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Office. 2, Telephone 210. Norwich, Tuesday, July 29, 1913, The Circulation of ‘The Bulletin The Bulletin Las the largesc elr- culmilon of amy paper im Easters and tram three to four times lurger than that of smy Im Moswieh. It fu delivered te over 3800 of (he €053 heuscs im Nor- wich and read oy mimeiy-tices per wemi. {of the peopic. Im Windhum it du delivered to ever 300 Louscs, is \Petnam amd Dasiclsen 1o over L8 amd im all of these places it in commidered the local aily. Emsters Commecticut has forty- nine (towns, ouc humdred and sixty- ave dlstrtcts, and aixty fmee delivery routes. The' Bulletin is sold fn every (own mud em all of the K F. D. reutngii Bastera Conmecctiouts CIRCULATION 1901, ; AVOrage. ceveen e e vennne 4412 1908, avorage... - - ..5,990] ’ Week ending July 26. 8.503 Have The Bulletin Follow You Murray Readers of the Bulletin leaving the city for the seashore, mountains, rural resorts or Europe can have the Bulletin follow them daily and keep in teuch with heme affairs. Orders sheuld be placed with The Bulletin Business Office. —_— A CONTINUOUS CONGRESS. When the extra session of cengress was called it was thought that the 2ariff, taking precedence of everything eise, would bs out of the way in a weeks and an early adjournment for, but today ne ene has to predict an adjeurnment. a competent autherity “Tt Jooks as though congress would Be in session until September on the fariff, and 1f it is then compelled to mp the currency question it will run this extra sesglon Tight into_the regular session in De- cember, which will be the long ses and that will prebably carry us the mext summer. “Congress is getting to bea ontin- uous performance and if a congressman attends to Bis duty he has very little chance to keep acquainted with his constitnents~ seongress 1s to be continued in a winter and summer capital 15 mecessary; and perhaps we might ®et 1t located somewhere along the breezy morth shores of Leng Island sound. It seems almest criminal to require public servants to serve us in the atmosphere of Washington during “dog days" Heaven on earth is what e should be striving for. PRESIDENT ELLIOTT. The man who succeeds Mr. Mellen %s president of the New Haven road came from the dottom up, and that Howard Blliot has been a man among men is an excellent guaranty that he will deal justly with his employes and with the public. He states his position clearly when he says: “T coms into the management with- out prefodics for or against any com- munity, pelecy, organization, method of work, man or men. I hope and ex- Pect to find many officers and men with whom I can work oclesely and cordially I bave no wish to displace any man 50 long as he is needed and is of good character, loval, competent and is in- dustrious and will pull his pull share of the load.” What he expects of others expresses the real quality of himself. He is a Wew England man who believes in New Engtand and a policy which shall prove of value to this section of coun- try. Speaking of conservation he says: *This railroad service can only be con- werved by having all who are interest- ed In the welfare of New England fair, prudent, patient and courageo: enough to take a broad, far-sighted view of the whole situation Those who are familiar with Work have for many years' recognized that womam had her place in police work and the police matron has been | on duty in all the larger cities for | many years, and she has wroven that her recognition and employment was no mistake. It is only of recent years that women as policemen have heen given strect service and special detec- tive work, but New York, ' Chicago, Minneapolis, Denver, Omaha and Les Angeles have them to detect female eriminale on the streets and to keep order wherever children in Jarge num- bers play or the sexés intermingle. for entertainment - and amusement. In some work woman Is quicker to detect irregularities and disorderly conduet. The Omaha Bee is quite right when it savs yman’s sense of the proprieties tends to give an advantage and then, too, her intuition and power to com- mand respect increases her effective pess for such work. But, of course, the women for police service must be selected with utmost discrimination, for upon their demeanor and diseretion, after all, rests their measure of suc- cess.” or e, the same sane discrim- inatlon applies to the selection of men for police service, but it is woefully neglected as a general rule. 1913 AS A CROP YEAR. While the government reports of the leading crops have a hopeful and as- suring sound, the east owns up to having been hit hard by the drouth whieh one old farmer says “beat the arouth of ‘64 when there was so little water in the streams that the fish wigzled with their tails out of water to keep their heads under.” One tells us his green peas cost him three dol- lars a bushel to raise and he got $1.50 a bushel for them: and another sold his extra early potatoes for 85 cents a peck, which cost him over $1.25 & peck to grow. Since peas and string beans have sold for from 50 to 80 cents a peck the middleman has not suf- fered from drouth. In this immediate Vicinity the hay crop has heen good— above the average we are told; but a correspendent writes of one meadow which had yielded 4 tens of hay a year for 100 years that cut but 3,000 Ibs. this vear; and of a hay grower who usually harvests 125 loads who had to be satisfied with 30 loads. It loaks as though hay in New England might be dear next winter. It is surprising that with freezing weather as late as June 10th the fruit crop in abundance seems to be d. EDITORIAL NOTES. The hee hive style of hat is all the rage in the millinery world. There is likely to be lots of honey under it. A Missouri woman has traded a hus- band for a mule. She prefers the least obs! © animal for a steady compan- fon. Tt would be pleasant if Norwich only knew how near she is to having the trolley line extended to the Maplewood The. Glass currency bill is likely to become a crackled thing if all the newspapers in the country keep taking a hi it. Vice President Marshall is a gener- ous fellow, for he goes about the coun- try making speeches, and he does not charge a cent for them 7 Mr. Mulhall might refresh more of his recollections, for most of them sm so tainted that no one suspects | they ave been properly refrigerated. If the city should get its police court revenue from ten cent admission fees instead of fines it would be very much more profitable at the end of the year. The representatives of the old worry clubs are predicting an early frost. There has been so much frost all over Hearty cooperation spells success in any field of service or industry, and this fs what President Flliot invites, and shomd receive from all THE DRUMMER OF TODAY. There has a great change come over the commercial travelers of the conn- try, and while the old drummers up of trade are mot all dead, there is 2 new Brood in the field which seem to.create = different kigg of a sensation about ; ; salesmen have organized as the band of Gideon, they are story tellers they are different stories than the old 4. 1If they do not smoke any cigars, they do not know how Play cards as well, but they know Bibles better. At a Gideon con- just held at Toronto—an in- convention—it was stated placed 200,600 Bibles on the lounging and smoking i il 4 el than the olden time drum. to fraternize with and esmen; but if they leave feeling by their acts that and can be measured by Rule, they certainly are ‘aut of sight If the other good © feliows we've known. i 25 ! ! il i man in & beaver hat save: It to be one of two. beneath at the beach, thah it is to h way do’mich good. We | Row much better these | ummer that they may be mis- v shouldn't $12,000 look small to Colonel Bryan. He finds a thousand dollars’ worth of advertising a day none too mueh to keep him before the | public. \ The republican postmasters cannot get the democrats mad by resigning | from office, for that is what they have | been hoping they would do from the beginning. When it comes to getting into the limelight the president will find it diffi- cult to compete with the secretary of state, for Willlam is an expert at get- | ting there. etary of War Daniels is of the nion “woman’s suffrage is inevitable. a supreme military opimion this{ to be worth considerable to the advocates of it. A Boston man has succeeded in put- ting 7700 words on a postal card, Just to show what,can be done. Postmas- ters in the country offices would not have time to read such a card. The women of an lowa clty beauti- fied the place by combining and cut- ting and pulling the weeds out of the streets. The street commissioner had no money and seemed to forget he had hands. The wild-west pictures are the most popular movies. A report of sales shows that there were seventeen of them used in the past year to every one representing criminal semsational exploits. A Boston poet puts the secretary of state's case this way: “It's no use to try—1 cannot get by on a measley $12,- 000 a year, {o lecture is fun and I need the mon, that's the reason my friends, I am here!” In these days of public utilitles it | is strange no city has thought of hav- | ing municipal automebiles to take the people to the parks for a three cent fare. The political desire to help ‘the | working pecple ought to have suggest- ed thi: Southern Nigeria Chi The native chiefs from Southern Nigeria, who recently arrived in Lon- don to give evidence before the Com- | try, pald a visit the other day to Har- | rods’s Stores. Among tnem were | Adegboyega Edun, -the = highest in | rank of the party, wearing & gold cir- | clet round his forehead, and the Lisa | of Thesi. Adegboyega Bdun. who | Speaks English well, interpreted to the | others. They were araazed st all they | saw, ezpecially the diamonds and Jew-.| eiry, apd the automatlc Welte organ | in the music room. They were also | interested in the flsh, flowers frult. o policeman at the junction Broadway and Shetucket ment they made purchases for their bought gome books, a Teacher's Bible, and all -the works of Oscar Wilde. St. Paul's water board reports a sur- plus of $75,000. | ter noted in a recent issue wives and children at home They algo { back out vet. “And this Is a real clpher?" asked Jessio Ludlam; ; “You could on eclor, eyeins the typewriicr. “How does it work?" she demanded, all excitement. “It's” very easy” he explained, vyou know how. You see, I hit the ‘a’ and it prints p.’ 1f 1 hit the ‘@’ it prints a’. ¢ “¥es, § hoxt do 1 uge ic7 “Suppose he explained, “you get a letter from me that réads, “Vokk ngz ug g lt zitquast,” you take it to your machine and write it off. Now, what 'do you hgve?” -l Jessie clicked the keys for a moment and lifted the carriage with a cry. It says, “Will you go to the theatre with me?” she laughed. “Thg key prints wrong.” - “Exactly,” he agreed, “and I have the same sort of a machine, so that when 1 write a letter it comes out in cipher; but when I copy your letters they come out-in English.” “It's going to be such fun,” laughed Jessie. I shall have to write you ev- éry day. Frank smiled. Jessie must be singu- lariw Jacking in shrewdness if she sup- posed that he had had the typewriter machines changed for any other rea- son than that he knew that it would induce her to write every da. In some odd fashion Jessie had be- come absorbed in the study of ciphers and codes, She made a hobby of the fad, and Frank was quick to see the advantage it gave him. Me was not altogether welcome at the Ludlam house, his father and Jes- sie’'s had been old business enemies, and, since he could not call frequently, a letter was the next best thing. A typewriter in which she only had to see that,” she cried, “but write the words as they came to her | to have them turned out in cipher was | an attraction not to be lightly regard- ed, and Keeler had reason to congrat- ulate himself upon his shrewdness, when every day five or six page letters me to him—an odd jumble of char- acters which needed only copyin§ upon his duplicate machine to be remdered into English. . There were no loving messages, just | for Frank had mot vet | in Wall | a girl's chat, made his hoped-for strike street, and had not spoken. But even the commonplace recital of the inc dentals of her daily life pleased him, and if his letters gradually assumed a warmer tone, he could not be blamed. The noveity of the correspondence kept it alive even when Grank began to grow interested in the railroad mar- ket. Several small roads were about to be merged into one larger company. ach in its separate existence did not ameount to much. As a trunk line the combination would be important. In a whisper had come to him of the merger, but he was alive to the importance of the movement and he knew that could he only foresee which of the feeder lines were to be taken into combination and which were to be left outside he would be able, with very little risk, to make his fortune from the market. John Ludlam was behind the move- ment’ somewhere, and were he so in- clined he could put thousands of dol- s Frank's way. Instead, he, wrong, even sending hi man with _small confidentia commissions in the | hope that Frank would suppose that he .| had inside Informatien, and so act ap- on it himself. The first time Frank had argued with himself that it was wrong to profit by this information. since it was not his own, but a client’s and after- ward he had been glad he had done so because the market would have gone against him. - This bad shown him ‘the trap. It was for this reason that he wa particularly careful. when Job Cal came into his office with an order to un an entire conspiracy | machine,” declared Frank, had | | more than once sought to lead Frank P Se nuttifal fnference was that Ludlam needed it in his deals, since cge.gu his recognized broker, and Cole _passed the commission | on t “that the market might not beéome aware that B. W. and G. | was one of the stocks the combine | was king to corner. ) col'e“w--‘ not only Ludlam’s confi- dential man, but he was supposed to be the man Ludlam had picked out for a son-in-law, and as suech Frank doubly disliked him. Still he was courteous to the agent, and when Cole asked permission to use the typewriter his request was readily granted. - “I did not know you could use a ma- chine,” laughed Frank, as Cole . sat down' before the keyboard. “Certainly,” smiled Cole, “Nothing like @ clean impression, and it's been a great aid to me.” ¥rank turned back to his work and did not look up until an exclamation from Cole attracted his attention. Cole had th, carriage raised and was re- garding his work with disgust. “What's' the matter with this ma- chine?” he demanded. Frank started. Cole had used the machine with ke changed type. ‘ “That's one the boy broke and tried } to fix,”” he laughed, unwilling to tell the real reason. “Try the next one Cole crumpled the paper and threw {it in the waste basket and moved to the next machine, Scarcely had he left. the, room when Frank had the other sheet out of the waste basket. He simply had to copy the letter he! \!ound and trapslate the note into Eng: lish. “Dear Mr. Ludlam,” he read. “I have | Keeler all right. He seems convinced {that' § is B. W. and G. we want and that will leave the market clear tnr] the P. and S. we really need. That | with the B. and G. we have arrflngod; for with Mason and the F. M. and R.| rds will give about all we need. I think we shall have no trou- | ble in getting—" The letter stopped {abruptly. Cole had found th¢ machin {at_fault, and it told Frank enough. | get money in Wall | vs how, and by the | next_afternoon carrying | several thousand s| | Somehow the mai grew stronger in those stocks and within two "days ! his operations showed a cle: profit of {half a miilion on the stock he had sold again, to,say nothing of that which he retained. | On the third day he sought Ludlam. | The manipulator was in no amiable | | mood, but he was gracious enongh to | Keeler. | | “I suppose you want to clean up | that B. W. and G! he said shortly; “Cole has that maitter in ch: X H No” said Frank. evenly, “that goes {to Cole. T have rounded up about a | | thousand shares. I could have bought more, bu vou see, I! had a tip to buy | other ares and could not give th | commission much attentiort. 1 | here shares in stoc actually want to the extent of'$237,870. ell them to from ¥ is easy to | to | paia |7 “Plus commi | “Plus commiss Jessie is the commiss “or half a minute th v abso- lute silence in the office. Ludlam dis- liked Frank on account of his father, | but to let the deal go now would mean !the loss of a million. If Frank had | been shrewd’ enough to get the secret {of the deal he was not unworthy of | the daughte: Ludlam reached for the | stocks. “Two hundred and thirty-seven rthousand, eight hundred a v y | dollars, plus commission. Ask Jessie, | But Frank thought It more in keep. [an’ to_propose by cipher.—St. Loui: | Globe-Democrat. d Keeler. <3 ¢ ffered at evenigreater reductio Floor this week—Come today ductions. $9.69. $6.00 Hammocks, .reduced to $ CLEARANCE PRICES ional Bam- At 85c—Size Sx8 feet, National Bam- boo Screens, value $1.10. ze 10x8 feet, National Bam- s, value $1.39, At $1.19-Size 10x8 feet Green Dyed Bamboo Screens, vaiue $1.65. At 55c—Colonial Rag Rugs, Size 24x36 inches, value 69 Jat o8 Colonial : Rugs, size 30x60 inches. value $1 At $1.49—Colonjal Rag Rugs, size inches, value $1 36x72 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. The Browntail Moth Rash. Mr. Editor: Perhaps a word from a sojourner in New Hampshire will add emphasis to Mrs. Dodge’s splendid let- of The Bulletin. Although a recent arrival Hampshire, I am already from “browntail” r ingly corroborate her words about its unpleasantness. If the public care so little about trees that they are unwilling to m: efforts to save them, surely when a matter of personal suffering they will take immediate action, To a_ nature lover the destruction caused by various moths here is mos in New sufterer | distressing. Once beautiful forests and froitful orchards are stripped of all foliage, many in dying condition. In driving one passes acres of trees so denuded. We haven't been as persistent in fighting the elm beetles as we should bave beem. Let us now, contrary to the old saying, provi business is our business and make every effort to rid our city of its latest pest. NATURE LOVER. Hudson, WATCH YOUR STEP! BY THE CONDUCTOR Worrying. “Mebbe ‘Worry kills more people’n work,” but I bet th’ man that horrows $10 an’ worries 'bout it pays it back quicker'n th’ mutt that don't. Worry is good for & fellow. It's a sure sign he’s a human bein’. Fish don’t worry none. Takes brains to worry. When you hear a guy say, ‘Let th’ other fel- low walk th' floor,’ S ten to one he ought to be walkin' it himself. They's two kinds o’ worry. One of ‘em is wor- ryin’ over what you done an' th’' other isworryin’ over what vou're gonna do. Nobody but crooks worry over what they done- already, an’ nobody but honest people worry over what they gonna do. “Seme folks think this'd be a better place to live in if nobody worried. That's where youe wrong. If things was Dit off like a cigar clipper done it this world'd be no place for me an’ vou, Half th' fun o’ livin' is cause you don’t knew what's gonda happen next. If 1 thought th' same mutts with th' same faces an’ talkin’ th' same words an’ wearing th’ same ciothes'd get on my car tomorrow moon I'd go back to plowin' corn, “No, sir, when people quit worryin’ itll be when they all wear 10 shoes an’ give th’ same horse power laugh. So long’s some gor splay fpet mittee on Lana Tenure in their coun- | an’ some got ‘tootsies’ you can’t count | on “em Kkickin' alike.. An' so long’s some cackle an’ others heehaw you got to. keep guessin’ what they gonna do. Worryin’ is jus’ not bein' sure. What right’s me an’ you got to be sure any person’d do like we would? If nobody worried they wouldn't invent nothin.' It nobody stayed put, like a checker on 4 checkerboard, i1s mutts'd still be ‘eatin’ raw-meat an’ sleepin’ out in th' rain like Adam and Eve. If I and | hadn’t worried till I couldn't set down I In the silk and musiin depart- | couldn't get up nerve to ask Lizzie to | States. marry me. Danny Lynch says Lizzie'll 1 should worry, “Don’t gtand in th' door, please! “Tll tell you, ma'am, when your street comes. Don't worry! “Come on! Come on! Lively! ‘Watch your step!™ sh, and can feel- | that evervbody's | The Best :Room. When I was a boy, in Illinois every house had its “best room.” It was where ‘“company” sat, ludie who came to call dressed up i Sunday clothes, and when he made’ his sit_and , Prayed with the family, and the law- !ver’ when he came to ‘get mother to sign papers, and the book agent wh cher At $6.19—Colonial Rag Russ, feet, 6 inches x 10 feet, 6 value $3.00. size 7 inches, ! IAt $7.89~—Colonial Rag Rugs, size 9x12 feet, value $10,50. sold us “Mother, Home and Heaven. | The room was the pride and glory | {of the house, and nearly useless. { The explanation of the best room' is |this: It is an expression of the desire | that the world should know us, not as what we are, but as what we are sup- | i posed to be. { The whole struggle for “respectab- {ility”. may be summed up as an in- |stinetive ‘effort to conceal our real sely Most of what is known as Dbut a rattle and mixture of respect- | ability, a parade of. masks, a_game in | which by a mutual :understanding each plays a part. | | To be genuine, frank and real is to be_coarse, ill' bred \or crude The “best room”'idea pervades us. | What is the religion of most of us but {a “best room” affair, to be used upon | occasions and not ~for the = daily warmth of living? With how man: of your acquaint- ances have you ever got farther than | their “best room? With how few | ! men or women do you talk with whom | {you feel that you are entering freely tinto the sitting room, dining room and i kitchen of their minds? | | In other words, we are acquainted with many and know very few. THOROUGH WORK How a Norwich Citizan Found Freedom from Kidney Troubles. It you suffer from backache— From prinary disorders— Any curable disease of the kidneys, Use a tested kidney remedy. Doan’s Kidney Pills have been test- ed by thousands. Norwich people testify. Can you ask more convincing proof of merit? Mrs, Jared Hewitt, Palmer Street, { Norwich, Conn. says: “For several months I was botherea by pains acry the small of my back and from | other symptoms. I knew that my kid- |meys were at fault. About a month |ago I obtained a box of Doan’s Kidney Pills at N. D. Sevin & Son's Drug Store and soon after using them the pain in my back disappeared and my | bealth fmproved. I do not hesitate to | recommena thia excellent remedy.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New YorR sole agents for the United | Remember take no other. puim el oo MBS S WHER you want to put you ness Defors the public, hare ss no s afum bettr than {Rrolgh the adverds ing columns of The Bulletin the name—Doan's—and At 14c—Plain white M to 14¢ a yard from 19c. 22c. At '16c—Scotch Curtain Madras, 36-inches wide in cream color, and a variely of handsome designs—reduced to 16¢ a yard from 25c. 25 a pair. urnishings This is the Season when we cléan house. It is, likewise, your ppportunity to supply your needs for Summer Home Furnishings at positive and substantial savings, We make these emphatic mark-downs with a view to bring about a quick clearance. We believe that there are many ouseholds in Norwich and vicinity who will find it to their advantage to avail themselves of these emphatic reductions. We mention only those items which-we have in sufficient quantities to supply all coming within a reasonable time. There are many smaller lots, not mentioned which will be ns. If you have hame needs to supply, then visit -our Third if possible. . : CLEARANCE PRICES ON COUCH HAMMOCKS Ourentire stock of Couch Hammocks at emphatic re- We mention only a few items: $14.50 COUCH HAMMOCKS, REDUCED TO '39,69 Couch Hammocks fitted with box sprfngs, upholstered on ifall, steel construction, and made of heavy 12-ounce khaki |fcolor canvas—our regulat $1 4.50 Hammocks, reduced t $10.50:COUCH HAMMOCKS, REDUCEb TO $7.89 Couch'Hammyocks, with 5-inch box, Imperial stitched-edge mattress, covered' with heavy 12-ounce canvas, all steel con- | Istruction—our regular $10.50 $6.00 COUCH:HAMMOCKS, REDUCED TO $4.59 Couch Hammocks, made with iron frame, rustless springs, soft mattress and hung with galvanized chains—our regula Hammocks, reduced to $7.89. Asmae ON PORCH SCREENS “Komi” Gauranteed Porch Screens,| reduced as follows: At $1.35. rrow Slat, size 6x8 feet, value §: At §1.76—Narrow Slat, size Sx8 feet, value §2.30. At $1.69—Wide Slat, size 5x3 feet, value $2, At $265-Wide Slat, size 8x8 feet, value $3.25 CLEARANCE PRICES ON SUMMER FLOOR COVERING| At $5.79—Size 9x12 feet Wool Fibre Rugs, value $6.75. At $6.95—Size 9x12 feet, figured Crex Rugs, value $8.25. At $7.19—Size 9x12 feet Wool ana Fibre Rugs, value $5.95. At $7.89—“Waite” Grass Rugs, size 9x12 feet, value $9.75. ICLEARANCE PRICES ON CURTAINS AND DRAPERY ¥ MATERIALS arquisette, 40-inches wide—reduced At 15c—Cretonnes, pretty striped effects, colors are pink, blue, yellow and lavender—reduced to 15c¢ a yard from $2.25 LACE CURTAINS REDUCED TO $1.69 Lace Curtains, in a great many attractive designs, fully patterns to choose from—Materials are Scotch Madras Scrims, and Nottingham Net—regular $2.25 Curtains at $1.69 and MONDAY AUSUST 4th Whitney Opera Co,, HE Wi f Sam Original Theatrs & 60—PEOPL Seats on’ THE DAV restion F_C. RLD COMIC OPER: - THE CHOCOLATE SOLDIER - played Colonial Theatre, PG.ulno Theatre S8ymphony Orchestra, Di r.:t.nr Signor DeNovollis Whi Thursday, P ts tney,: Present ston July 3ist, at 10 Regular tra sengers will transfer to Norwich L. Newport 1.30 p. m. $1.0 ROUND TRIP ONLY Number of tickets strictly lpmives. EXCURSION TO NEWPORT Via Rail and Steamer Tbursday, July 3lst leaves Norwich at 9.10 a. m. for New London where pa ine amer, $ No tickets sold on morning of excursion it limit is previously reached. NEW YORK, NEW HAVEN & HARTFORD RAILROAD City of Lowell, 1.00 due AM AM *9:00 **9:15 1030 10.40 1145 12.00 115 1.2 P.M. P.M. * Daily, except Sundays. Norwich New Lon Watch Hill . Block Island Ly. Due AND Watch Hill &0 Adults, 50; Children, 250. UMNER TOFS Steam, Mechanical and Sail Boa Sand Toys, Pails and Shovels, Wag- ons, Celluloid Dolls and Teys, Baskets, Para: Fans Pennants, Kites, Paper Napkins, Lunch Sets, Etc. MRS. EDWIN FAY Franklin Square Pl [There is a great varie on the market but ther brand made for quality, that sell the famous THE PORTEOUS & MITCHELL CO. ty of Carpenters tools e is only one complete® is the reason we KEEN KUTTER Brand. The KN AUTTER Trade Mark or the words KEEN KUTTER on any tool are an absolute guarantee. Buyra tool you will know you are THE HOUSEHOLD Bulletin Building, under this brand and getting the best. 74 Franklin Street Dr. Jafkson's “Natural Gum” sets of teeth abso- lutely defy detection. GOLD FILLINGS $1.00 UP, OTHERS 60c. Dr. JACKSON, Dentist ccessor to THE KING DENTAL coO. 203 Main St. next to Boston Store 9 a. m, to 8 p. m, Phone 1282-3 Steamer Block Island WATCH HILL and BLOCK ISLAND impossibl mouth. only to be had in aim is to give the possible guarantee for 10 ye: THE NEW " Unt Block Island Watch Hill New London . Norwich .. DAILY SERVICE til Sept. 2, to AM AM \Lv. %215 **8.15 . 345 5.05 7.00 *+ Sundays only. ock Adults, B party TANTIG 15 cents one Norwich P! London Pier, Thames Navigation Co., Norwich, Conn. SPECIAL EXCURSION TICKETS Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, July 7 to August 29, \Island né'm’nn 75¢; Children, 4Ce. Shore Dinner Houses aud Bathing Beach near landings at Watch Hill and Block Island. For further information, e of company on Shetucket Street, Norwich. NEW ENGLAND STEAMSHIP €O, C. J. ISBISTER, Norwich, Agent.” rates, apply at office Excursion Boats and SHETUCKET Between Norwich and New Landon. A boat leaves either city 3 and 11 & .m, 1,3 and 5 p. m. daily. Fares— way; 25 cents round trip. ier, Franklin Square; New foot State St. FULL SET TEETH My reputation for making the most ates is well satisfied. cost. Iite-like, finest fitting and best wearing known. No set ever leaves my office until the, patient is fully broken. This rnie is never In addition on set is the nat- ural gum, the use of which makes it to detect false teeth in the s wonderfnl invention is office. My sole est at the least I give my personal with uii wark. This is the only office in Norwich (undeter where gold crowns and teeth without plates ones) are inserted positively without pain. ctable from natural Dental Nurse in Attendance. Painless Extraction. FERTILIZER GROUND LIMESTONE AIR SLACKED LIME. Brick, Cement, Sand, Lime, all hard Plasters and Prepared Roofing. t market. Full line of Sewer Pipe. Roofing Psint in the THE UPSON WALL BOARD WATER HANDY INEXPENSIVE AND IN IS PROOF SIZES. Largest Storage Capacity in City A N. CARPENTER Tel. 171 23 Commerce St. DAN MURPHY & co, Ales, Wines, Liguors and Cigars Gorner of ‘Watar and Markes Str. WHITE ELEPHANT CAFE| Most TOM'S ars Try and have 87 218 Main Str THOS. M. SHEA, Prop. Next to e DEL-HOFF HOTEL Eurepear Plan Grill Room open until 12 m. HAYES BROS. Props. ' SAVE THE PIECES Are Good. THESE ARE BETTER 1-2-3 5c CIGAR GOOD FELLOW 10c CIGAR them and see. Franklin St. lace Cafe a new Lei made by A. SPEAR, 2 Optometrist and Optician, eet, opp. Franklin Square over Somers 52 STYLES. MRS. G. P. STANTON, Shetucket St al 0