Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 22, 1913, Page 4

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Eorwich u iletin and Goufier. 117 YEARS OLD. PR 0 i B e RS Subscription price, 126 @ week; 500 & month; $600 a y-—- Entered at the Postoffice at Norwics, Conn, as second-class matter. Telephone Calis: _ Bulletin Business Officc. 450. Bulletin Fdiiorial Rooms, 353 Bulletin Jeb Office, 35-2 Willimantic Office. Room 2, Murray Building. Telephone 210. " Norwich, Friday, Aug. 22, 1913. The Circulation of The Bulletin The Bulletin 4as tae Iargest eir- culation of amy pager in Easters Commesticut, irem three to four tUmes larger thum that of n Norwich, It s delivered e over 3,000 of the 4453 houscs im Nor- wich, and read oy nimety-three per cent. of the peeple. im Wimdham i€ tn delivered te s canwidered the local dafly. Eamtern Commeeticat has forty- ulse towss, omc hundred five postofice district: rural free Ihe town oute CIRCULATION 1901, AVerage..cceecrccccncacs 4412 1905, avarage 5,920 Week ending Aug. 16 8'658 Have The Bulletin Follow You 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 touch with home affairs. Orders should be placed with The Bulletin Business Office. HUERTA MISINFORMED, Provisional President Huerta is fol- lowing an unwarranted course in the belief that the people of this country are not back of the administration in its endeavor to secure a proper adjust- ment of the existing trouble in Mexico WEIGHTS AND MEASURES. There is nothing in which the public is more vitally interested and in whic] it should manifest the mecessary con- cern than in the requirements for and use of scales and measures which will give correct weight and quantity. The old timie tales of sanding the sugar, adulterating the coffee and watering the milk are all ed in the modern method of dealing out short measure by the ability to manipulate the scales, There is only one intent where short measure and false scales are maintain- ed and the need of checking such fraud is general. The cost of living is high enough without being obliged to pay for something Which is not re- ceived and when a Massachusetts court fined a peddler $25 for using a scale which gave short weight of a quarter of a pound, it only pointed out the need of the strictest attention to the testing of weights and measures as a protection to the purchasing pub- lic. Such deception exists because of a laxity on the part of the sealers of welghts and measures and the failure on the part of the public to demand the seal as a guarantee of test and approval, Short weights are not only a swindje but a rank injustice against the honest dealers who give full weight and measure, yet are subject to the loss of trade through the deception which the fraudulent are able to make be- cause of the easy minipulation of the scales. Competition is healthy when it is fair, but it ceases to be competi- tion when incorrect scales are main- tained. CHARITY'S GREAT WORK. Every city which is blessed with a charitable organization for taking care of the many forms of distress must realize the great need which ex- ists not only of relieving such, but of doing much work of a preventive char- acter as will correspond to the effect- ing of a pound of cure through an ounce of prevention. It is such a view which the United Charities of Chicago takes as set forth Prof. Bains, the geologist. was not a bit absent-minded. He was rather for- getful, but the two are not synonymous. He was 50 years old when he came to the village of Rocky Ridge to pass a month studying certain signs to signi- fy the age of the earth. If he had been absent-minded, he would have stopped short at Grafton's Fall or gone on to Sandstone Hill. That he was forgetful was P! by his leaving his money on hi sser at his board- ing house in the college town when he came away. The professor had never married. He was suave and courteous and of fine appearance, and he made friends in Rocky Ridge at once. Most of the people laughed at the idea of his car- ing whether the earth was 100,000 or 10,000,000 years old an_ the exact figures would have no effect on the price of butter, but the laughter was good-natured. As Deacon Winfield summed it up at the postoffice: “He looks like a smart fellow, but if he wants to waste his talents climb- ing around among the rocks instead of swapping horses, why, it'’s his own business and there's no call for us to pity him.” The professor found a boarding place with the Widow Glynn, and thereby brought pique to the hearts of four other widows and an old maid, all of whom took summer boarders—when they could get them. No one had told *him of the other widows, or he might have tried to scatter himself around among them. In time he fet them all, and while they still held their plque they said he was a nice man. Prof. Bains got along in his investi- gations very well for a couple of weeks and then he struck a snag. He had about made up his mind that the age of the earth was 73,000,000 and some 0dd years, when he came across a stone that knowledge of geology apprised him must have been formed at a far earlier date. This find rather knocked him out. He was sitting on a big sboulder thinking the matter over when Farmer Stebbins, who had met him in the village, and who lived only a quar- in its vear book in answering some of its critics as to expense. Not only does it seek to continue the systematic labors of relieving distress and restor- ing the needy to a normal plane of life, but it strives to find the underlying cause of poverty and disease and to deal with them in a preventive way. 1t is readily recognized that such an organization through its work is prop- erly qualified to understand the op- portunities for preventing distress and that such efforts are more desirable and likely to obtain better results than entirely ignoring such cases until they have passed the preventive stage and become chronic. Wherever charitable organizations can go further than mere relief, or even rehabilitation and min- ister to the people it should have the united and hearty support of the com- munity. No greater charity could ex- ist than teaching and helping those ter of a mile distant, came tramping across a fleld to say:— “Well, professor, how goes it?” “I've struck a snag,”’ was the reply. “How 2" = “By discovering this stone. It's mill- jons of years older than the others around.” “Sort of a kid, eh? Does it change your figgers much?" “Very much, indeed, I confess that I don’'t know exactly what to do about o “Then Il tell ye. The old woman has got a biled dinner all ready to set on the table. You come to the house and help us eat it. Il bet you haven't had one in 20 years. Come and fill up and then we'll have a talk about this old eorth. I own 240 acres of her and T'll like to be posted. It was a good dinner. The profes- sor filled up. For 30 minutes or more the ham and potatoes, the cabbage and carrots made him uttely forget the age of the earth. Dinner finished at last, the two men liable to fall into it how to avoid dis- | 1osk chairs on the veranda and the tress. HEALTHY EXPORT TRADE. In the matter of production of raw material for foreign consumption this without bicodshed. From the time when the trouble gave its first indi- cation of seriousness the government's policy kas been against intervention. It has stood for the recognition of constitutional govermment in the re- public, but against the recognition of such methods as characterized the opening of the Huerta regime. It re- quires the protection of all foreigners in Mexico and seeks to have estab- lished a government in the republic through an early election which it can and will recognize. For Huerta tp be- lieve that the people of this country do not support the administration in this stand is folly. The firm position against the rec- ogmition of Huerta and the equally de- termined attitude against the sending of an army of intervention into Mexico are founded on the belief that every possible means must be exhausted for a peaceful adjustment of the revolu- tionary conditions and the restoration of order. President Wilson has under- taken the delicate mission in accord- ance with the higher and nobler meth- od of settling disputes, because it is not simply his, but the country's policy, and the quicker Huerta realizes it the better. EXPOSITION WILL SUCCEED. From present indications a number of the leading countries of Burope do not intend to enter the Panama-Pacific exposition for economic reasons, all of which Is perhaps best determined for themselves. The plea of (00 many ex- positions is ome which carries much weight when it is realized the amount which proper representation requires as the necessary investment. The dis- play of indifference which has been manifested will mean no little disap- pointment to the thousands who have emigrated from their native lands but who will expect to see them fittingly represented among the other countries of the world. Yet such decision as they make rests with themselv ‘There is nothing compulsory about participation. It is a matter of business judgment for there is foundation for the sensible bellef that benefits result from such expositions to the nations, and to those sections of the country which partici- pate. The decision to refrain from en- tering simply places n greater obliga-; tion for the success of the undertak- ing upon this country. It will mark one of the most important events in the world's history and American re- sourcefulness will not permit it to be a failure. The opening of the canal deserves proper observance and no withholding of participation therein by a half dozen foreign nations can place such a damper thereon as to be in- surmountable. The exposition must and will succeed. Instead of devoting his time against stirring up sentimient in opposition to impeachment. Governor Sulzer and friends could better devote their ef- forts to convincing the people that there is nothing to the charges which have been brought. ®ven though it was by a small mar- gin there is satisfaction in the fact that the greater number of baseball readers who were consulted in Chicago desire the stories of the game in plain English in preference to slang. A cut in the anthracite coal rates to Roston has been allowed by the Inter- state Commerce Commission, but the consumers will be lucky if it suffices to offset the increase to meet the Penn- sylvania state coal tax The Russian writer who says we will get Central America and Caribbean is. ‘ands. plainly indicates that he is lack. ing in his acquaintance with the United States policy in such matters. Scorching hot weather affects in- dustry but the northwestern farmers who are using their auto lights on thelr harvesters and working by night are abreast of the times country is showing a healthy condition compared to a similar period last year as gleaned from exports for the month of July, when the principal customs districts recorded the exportation of breadstuffs, cottonseed oil, food ani- mals, meat and dairy products, cotton and mineral oils to the extent of near- ly forty-elght million dollars worth while July of last year showed a total of but thirty-three millions. This ap- preciable increase is largely due to the increased exportation of wheat during that period ,over nine million dollars worth being sent adroad against a half million the year previous. This indi- cates the value of the bumper crop of last year. Meat and dairy products show an increase of two and a half million doi- lars and cotton a million and a third. July was a big month for exportation of wheat being the largest of any July sfnce 1901, while the increase in flour exports amounted to nearly a million The figures for July however do noy represent the same increase over last vear for the previous six months yet for the seven months of this calendar year. ending with July the value of the above-named goods sent abroad reacn- ed a total of over 486 millions. which is practically -the same as the cor- responding months of last year. Thus while July shows a marked increase the average thus far is but about nor- mal compared with 1912. EDITORIAL NOTES. There is no one who enjoys a re- union much better than the boys of '62. These are hard days for the potato bugs. They sizzle one day and are frozen the mext. to be putting in its hardest work just at present, in behalf of the vegetarians. Nature seems The United States don't seem to be having as much success against Huerta as the revolutionists are. The early capture of Thaw has over- come the discovery of him in all states of the union at the same time. Thaw will find he has quite a task on his hands if he attempts to con- vince Canada that he is a desirable. There were 116 suicides in the me- tropolis last month In spite of the many other avenues for leaving the city. Sulzer and Tammany are in the same sort of a controversy as.that which prompted the pot to call the kettle ‘black. There is nothing surprising about the fact that pictures of Sulzer and Huerta show them possessing the wor- ried look. Two governors ought to get Thaw back twice as quick but the friction from the double efforts may make it twice as long. If all of New Hampshire's sheriffs are of Deputy Kelsea's type, that ought to be a poor state for fugitives from justice to seek shelter in. Applications have already been re- ceived for the job which Thaw so un- ceremoniously left. It had advantage. which others readily understana, i o o opclie R With fifty thousand men repairing the roads of Missourl for two days it will be about time for the road bulld- ers to step in where they leave off. It would be a hodge podge fortifica- tion at the Panama canal if the gov- ernment should undertake to follow all the advice which is beins nfered to it. Even now Mn.;chu'mr 3 governor ha#n't reached the point where he is williag to say what ne intends to do. 11:; may still be sparring for an open- farmer lighted his pipe, his wife brought out a jug of cider, and the host began:— ‘How do you fellers figure that the airth was made ” The professor belonged to the school that believes this globe was at first a fragment cast off by some planet, and he was going ahead with his ex- planations when he was stopped with: “Hold your horses right there. Don't the Bible say that God created the heavens and earth in six days and rested the seventh?” And thereupon began a hot discus- sion that lasted the better part of an hour, and as the two shouted they had recourse to the cider. That cider was hard cider. It was oily. It had & twang to it. It was deceptive. Never in nis life had Prof. Bains drank a glass of hard cider, and here he was drinking pints of it. He had read every work on geology yet published, but he had not read that hard cider leads to in- toxication, and that a man once drunk on it stays so for 30 hours at least, and during that time he can make & fool of himself a dozen times over. The argument when the host discovered his guest's condition and drove him to the village and his boarding place. Some men whoop and cheer and want to die for nothing whatever to say, but simply looked wise. It was explained to the Widow Glynn by the farmer that the gentleman had a slight case of sunstroke, and that while it was not necessary medical to sleep as long as he wanted to. That tallk was all right, and the professor sought his ‘couch and stayed by it for 28_hours. What happened when he woke up? Why, he had had a hard cider dream running through his long sleep, That OTHER VIEW POINTS We should like to inquire: Are you going to do your Christmas shopping early? Thereby we claim the record in this state for timely mention of the matter.—New Britain Herald. Practice with the big coast guns Is well-nigh intolerable to dwellers In their vicinity, no doublt. head the protests against the army parctice-in the summer were the loud- est in their call for protection for the coast during the early alarms of the | war with Spain.—Providence Bulletin. Recognizing the basic appeal of the spirit of competition many county animals, correct judgment of ploughing, etc. A fair that has these features never lacks the educational element. The ambitious and success- ful farmers are found watching these rivalries with keen and critical eyes, rather than ringing canes of getting their fortunes told—New Haven Union. It i{s not enough to answer that the difficuity foreigners or illiterate Am- ericans have with our spelling is not an argument against simplifying it. The danger is the creation of the im. pression that spelling has by simplig- cation been made easy. It can never be made easy. If ever educators and pupils get the notion that it has been made easy, confusion worse confound- ed is at hand.—New Haven Register. to effect fusion is to fuse. The persistence of District At- toruey Whitmau's republican friends in trying to get him o accept a nomina- tion for mayor, looks from (his dis tance very like the same sort of par- tisanship that the disappoinied publican fusionists charge agai demorcratic supporters of But tife .district attorne has been pretty clearly The only way de ed He is likely to stay put. Sprinzield Repubiican. If Thaw_will only join the Pank- hursts in France or Castro in Vene- zuela or go into retirement with Henry Lane ilson all decent people wiil have reason to be thankful, Here is your hat—what is your hurry? Now mother Thaw can dance a jig and Emily Nesbit can throw more fesling h;w herAtl:nlol hlndl tdri‘w larger audi- ences, ogether 8 & good thi; Thaw ls Qut.—Middletown Sun. % hadn’t been finished their country when they have looked | upon the cider when it is hard, but the professor wasn't one of them. He had to have | advice he should be allowed | Yet it will | be recalled that the villa owners who dream was a reality to him. What it was transpired soon after he had left his' couch and had a bite to He went straight over to the widow and, without beating around the bush, he' said: “Widow Goldie, I drank too much hard cider the other day, thinking it a perfectly harmless beverage.” ' “My lamented husband did that once,” she replied. “I remember that I was thinking of you as I drank the last glass.” “That was nice of you.” “And, according to the best of my remembrance, I called here and told you I loved you and asked you to be my wife.” : “Oh, professor!” exclaimed {he blush ing widow, > “It’s this way, you see,” he went on. “I had no thoughts of marriage, but if I came here, and I think I did, and asked for your heart and hand, I shall act_honorably in the -matter. That is, we shall be married. Did I or did I not_selicit your hand?” ‘What a chance for the widow, who had been looking around a bit for the last three years! Never in her life again would a like opportunity ceme knocking at her door. She had only to say yes and the thing was done. But the professor was an honorable ma,n and she was an honorable wo- man, and she sighed and told him that she was away all the day he cdlled, and that he had got her mixed up with some other person. “Very well—very well,” replied the professor as he took his leave. “I don't think I was quite myself after imbib- ing that cider, but if I ask for any woman's heart and hand I shall stand by the proposal. Calls were made on the other widows in succession. In each case they had to deny that they had been proposed to, but it was a sacrifice for which they ought to have worn medals. A more honorable man than the profes- sor, and mere honorable women than the widows it would have been hard to find. There was an old maid in the case. She was the last onme to be called upon. She was the village librarian, and Prof. Bains_had smiled at her several times. He was smiling on this occasion, and she said to herself. “If he proposes I'll accept him in & minute.” But he didn’t propose. He had call- de to ascertaln if he had proposed while under the Influence of hard clder. “Let's see? Let's see” mused the librarian, as she rubbed her chin. “If 1 did I shall keep my That is very honorable of you. to what you said to me I can't say that I took it as proposal, but—' “Very well—very well. 1 am glad to find that you didn’t. but if you had—" The professor wasn't done with His consclence yet. As he sat at dinner with his landlady it suddenly struck him that it might have been she that be proposed to, while under the in- fluence, and he quietly asked:— “Mrs. Glynn, if I should ask you to be my wife— “I'd say yes.” she promptly replied. They were marrled a month later and are living very happily.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat, | prancin’ Lizzie's man. ‘The Wedding Day. d . “Me an’ Lizzie’ next Wednesday. Danny Lynch, he’s my best man. Lizzie ain’t keen about him. An’ I ain’t keen 'bout th’ girl she’s picked to stand up with 1 It's that rain crow sister o’ hern. If I didn't like Lizzie more'n all other girls put together I'd kick. I'm gonna tell Danny to make sister look down on th’ floor all th’ time, for if I get a square look at her, it's all off. T'll slap her face sure. We ain't, havin’ any- body else there but Lizzie’s maw an’ her Uncle Henny. ~An’ if ol Henny don’t loosen up an’ give Lizzie a good present, Danny's gonna steer him' to th’ wrong church so he'll miss it. I don’t want no presents, but that girl ought to have a lot of "em for throwin’ herself away on me. don't want no fuss made about th’ weddin’ an’ ain’t sendin’ out no cards. She says she beggared herself all her life sendin’ weddin’ presents to people she didn’t care enough about to go to their fune. ral, an’ she don’t want them kind o’ people sendin’ her junk. An' we ain’t gonna spend all th' cash I saved up runnin’ to Niagary falls to hold hands. “Some feilows talk about a honey- moon like it was th' last good time they'd ever give their wife. Me an’ Lizzie is hookin' up for keeps. She says, ‘Jerry, they’s only one kind of a widow, an’ that's a sod widow.' An’ 1 been goin’ with her so long, I guess she means it. If any gay female comes up 'longside me when I'm Tll cut her dead. If she keeps botherin’ me. Il say ‘Look here, woman, you're askin' for it, an’ you gonna get it. I'm gonna sic Liz- zls on to you. She'll make you hard to catch. If youw're a good sprinter you'll go so far in ten minutes it'll take you eight hours to come back.' Gee, I wish it was next Wednesday to-morrow. “Come on; there waitin’! ‘All on, now; all aboard! “Watch your step!” Roots Barks Herbs That have great medicinal power, are raised \to their highest efficiency, for purifying and enriching the blood, as they are combined in Hood's Sarsa- parilla. 40,366 testimonials received by actual count in two years. Be sure to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla Get it today in usual liquid form or chocolated tablets called Sarsatabs. Dr. J. M. KING DENTIST May Building Jan1TuWF come on! Deon't stand your easy selection. At 5¢ Colgate’s Turkish Bath Seap Imported Castile Soap Copeo Soap Lava Soap ms’ Shaving Seap Cheoluhpuflh’l Vaseline Johneon’s 1 oz. Absorbent Cotton Orange Wood Sticks 1 dozen Emery Boards Chamois Court Plaster, 3 colors 8 Drinking Clps 1 pint Ammonia At 10c Munyon’s Witch Hazel Soap Glycerine & vood Carmel Castile, de in Halifax molin Antiseptic Buchan’s Carbolic Colgate’s White Clematis Colgate’s Oatmeal Colgate’s Tar Colgate’s Vioris Colgate’s Monad Violet Colgate’s Tooth Pas Colgate’s Shaving Stick Colgate’s Mechanics’ Soap Paste Blue Seal Vaseline Osborne’s Peroxide Johnson’s 2 oz. Absorbent Cotton Daggett & Ramsdell’s Cold Cream Camphor fce Sulpho-Napthoi Pyramid Deedorizer Household Ammonia—quart Scot & Sanitissus Toilet Paper Tocth Brushes Chamois Skin Aluminum Drinking Cups - b o ‘Oi At he Trolleys Business Leai Center! ow Much Do Want To Pay? What size -have you room for in your grip when starting on your end-of-the-week trip? Popular standard Toilet Articles at small prices grouped at our Toilet Department in like manner for JUST REMEMBER WHICH GROUP horwica ou At 15¢ Genuine 4711 Rose Glycerine Soap Colgate’s Cashmere Bouguet Soap Colgate’s Coleo Soap Cake Soap in'Aluminum box Lavender Liguid Soap Williams’ Violet and C ti Talcum Powder st Colgate’s Talcum Powder in Eclat, Dactylis, Cashmere . Bouguet, Violet, 'La France Rase and Monad Vislet Mennen’s Borated 'and Violet Vantine’s Sana-dermal Bradley’s Woodland Violet Amolin Antiseptic Taloum Powder weddin’ comes off | On the TRAIL of the Sl:-igfg GAI(('i" THE LITTLE PIRATE THE RIOT Beautiful Reliance Drama Keystone and it Ri R REEL BRONCHO- Featuring an Old Man and a Clever Littie Girl Matinee Every A Cool Place In Day 5 Cents B R E ED Hot Weather _—— 2000 Ft.—“HONOR THY FATHER.”—2000 Ft. Immense Two-Reel Domestic Drama. “THE FLYING SWITCH,” Powerful Kalem Railroad Story “WHEN SOCIETY CALLS,” Delightful Vitagraph Feature “THE MIRROR,” Wonderful graph Scenic Play Five Big Recls—All Features—All Intensely Thrilling. TDAY-AUDIT O RI U M—-T0DAY RUSH LING TOY & CO. W. 8, LITTLEFIELD ., e + Mimio THE LAWBREAKERS ... Sensational 101 Bison THE ANIMATED WEEKLY and 2 CLEVER COMEDIANS * .. in a $25,000 Production 1,000 NOVELTIES at the BI§ BUNNEGTIGU FAIR ———— AND GRAND CIRCUIT RACES CHARTER OAK PARK, Hartford September 1-2-3-4-5-6 OPENS LABOR DAY A Host of Free Attractions—Grounds 23 |and Buildings Vastly Improved—Spec- tacular _ Fireworks' Display Every Night—Steeplechase Races—New Mid- way—Wonderful Agricultural and Farm Displays. $50,000 IN PURSES AND PREMIUMS Admission: Day 50c; Night 25c; CHildren under 12 Half Price. Sail from Boston PLYMOUTH (London) BOULOGNE (Paris) - HAMBURG ON PALATIAL STEAMSHIPS by Day Assuring Arrival in Paris S. S. CLEVELAND, Sept. 12 S. S. CINCINNATI, Sept. Hamburg-Am:rican Line 607 Boylston Street BOSTON, MASS. i Exoursions on All Railroads. auglsMWE Full Assortment - Fresh Mined COAL Including Steam and Blacksmith Great Variety Rough and Dressed LUMBER Windows, Window Frames, Cased Drawers, Shelves, Doors, Etc. Also Pole and Light and Heavy Extension Ladders Co. FULL SET = TEETH My reputation for making the most Iife-like, finest fitting axnd best wearing piates is well kuown. No set ever leaves my office until the patient is fully satisfied. This rule is never broken. In addition on set is the nat- ural gum, the use of which makes it impossible 1o detect false teeth in the mouth. This wonderful invention is only to be had in my office. My sole aim is to give the best at the least possible cost. I give my personal iarantée for 10 years with aii work g $9. This is the only office In Norwich where gold crowns and teeth without Dr. Jackson's “Natural Gum” sets of teeth abso- lutely defy detection. GOLD FILLINGS $1.00 UP, OTHERS 30c, Dr. JACKSON, Dentist plates (undetectable from natural ot ones) are Inserted positively without THE KING DENTAL CO. pain. Dental Nurse in Attendance. 203 Main St. next to Boston Store : 3. Painless Extraction. a. m. to 8 p. m. Phone 1282-3 DAILY SERVICE Until Sept. 2, to Steamer Block Island WATCH HILL and BLOCK ISLAND AM AM AM AM *9:00 **9:15 4215 4315 10.50 10.49 Watch Hill 1145 12.00 Block Island ..... 115 180 ¥ P.M. P.M. * Daily, except Sundays. Block Island Watch Hill New London Norwich Norwich . ** Sundays only. Riker's Tooth Powder Colgate’s Tooth Powder Sheffield’s Tooth Paste Osborne’s Peroxide Capsicum Vaseline Johnson’s Absorbent Cotton Tooth Brus! At 19¢ Woodbury’s Facial Soap Cuticura Soap Pompeian Massage Soap Woodbury’s Facial Cream Munyen's Witch Hazel Cream Sanitel Cream Stick Sanitol Shavin Sanitol Tooth Pawdor, Paste and Liquid Sanitel Tooth Powder, Paste and Kolynos Tooth Paste Swansdown Face Powder L Nail Enamel o Perspiration Powd th Brn:hu g et < o SPECIAL EXCURSION TICKETS Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, July 7 to August 29. Watch Hill <&V | Block Island RETURN Adults, 80; Children, 25c. Adults, 75¢; Children, 40c. Shore Dinner Houses and Bathing Beach near landings at Watch Hill and Block Island. For further information, party rates, apply at office of company on Shetucket Street, Norwich. > NEW ENGLAND STEAMSHIP CO, C. J. SUMMER T0YS Steam, Mechanical and Sail Boats, Sand Toys, Pails and Shovels, Wag- ons, Cellu.... Dolls and Toys, Baskets, Parasols, Fans, Pennants, Kites, Paper Napkins, Lunch Sets, Eta MRS. EDWIN FAY Franklin Square ISBISTER, Norwick, Agent. Excursion Boats IANTIC and SHETUCKET Between Norwieh and New London. A boat leaves elther clty 9 and 11 a.m. 1, 3 and 6 p. m. daily. Fares— 15 cents one way; 25 cents round trip. Norwich Pier, Frankiin Square; New London Pier, foot State St. Thames Navigation Co., Nerwich, Conn, 'Palacs Poo) and Billiard Pario's Six Tables—five pool and one Billlara Tables sold and repairing done at reasonable prices. Supplies at all timea. 49 MAIN STRE! , DR. F. D. COLES Veterinary Surgeon Office, HODGE'S STABLE Phone 10 Resldence 1095 phous

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