Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 20, 1913, Page 4

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Borwich u iletin sund Goufies. 117 YEARS OLD. ion price, 120 a week; G0 a ; $6.00 a &_flnfl at the Postoffice at Norwien, “i. a8 second-class matter. Telephone Callsc “Hetin Business Office. 480. iiutictin Ediiorial Reoms, $5-8. “isleiln Job Office, 85-6. - imantio Office, Ream 2, __Uuiiding. Telephons 210. Norwich, Friday, June 20, 1813. Murray f'he Circulation of ‘The Bulletin The Bulletin has the Iargest elr- culation of amy paper in Bastern Connccticut, and from three to four iimes lnrger tham that of any fm Norwicn. It ia delivered to over 5,006 of the 4653 houses im Nor- wick, and read oy mimety-three per fest. of the people. In Windhum i¢ In delivered to over 900 houses, all of the R. W, CIRCULATION 1901, average. - 4412 5,920 Week of June 14th.. 8.475 WELCOME TO THE THAMES. This is the day when thousands of Fisitors are attracted to the one big aquatic event of New England in th Thames river. That they are wel- comed goes without 1905, average....ocoeeeea. aying and the | only regret is that there are not more | such events throughout @raw as large numbers to the banks ©f the fascinating river. The annual contest on the water between Yale and Harvard has been rowed here for many Yyears and the final training quarters and the four mile course have served %o @irect much more attention to the Beauties of the river than would other- wise result. The Yale-Harvard race @nd the Thames are as closely asso- clated as the colleges and their home towns, and the contest could hardly be the same anywhe e. Although in the preiiminary showing Bhis year Yale appeared to have put forward a crew which much promis-, have been laboring un- der the difficulties of making import- mnt changes in their style within a shert period under nmew and foreign coaches. Seme idea of the value of the mew strokp, can be gained today but ®0 radical a change in such a brief time does not permit of final judgment of s efficacy. That it will permit the Yale efght to at least give Harvard a race is expected, for nothing is more tame and uninteresting than a grad- vally lensthening procession for the four miles. Tt is time Yale overcame the slump and least put Harvard through more than a practice spin. the year to SELECTING ENGINEERS, ‘Whatever may be the reason for It, ©r the methods under which it oper- ates, the system which s used on the New Haven road for selecting engl- meers to be In charge of the passen- ger trains is due to undergo a revision. Through the testimony of experts who declare that the brakes work alright 4 they are properly applied and ope ated with judgment it is brought to light that other roads would not have permitied Engineer Doh to have Tun the second sec Spring- fleld expres: ance when spare 1 of engineers in aceordance with the understanding Between the road and the engineers, But it is very evident that If a raflroa 48 going to ope system with any assurance of safety it must be able to pick the best men and place men in the engine cab because they the necessary and the judgment requi o operate express trains te fts have expe possess t If it is the fault of the system of selecting enzineers, that should un- dergo an immediate change, since it s fair to no o engineer, railroad or the pudlic, to permit the existence of an understanding which is against the demands of sa If the railroads are to bear the responsibility of oper- ation, which they should, the selection of engineers shoulq n accordance r demands. Otherwise it e to fix responsibility, an in Justice is done to the engineers and the public suffers. When Lackawanna road finds that three years' experience on freights is necessary fore an en Fineer ia allowed o run a train as im Portant as The Springfield express it i= nome too much for the New Haven, and the public should impress upon Both the road and the engineers that 4% 4= demanded, not ocecasionally, but all the time. DEVELOPING FLYING MACHINES. Magnificent progress been made in the mmnufacture and operation of the aeroplanes of various tvpes since it was demonstrated by the Wrights that a heavier than air machine could be made to fly and carry one or more persons. Not only has the develop- ment been rapid, but great speed and altitudes have been attained by some of the most expert aeronauts and pro- gress of a most satisfactory nature made except in the direction of insi:- ing safety in the navigation of the air, Wherein, however, there appears to be * plenty of opportunity for striving for pertection. Thus far attention has been centéred fn developing a machine which Is operated by an engine, such power necessary for the propulsion: of the aircraft but what such aeroplane designers have gone through with their ‘machines in thelr various steps of pro- 18 now belng experienced in France where efforts are being made %o bulld fiying machines which wili be . entirely by force of human museles. That there were fifty entries n jprize contest for $2,000 for a " flight of ten yards shows that there is & healthy amount of interest in such , though the distance re- 2nd the fact that none was suc- indicate the difficulty of the which they face. That they suecceed is no more improbable the efforts of the Wrights, which sfart only drew forth laughten There is much interest in the out- come of the conference between Dis. trict Attorney Whitman of New York and Col. Roosevelt because of the bearing it will be likely to haye upon the mayoralty fight in the metrepolis. this fall. If as has been Intimated, Col. Roosevelt enderses Whitman as. the fusion candidate, it will be noth- ing \but what the circumstances in New York city at the present time call for. To do anything else and,lead the strength of his party to a third candidate s only lending aid to the interests of the Tammany organisa- tion. Whether Mayor Gaynor again wins and carries out the policy of the influence back of him depends to a large extent upon the attitude of those who are out for good government. At the present time the logical ean- didate, and the one who Is calculated to lead the forces of fusion to get- ting out the largest vote, is the dis- trict attorney, Who through his active efforts to down graft amg vice, and in direct opposition to the workings of the police department has unearthed conditions end applied the punishment persistently. He has set forth his pol- icy in a far better and more convincing manner than any public announcement could do it. That he is a republican does not lessen his power or his in- tegrity. He has demonstrated that he is the man for the forces of reform to unite upon and that being the demand of Col. Roosevelt and his party, there | remains nothing for him to do, and be consistent, but endorse him. CHIEF JUSTICE WARNS. When Chief Justice White in an ad- dress at Brown university called upon the American people to “frown down the attempt” which is growing in the land to attack the principles of gov- ernment, he gave not only to his hear- ers but to every citizen and resident of this country food for reflection. The disposition to disregard law and or- der, to cry for the recall of judicial decisions and lamentable displavs of disregard for the flag are all evidences of the attacks on government which are to be frowned upon, and against which he would give widespread warn- ing. He makes a strong appeal when he | dec “The very foundation of our free institutions was the belief not in | the march of a triumphant democracy, not in the march of popular feeling and popular conduct unrestrained, but that men could restrain themselves, | that great principles couid be written into our national life which could steer and guide and restrain and hold us and lead us on, free from anarchy, full of | liberty, with life and property and everything that blesses mankind saved and secured. Look around in this great land today. Where is there a country like this? The world has never seen the equal of it. and the world will never see its en- durance if the American people forget the foundation principles of their free institutions because of what they im- agine to be an evil here and an evil there and seek to pull down the pil- lars of the temple in order that they may destroy what they suppose to be a rat within the house.” The country owes everything to its institutions and to its government without which as the chief justice points out “there would be no right ang everything wrong.” Unwarranted ! attacks upon principles of government deserve not only to be frowned upon, but stamped out. EDITORIAL NOTES. Tt Is quite evident that Senator Mar- tine does not belleve in a lobby in pub. lic at least. Some of the baseball teams are al- ready reaching the stage where there is need of calling in the pulmotors. An investigation timely now to find who did it and why the insidious sugar schedule was put in the tariff bl Prof. Taft is seiting a delightful safe and sane example when everyone strives to be as “happy as an ex- president.” Potatoes are selling in Kansas for six c bushel and vet not long ago t were being imported to sup- the demand. nts However much some of the profes- sions overcrowded there appears 10 be an extensive field for the swim- ming instructor. natural that quite Secretary n should want to be in Washing- there is anything pending on ion, the currency que: Happy thought for today: If the hot | wave was only a/sample of what's coming, it’s proper to keep cool till the big show comes along. A western man was declared insane for refusing pay because he had not | earned it. This form of dementia is disappearing, however. There seem to be as many opinions | on how the brakes worked in the test of the engine in the Stamford wreck 1s there were concerning the wfec The popularity of the early and un- ripe cherries is only, praceding the en apples by a few days, but the ildren are bound to get the same re- sult: Now that Canada has killed the plan to build battleships for Englend and dismantled its own naval vessel, the fear of being kidnapped is evidently disappearing. Every baseball ticket has a double value. Not only does it admit to an afternoon of good entertainment, but it provides a topic of conversation for the next week. The silence in the Balkans is get- ting monotonous. but it better be si- lence than- war and no cloud can be promised until it is time to crown the king of Albania. The demand for Seven cent pieces S0 as to reduce the price of many ten cent articles sounds well, but it offers a too strong temptation for increasing the price of five cent articles. All the southern democrats who threaten to withdraw ~their support from the party unless their protest against tariff changes Is respected, much realize now how belated their ae- | tion 1s Spare the rod and spoil the child | was the belief of the New York state woman, but she would have been will- ing to take the chance had she known that the spanking she administered would have started a $100,000 fire, Secretary Daniels has seen but a few of the navy yards. When he completes his inspection he may be able to start a new ship in each yard and then again WILL THE COLONEL ENDORSE? | | For “Belinda is the dearest girl” said the chatty woman. “She told me one day that she looked back with regret to the time®when the purchase of a spring sult was merely a matter of saving and skimping and when she could buy, wear and be merry with- out a thought of the scruples of to- merrow.. But now Belinda has to pay, for belng a conscientious, progressive and new movement working, woman with all sorts of moral questionings! So the purchase of her spring suit 1s an_ordeal beset with many dangers. “First, as a self-supporting girl she must not squander too much on her ciothes, and the dress she wants is al- ways a ljttle beyond her limit. Next she is committed to the purchase of only such garments as have a safe hygienic origin, and often the most becoming of sults spread before her do_not answer these requirements. “Of course Belinda belongs to an art class, and she 1s bound to see that her garments reveal ‘good lines' and are not inharmonious. either in form or color. Nor must her sult be out of net on a higher plane than her shoes, or below her hat in style ‘and juality. “If her hat Js a kind of lady of le ure hat, and her shoes of a workaday style, why, they will harmenize neith er with the. sult nor with each Belinda likes b“’ 1hl.‘lc Lh’%lr.conuh ousness that there is perts t e e difforent articles of her Bt- tire. % 4 her clothes or else they might as well] hang on their pegs forever. Ana even ‘when they AI'; hl:ll‘h:l’ on. un{r D;C‘g —she always devotes two Degs to e garment-sho likes to be conacioua of & friendly Intimate feeling' toward | them—to belleve,- when she looks at them, that she is eazing at & part of herself. 4 “This looks as if Belinda was a very fussy person, which she is not, being only very consclentious. Really, if vyou could her In a costume that has passed muster, one that harmon- end her in- no insanitary b {izes both with her ey come, that reveals tune with the other articles of her stitches and has no germs lurking in wardrobe that are to be worn with it. Bhe must see that the new gown is OTHER VIEW POINTS East Haddam bridge celebration witnessed one of the most orderly of crowds. But a Connecticut generally an orderly one, and ally in Middlesex county town Press. peci- Middle- If,he has been quoted correctly, Cordner Phelan seems®to have made up his mind beforehand and has al-, ready put the blame on the engine and called the company a criminal. | Not a very good man to take evidence | and pass judgment on it.—Waterbury | American. | It is painfully - evident that no amount of persuasion is able to make an impression on the minds of some people and even the futile cry for help as the man or woman sinks be- neath the water is forgotten in a few: days and is only recalled when some other person goes to the bottom.— New Britain Herald. To prove that the twentieth century convention _ is needless Joseph Knowles a Boston artist, will plunge into the wilderness of Northern Maine without clothing, food, matches, fire- arms or ammunition. He says he will |live like the men of the stone age for three’ months. Looks like good adver- tising to us.—Meriden Journal Concentration of thought on the task in hand and full attention to its successful conclusion will bring suc- cess and prevent faflure and grief, whether one’s work be hazardous or not. The world’s experience {s even pointing to this as the right way. Why should the individual wait until | he has been taught by personal ex- perience that it is the only safe way? —Waterbury Republican. We boast about achievements, virtues of the modern, and progress. Undoubtedly we have achleved much But how much have we gained in comfort, in usefulness, Is life sweeter or better or more pur- poseful, more saticfactory—or safer in this era of steel bridges and trunk | line highways than it was In tne days of ferry boats and winding dirt roads? Haven't we actually pald a pretty stiff pricce for some modern conven- iences 7—Bristol Press. \ We do npot know what motive prompted Theodore Phillips, a valiant local prohibitionist, to force rests of baseball players for Sunday ball, but we suspect that Mr. Phillips reasoned that Sunday ball is an argnment against prohibition. We all know that Sunday ball is & viola- tion of the law, and that it is tacitly approved because the people want it. But it the Sunday law could be open- ly violated. why couldn't a_ prohibition law be violated with equal impunity? Bridgeport Telegram. A submarine vessel designed on a new plan remained under water off ihe California coast, at a depth of a hundred feet, for thirty-six hours, beating all Trecords. The inventor claims that the craft could have stayed submerged for a much longer period, and the six men who were on. board testified that they had a very comfor- table evperience. The submarine is likely to play an important pare in na- val operations and this experiment demonstrates that the United States is well in the advance in the develop- ment of such vessels—New Britain Record. Still they come. If anvbody had supposed that the tide of immigration was turning from this country, he is advised, for his information, to notice that ‘half a million aliens have ar- rived at Ellis Island since January 1. an excess of that figure for any given six months one will have to go back several years.—New Haven Reg- ecretary Bryan’'s mail is said to be loaded down with samples -of grape juice _sent to him by enterprising manufacturers, is not stated, how- ever, that any of the members of the diplomatic corps have volunteered their services in testing the samples. —Springfield Union. crowd is | the | in happiness? | the ar- | playing | the seams, that shows graceful lines and pieasing color—in ghort, a cos- tume that is true to Its wearer' tdeals you would sce o pretty girl who in the best sense of -the term and according to her own conviction is truly well dressed. “Far be it from me,” went on the chatty woman, “to quarrel with Be- linda for being conscientious. I only wish that more of my friends were like her. Still, there are compensi- tions when people express themselves freely in their clothes—particularly their hats study of her nature, will you as surely and as will one glimpse of She may hide herself analysis, she may chological reveal her to thoroughly as her spring hat. from your mental trick vou by and spiritual disguises, but when she chooses her hat her hidden nature re- her qualities confessed. “What a constant surprise these | millinery revelations are! There is | Emily, whom T thought the soul of so- {briety’ and demureness, and vet had |she really possessed these qualities would she have chosen for her spring hat a purple bowl decorated with yel- low green feathers? And how can I reconcile the quiet modesty, the shrinking timidity of my friend Phy- [1lis with screaming audacity of a burnt orange bow on a cherry -col- jored turban? Then there is my artist friend, Miss Dower, whose water color sketches show delicate quakerish tints, yet in her hat she turns her back on such ideals and dares to ap- pear In a perfect riot of reds and pur- ples. “My neighbor, Mrs. Stern, is by her own confession superior to clothes and entertains a noble contempt for per- |sonal adornment. ~ Still if she were really sincere in these sentiments would she be meen in a red straw decorated with a_cream colored feath- er duster? Another neighbor, Miss Linsome, Is too much eccupled with putting things into her head to care sbout what goes on it, and yet who but herself is respomsibls for those huge loops of watermelon pink ribben | that grace her spring hat? “It's all a great mystery, and 1 am not sure whether these seemingly contradictory bits of headgear are ex- pressions of hidden depths in the na- {tures of my friends, or whether they are but a kind of millinery measles, & breaking out of some unimportant with all | mental’ disease that has nothing to do | with the real nature of the vietim."— Chicago News. |} WATCH YOUR STEP! By The Conductor. Copy Cat: All us guys is a lot o' copy cats. If anybody starts out to do somethin’ nobody else ever did, you think he's dippy. Folks don't try to act like some picture they seen. It takes gobs ‘o real brains to make you look like yourself so some other mutll copy you. Women'll pile all kinds o' dead | hair on top their head s0's to look like |Some woman with real hair. An’ ’en men’ll wear socks when they’d a durn sight rather wear stockin’s they could |Pull up on their knees. A fellow'd think he wasn't half dressed if he didn’t have a fool pin stickin’ in his tle, an' if a guy'd come downtown with a coat on that hadn’t got a collar on it just like every other guy. he'd be afraid he’d be arrested. An' when Blood Humors Commonly cause pimples, bofls, hives, eczema or salt rheum, or some other form of eruption; but sometimes they exist in-the system, indicated by feel- ings of weakness, languor, loss of ap- petite, or general debility, without causing any breeking out. They are expelled and the whole sys- tem Is renovated, strengthened and toned by Hood’s Sarsaparilia Get it today in usual liquid form or chocolated tablets called Sarsatabs, hre Tou Amnng_lhuse Who Dread to Go to the Dentist? The ease with which I perform dit- ficult dental work and the entire ab- sence of pain during the operation, is generally enough to claim a just one. prove the above 1 am giving my patients the benefit of every known appliance for chosen profession. the betterment of my Success Does Not Come Without Good Reason Better facilities, more complete eq uipment, and a superior method and my personal guarantee of perfect results, are but a few of the reasons why 1 have been so successful in th My aim is to give my patients at erate charge. Come in and talk ov is city. solutely Painless Dentistry at 2 mod- er your tooth troubles and you will he agresably surprised at the small amount it will take to put your mouti in perfect condition Fall Set Teeth $5.00 up Gold Fillings .. $1.00 up Silver Fillings . Purc Gold Crowns Bridgework .. s Consultation and Advice FREE Dr. JACK3ON, Dentist Successor to THE KING DENTAL CO. 203 Main Street, next to Boston Store 9 a m to8p m Phone 195-3 =ame of the fourth class postmasters may want new bulldings by that time. DON'T BUY OLD STYLE TEETH Every set of Teeth that leaves my office has' the natural gum, an exclusive invention which absolute- ly defies the detection of false teeth in the mouth. No extra charge for this during the above offer. “Not length of intimacy with your | woman friend, nor any deliberate pys- | | | 2 hundred Intellectnal | veals itself, and she stands before you | i “Yes, Belinda has to ‘feel right' in{ some dub gets up to make a h to a crowd an' says & lot o' fine-dub ‘bout liberty an’ use all th' nice words he can think of like “mother,” “home" an' “heaven" the crowd rave over it like he was sayin’ somethin’. It don't take no brains to listen to such stuff, 1 always think a fellow makin' & speech ain't said nothin' when th' peo- ple listenin’ to him clap their hands. If he'd sald somethin’ new, that took brains to say, the people wouldn't be clappin’ their hands; they'd be so busy gettin’ th' new dope, you could hear a pin drop. I never see a hen flappin’ its wings yet when it's layin' a egg. It's too busy. Us humans has got corns on our feet an’ callus's on our hands. We got stummicks all wored out an’ our hearts are gettin' weak. Our lungs are bein' coughed up an' our liver's choked. But we got one bran’ new piece o machinery up in our cocoanut that ain’'t bein’ half worked. Did yon ever - try . thinkin' real hard You might surprise your- self doin' somethin’ that the other muts ain't doin. Move up in th' car! i Don't all of you stand right in th' door. ‘Watch your st ' Race for Simplicity. Thomas Jefferson is being hard pushed by Woodrow Wiison as an ex- emplar of simplicity. For a century the former has been held up as u model of unaffected manpers, and no president has wrested first honors from him, but just now he has a rival in the person of our Chiet Executive —Boston Post. Can't Help China. See that China is flooded with bad money. Can't blame_us. Under ord- | ers from President Wilson we didnt| lend her any.—New York Telegram. Would Be Surprising. What a surprise it would be if the Senate should find anybody guilty of anything.—Washington Herald. New York's oldest policeman, Abram Storm, age 70, has retired after 48 vears of service, "FRECKLES Don’t Hide Them With a Veil—Remove Them With the Prescription. This prescription for the removal of freckles was written by a prominent physician and is usually so suceessful in removing freckles and giving' a clear, beautiful compléxion that it is s0ld by Lee & Osgood under an abso- lute guarantes to refund the money if it fatls. Don't hide your freckles under a vell; get an ounce of othine and remove them. Even the-first few applications should show a wonderful improvement, some of the lighter freckies vanishing entirely. Be sure to ask the druggist for the double strength othine; it is this that is sold on the money-back guarant DR. F. W. HOLMS, Dentist Telephona 535 ect1e Shasaen Butldlag imnex. Room A Danger Signals Kidney Troubles, Bladder Dis- orders and Rheumatism. When these symptoms are neg- lected, then Serious Diseases Foliow. It is not only dangerous, but needless, for you to to suffer and endure the tortures of these troubles, for the new discovery, UROGEN promptly ends all such misery. Three doses of Urogen a day, for a few days, is often all that is ever needed to relieve the worst backache or overcome urinary disorders and relleve chronic rheumatism. All druggists are authorized to return the purchase price if UROGEN should fail to give you rellef. Price 50 cents and $1.00 At all druggists PLUMBING AND STEAM FITTING Sanitary Plumbiny A peep into an up-to-date bathroom is only less refreshing than the plans of the porcelain and other tuba ana give you estimates for the work of putting them in in ths best manner from a sanitary standpoint—and guare antes the entite job. J. F. TOMPKINS, €7 West Main Street 1. F. BURNS, Heating and Plumbing, 92 kranklin Stres! . C. E. WHITAKER Successor to 5. F. GIBSON. Tin and Sheet Metal Worker, Tar o1 Asphalt and Gravel Roofs, Walks and Driveways, apria 55 West Main St. ROBERT J.COCHRANE Gun Kitng, Plumbing. Stemm bai, 10 West Matn 8t., Nerwieh, Conn. Agent N, B. O. Sheot Packing. aprid (NORWICH) Line TO. foute next time yuu - 1o o T . ‘wonde ne o008 it o8 Tos wanaortol ey i Sasiner e Boe Lonteg it | 2. nd Fuge North Hiver, ‘@’clock next moraning Tickets and staterooms from ticket agent rallroad station. £ Meals a la Carte wion_ 9 1:80 New England Steamship Co. New York CHELSEA LINE Fare $1 Freight and Tm service direct w New York, (From, Norwion Tussdays. Thurs- 5. Sundays, a 3 Sw Tork, Bler 23 Haat Rive foot Roosevelt Street. Mondays, ‘Wednesdays, Fridays, at § p. m. Freight teceived unt!l & p. m. V. KNOUSE, Agent. ey 2. L Sens 1oc bos tnssiut Sxide sy DIRECT THRU MFER:A i ROUTE TO CHICAGO AND THE WEST Modern thru standard and tourist sleepers, Boston to Chicago, via Buf- falo, Cleveland and Ft. Wayne. Quick time. Lowest rates. Unexcelled Din- ing Car Service on all trains. Free stop-over at Niagara Falls and other points. Very low round trip SUMMER EXCURSION FARES TO PACIFIC COAST, COLORADO, and many other points in the west now in effect. Long limits. Variable routes. For detalls as to rates, etc., write L. P. BURGESS, New England Passenger Agent, 812 01 South Bldg., Boston, Mass. HORTON'S N. V. ICE CREAM BEST IN THE WORLD. Quart Bricks, 40c Pint Bricks, 25¢ o John A. Dunn, 60 Main Street MISS ELLA M. POTTER Insaructor of Piano and Harmony Boom 6, Alice Bldg. Tel. 968 SUMMER MILLINERY A FINE ASSORTMENT OF LATEST STYLES. MRS, G. P. STANTON, 52 Shetucket St. NV S EVES will be welcomed by every reader of “QUEED” and all admirers of “POL- LY of the HOSPITAL STAFF” can- not possibly be without “POLLY of LADY GAY COTTAGE.” Both these recent books can be had “ CRANSTON?S, 158 Main St. £ THOMAS J. HOWARD Long Island Sound New York Har ~—AND— Hudson River TRANSPORTATION Scows and barges for freight or charter Ne: 1 BROADWAY, NEW YORK 3 The Vaughn Foundry Ca. Nos. 11 to 25 Ferry St., MILL, CASTINGS & Specialty, Orders Receive Prompt Attentios J. F. CONANT 11 Franklin St. hitesione B¢ and the J. F. C. 100 ‘lgers are rhe best on the market Try them Delivered to Any Part -+ Nerwich the Ale that 1s acknowledged to be the best on the market—HANLEY'S PEERLESS. A telephone order will recetve prompt attentiom. ©. J. MCCORMICK. v Franatin €t excepted, and by appointment. WHEN you want te put your busi- ness before the public, there is mo me- éium better than through the advertis- ing columns of The Bulletin. and Throat leTo_RlU‘M u GIRLS FROM THE FOLLIES--12 People MATHILDE—2 Reel Eclair Feature Wiy Breed Theatre Ho Sk, SENSATIONAL TWO REEL FEATURE TODAY (2000 it.) “THE OPEN SECRET” (2000 ft.) An Incomparable Domestic Patheplay “AN UNWILLING SEPARATION;,’ “A DANGEROUS FOE,” .. “BRAVEST GIRL IN CALIFORNIA, ......Decoration Day Story ..Biograph, with Harry Carey ‘With Ruth Roland Mersick Water Supply System Spring of the vear is just tne time f : waggh TR S ea Just o time for you to instali & MERSICK e qutfit shown above consists of a gearsd pow : 2 H, P Gasoline Engine having a suction 1t up to 25 fent. - Capacity. 43 gallons per ‘minute’ The Bump Zear”cun b chfouh “0ulby SrTecceneria ermitting use of enging for other purposes. or - equlgmen{ for country homes.- XS S R A s end for our Catalog T" on Individual Water Supply Systems and Farmhouse Lighting Outflis. THE C. S. MERSICK & CO., New Haven, Conn. The Porteous & Mitchell Co, The Special Sales IN EVERY DEPARTMENT Will Continue Throughout the Week addition to our Annual Sale of Cottage Furnish- l ings, which is now in progress, we are offering EXTRAORDINARY VALUES in every department of the store. I has always been our aim TO LEAD IN LOW PRICES, and we are prepared at all times to main- tain our position as the store which sells only reliable merchandise, AND AT THE LOWEST PRICES TO BE HAD ANYWHERE IN CONNECTICUT. THEN visit the store this week. Take a walx through the different section: On every floor, and in every aisle, you'll find merchandise offer- ings that are BARGAINS in the best sense of the word. Domestic Department Extraordinary values in Sheetings, Plllow Cases, Sheets, Bed Spreads, Comfortables, Blankets, Towels, Tow- eling, Napkins and Table Linens. Carpet Department Remarkable values in Draperies, Curtains, Carpets, Rugs, Oil Cloths, Linoleums, Porch Screens, Hammocks, Etc. Millinery Department Emphatic_reductions in Miilinery o all kinds—Hats (trimmed and untrim-| med) for women, misses and children, Flowers, Feathers, Etc. Silks and Dress Goods Many remarkable values in Silks and| Dress Goods, both black and colored| in all this season’s newest weaves and| colorings. Wash Goods Department This department offers many splen-| did values In Staple and Novelty Wash| Fabrics in -a big variety of kinds—and| at decided reductions. \ Kitchenware Department Unusual money-saving opportunities in Oll Stoves, Window Screens, Gal- vanized Tubs, Wash Eoilers, Tea Ket- tles and Kitchenware of all kinds. Men’s Department Extraordinary values in Men’s Cloth- ing, Underwear, Hoslery, Negligee Shirts, Etc. Many splendid opportun- ities for money-saving in this depart- ment. ‘Women’s Suits and Dresses In this department there are unus- ual money-saving opportunities in Women's Tailored Suits and Women's Dresses. Hosiery and Underwear Summer-weight Knit Underwear fos women and children — Hosiery fo women and children—at positively thi lowest prices to be had anywhere. Other Special Values There are many other special values throughout the store—Ribbons, Gloves, Handkerchiefs, Small Wares, Umbrel las, Hand Bags, Etc The Porteous & Mitchell Co. KEEN-KUTTER SCYTHES bEvery One Fully Warranted The Household ALBERT BOARDMAN,. Prop. BULLETIN BUILDING, 74 FRANKLIN STREET Drs. L. F. & A. J. LaPierre, 267 Main Street Fours 10 a m.-3 p. m. J. H. GEORGE THE PIANO TUNER Forty-five Years Experience P.O. Box 205 Norwich, Conn. Telephone NERSRWII.. T . WRERES THERE Is no Adverusing Eastern Conneotiout al “. Tetin"20: Dusiness resulie .'!\ . Sundays Practice limited to Eye, Ear, Nose HERE 15 no aavertising medium in pastern Gonnesticut squal to The Bur letin for business ite

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