAND FEET OF FEATURE FILMS MAKING A TWO HOUR SHOW THREE DAYS ONLY. from the usual vaudeville pro- Girlie Girls”’ NO CHANGE IN TIME AND PRICES. ment, with th game between men. The fun Haskell, E. H, were appointe After the deat brother D. F. succeed him. by money comi | warden. Commi | A committee | ing Mr. Lewis | A. Ross, B, | Carthy, Brown, Georg; J. W. Miller. | Fanning made of one | later another { contributions f | ties, lodges, & the Whatsoeve Daughters of t fiftcen hundred [ this committee to five thousan lana the not the site, an fo location, Joh nd Marcus 1 | to the committ no de H. Fanning aga and_interesf b | Site Purchased. | of St. Mar | which the old This_offer hundred and s this company The monum est A. 1. West known as Blue the monument four inches , the top of first course is 1 second in six above this cou stones beginui the raised panels c for May 28th, Additional Gif Mr. Fanning interest_in gave a heavy I with steps anc E: main entrance street, here tw are beautified bronze pillars mounted with candle power. Later he wi park suitable establishing a memorial. When all is dollars, the base wa laid the solid_grani of the Norwic of May 1, and Evening Recor graph of Da Worcester and which was pri April Othe story of the m inino years | above, and a ument (taken G. Second Congr: wold, the new Methodist and unveiling, wh unvejling of th in David Hale thirtieth, teen. Committ chalrman; tary: Dat Bailou, Rev, The presiden: s Woodrow W Bovernor of Co Baldwin, The senate from t) Trandegee. Gr in Hartford io Is nearly 4,800, Marcus H, Drisesll, V. H, Deasrosiers 'man, eph McCarthy conceived the starting a fund for a Soldiers’ Monu- R. William monument was . | borough and the sum of four thousand | dollars was paid by Mr, Fanning for | the site, the old church being removed the 32 feet, it weighs about 25 tons. fourth base indrical in form. the abutting the St. st and West will- have given over amounting to th Contents of Box. When the corner stone of the main inches was placed in a Other enclosures in the ago to First Congregational Everett H. el F, Edward M treasursy 1 John Welsh, men gre, James H, Bhea, John Potter |wold are: idea of e proceeds of a ball- the married and single d was placed in the Jewett City Savings bank, and G. A. Hiscox and J. H. Finn d trustees of the fund. h of Mr. Finn, his Finn was appointed to The sum grew slowly ng from various affairs, until the borough took it up in 1909, at {the time the late Ira F. Lewls, was ttee Appointed. w appointed includ- as_cheirman and Geo. Gardner, J. H. Mc- Johnstone, A. M. Labonne, Jr., Dr. James T. Wilbur, A. G. Brewster, and This committee asked e for contributions and then David Hall his first contribution thousand dollars, and a little thousand. With other rom individuals, socie- tag-day, cenducted by r Circle of The King’s he Baptist church, and dollars frem the town, brought the fund up d, two hundred dallars, was assured, but nd at a meeting held in r the purpose of finding n Potter, D. P, Auclai* 1. Driscoll were added ee. For nearly a vear, ision was reached, until David | in proved his generosity y_offering to purchase s church thé preperty on church stood. accepted by the by the Catholic parish at their ex- nse. At the meeting when this offer i accepted it was voted that the | site should be known as David Halc | Fanning Park, forever. | The trustees with the addition of IRev. E. M. Haves and F, D. Ballou, were appointed as a committee to pur- chase and erect a monument and tu have in charge all arrangements for its unveijling. The contract was given to the Smith Granite Company of Westerly for four thousand, eight eventy-five doilars, and subscribed seventy-five dollars towards the cost. The Monument. nt is cut from the Tn- erly granite, technically -White. On the ground is 13 feet by 10 feet and and its total height to head of the figure is Tha made in eight pieces, tho pleces and the third in four pieces, all joints grouted with cement and clemped together with brass. The octagon base and butress- es are made of four stoones; all sections ‘ rse are made in single | ng at the top level of the monument is cyl Thz die has poli on four sides. Th per portion of the die e with polished siars, and the nosing « the cap with laurel carving in reilc emblematic of Peace and Victory, e p surmo t ft is in_an c manner in bold with shicld on four sides the bars of which are polished. Sur- | mounting the structure is the figure of a standard bearer, seven feet and eight inches high to the top of the head and twelve feet nine inches higi over all. He is in uniform and is represented as holding the colors which he is drawing his sword to protect. The south panel of the die is lettered, “To the Loyal ‘Griswold and Vicinity,” The contract was signed Algust 13th, 1912, and the monumeni was accepted by the committee and paid 1913. ts From Mr. Fanning. in token of his further founding of the i Jeer nd granite curb i entrances on the side Mary’s property, on Main stry and a > looking down Main granite side stones two ornam i feet high sur lamps of by seven electric 0 1l also plant hrubs and nd and upon trees thuas permanent Fanning completed Mr. thousand twelve other ce th isand dollar a_ copper box 10x4x4 niche cut in te. It contained a copy h Bulletin of April 28, 1913, a copy of the Jewett City Press a copy of the Norwich d of May 8. A photo- vid Hale Fanning of a_sketch of his life nted in the Bulletin of r Enclosures, box were a onument from its start the finish, as told one cent piece of the latest issue, a photograph of the mon- from a painting) by H. Prior, and a photograph of the egational church, the church in Gris- and old St. Mary's, the the Baptist churches; a copy of the official invitation to tha ich reads: The honor of your presence is requested at the e Soldiers’ monument Yanning park, Jewett City, Connecticut, Memorial day, May | ninteen hundred i d ' th ee, Georse A. Hiscox, Frederick Haye: t of the United States ilson, a democrat. Thne mnecticut Is Simeon E, senator In the 1, 8. iis district i Frank P {ewold’s representutlye Fred 1.Heureux, Finn. popiilation of the Town of Griswold | clerk and The select- The town and ¥, E. Robiuson, The school comy S | the | subscriptions | The | BARGAIN BILL THERD RS g 7--HARMORIZING KIDS--7 LOTS OF FUN—LOTS OF DANCING—LOTS OF MU! MARGARET CLAYTON BAKER AND HERBERT ‘ Comedy Musical Aot Singing Cartoonist COMEDY ENTERTAINERS THE BOLDENS Singers and Dancers TWO-REEL_FEATURE PHOTO-PLAY—TWO-REEL THE BIG BOSS—Thrilling Political Drama TONGH HARRY MORSE & CO,, in Uncle Seth and the Hoodoo AND THREE OTHER FEATURE ACTS MATINEES EVERY DAY 5¢ HIGH-CLASS Breed Theatre FILM DRAMAS Sensational Cattle Herder Picture (2000 it.) ““A BROKERN VOW’” (2000 ft.) i S8EE THE THRILLING CLIMAX, AND BEAUTIFUL SCENERY | ‘THE MAN WHO MADE GOOD,". “PEDRO'S TREACHERY,” . {§ “THE COVETED PRIZE,” “FRAPPE LOVE,” = | Superh Edison Feature Mexican Lubin Story .Blograph Comedy Ixceptional Farce Comedy For Summer Travel Just bear in mind we are HEADQUARTERS in NORWICH for the following lines of LUGGAGE: STEAMER AND FULL SIZE WARDROBE TRUNKS OF REGULATION HIDE. STEAMER AND FULL SIZE TRUNKS. GENT’S TRUNKS AND HAT BOXES. A large line of TRAVELING BAGS of Leather and Light Weight Suit Cases; a large variety of the latest improved makes. All these/goods are carefully inspected and chosen by us from selected stock. We know how to do this, it being our eror&sh»n. and can assure you of supplying your needs in the right trunk, the right suit case or the right traveling bag at a RIGHT PRICE, a price that meets and. vanquishes com- petition. 'When you buy any of the above goods, you want {hem strong, serviceable, trim and reliable; the kind you get | here at lowest prices. Let us show you. Shetucket Harness Co. Opposite Chelsea Savings Bank HOTEL ST. DENIS Broadway and 11th Street, New York City HOME COMFORTS WITHOUT EXTRAVAGANCE The only first-class hotel near all steamship lines Half block from Wana- walk of 8hopping District Within easy access of every point of interest. maker's. Five minutes' NOTED FOR:—E teous service and cllence of cuisine, comfortable appointments, cour- homelike surroundings il The very best accommoadations in the city at $1.00 Per Day Up 7 minutes from Grand Central Depot 10 minutes to leading stores and theatres | ST. DENIS HOTEL CO. ALSO STANWIX HALL HOTEL, ALBANY, N. Y. The Sanitary Way Cleaners UG MEMS QUL Who CIe an It’s the cleaning that has made NORWICH FAMOUS Our modern process thoroughly cleans every weave to give the garment a NEW APPEARANCE. Beware of SPOT CLEANERS who press the dirt in- to the garment. WE DON'T DO THAT KIND OF WORK LA NG’S NOSWICH'S x g Only Plant mittee 1s G. H. Jennings, G. A. Haskell and J. H, Shea. The warden of the borough is Joseph MeCarthy; borough clerk and treasurer, Wm. T. Crumb; | the burgesses are A. C. Burdick, Jos- |eph Bryant, Horace Myolt and i'rar E. Robinsou, Civil War Veterans. The names of the Clvil war veter- {ans who are today residents of Gris- 8, P, Green, W, H, Tift, L. ]Iiack. Livery and Boarding STABLE We guarantee our service to be the best at rZe 1008t reasonnhle nrices. MAHONEY BROS.. Falls Ave WHEN you wWant to puc your busi- ness before tLe pubjic, there is no me- and Oscar Dugas, The board of edu- | A. Thornton, Jokeph Cross, G, A. Has- s hrough the advertis- cation s 4, H, Tracy, A, C, Burdick, | kell, Gaorge W, Rinke, J. H. Les, HUgh | g eolomus i The Bulletis o John €. Hawikiny, Jumey T, Wilbur, | McLaughiin, R M. Hrown, Adolphus | Willis &, Terry, Shiepherd ¥, Brown. | Moffat, Fred Whipple, W. H. White. | THERE Is no aavertisin cut e 1u‘l..l ot Joseph Pariseau and Alfred tern Connec! {otia"Tor Dusiness Tas

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