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Gorwich gh Hetin and Gaufier. 117 YEARS OLD. Subscriptin price, 126 « week; 50 a h: $6.00 a v- .,m;n.u at llle Postoffice at Norwicn, “u, as second-class malter. Telephone Calls: *mxn Business Office. 480, tin Ediorial igooms, $3-3e uu) etin Job Offic g, 35-2 “Wiiimantie Oftice. Room 2, Murray . Telephone 210. iorwich, Thursday, Sept. 18 1913, me Clrcuiatlon oi ing punelin e Buiicun tue lnrgest « auy paper im Easi aud trew three 1o four any 1w over in Nor- wineiy-theee pex le. im Windhas L6 ever HUU bouscs. wa of loenl cably. = ot iom Conae ticat, i s delivered 4053 Louscs reau the dveseu that of ‘u 1 tire veo PE TN aud [ places over i in an cae sered (e Lustern Connecident b tort srum, on. busdred and sixiy- istotfice disiricts, aud mixey CIRCULATION | | 1, average. ceee ceee 4,312 1905, average.eeeeeeenesen..§ 920 s 8871 L] fave The Bulletin Follow You aders of the BuMNetin leaving y for the seashor. ., mountains, ral resorts or Europe can have the Bullstin follow them daily and keep in touch with home affairs. jers should be ;:V’\ce.i with The Bulletin Business Offic BEEF AND THE TARIFF. wh prices itained has been pment of beef re. wn HUERTA'S M ESs;&E E. that in- meanir is his intention to re is good reason to first consid- £ h being nothing he could do ince the interests of plain, definite s the exercise ation of and complete ndly pointed untry fr rmer h whi in is he I er direction s c Mexico for the restora- n of in that republic, and sent is the one who can hasten it. Two million re to be planted on the national rves in Utah, Ne- vada and Idaho next year. It is about time Connecticut considered the ne- cessity of replacing what the chestnut tree blight is removing. With Thaw, a murderer, not guilty because of insanity, getting so much favorable comsideration, New York might anticipate a repetition in the Schmidt case if he could produce suf- ient mone: The idea of putting the baggage car the rear of trains as a sacrifice in of coliisions, might not bother 1se t baggageman, but think what would happen to the trunks, already roughly handled, The Coaticook efficial wno arrested Jerome and now geis into serious trou- e when he crosses the line, pNebably sees he point in reclprocity, LEGISLATORS’ PAY: In its support of the propesition of Inereasing the salary of the represen- tatives in the state legislature, the New Haven Register declares Tt will be econemy for the state to increase the compensation of legislators to one and two-thirds what it is at present, and then to elect proportlonately bet- ter men members of the general as- sembly.” Such is a view which cannot but re- ceive therough endorsement. Many are the instances where the men who | . are best fitted to serve in the general assembly are unwilling to listen to it, pecause of the sacrifice which it means and which they cannot afford to make. Every town should send its best men. men of standing and judgment, to rep- of the state saving of its money. Whatever the ktate can do to get capacity it is justified in the under- taking but it should be done with the avowed purpose of accomplishing such results. The best are none too good when It comes to promoting more effi- ciency and economy in operation in state business. Let the incre but let the towns realize the bility which it imposes select and support the best citizes In no other way can the desired benefit be obtain- ed, and the ste ze the deserved profit from its outl PRO"ER SUPPR ESSION Anticipating the decision in the in- vestigation of the plays which have aroused so much opposition in the metropolis, it was good husiness policy on e pa the man when they forestalled it by w wing and remodeling the productions. The pub- lic indignation which had been aroused however against such plays is not 0 be tisfied unless the pledges of the moters are lived up to, and the ohjectionable portions of such plays if not the plays themselves are eliminated. There are plenty of whole- some and edifying subjects for the both for ainment and profif, without r to the field of commercialized vice ere are too many lessons in every day big city life to require the placing on the stage of any such plays for moral purposes. v leave taste that ar more rmful than it can be beneflcial New rk has taken stand in this mat h must not be receded | f Those back of are desirous omplishing everything possible can and sh done in the proper wa A m deplored possi- i will be elsewhere New York has set is ry other city we llow. The samse in every city as ful effects of such EXTRADITION. Aldrich of New When T r awred that h decl making ion o man Lt in q an the re- m com- should = There resent it in the making of the laws Lflm and the spending and|yoy can't get things! better men to serve in that important | Thes ED‘TORl AL 7\ ans the e season. Tt s a 1t an fm- played in Thaw's ¢ vt care, but little sympathy for on the expense account. Pankhurst to have 1 his ¢ when the 1 in New of the Huerta n administration re when they are not the service demanded; and resign. New Yor is looking 1ip when it realizes that its hope lies in the port which is given the fusion ticket, weak though it is. Governor er ought to be a nch s ter of Governor Bald- win's idea of making the state pay campaign expenses. The man on the corner vs: Tt is amusing to see how hard it is for some people to get along without the open cars ¢ The democr: re more interested in the fact that they can control the currency legislation than they are in bill putting forth the best Tdison may think he can go longer without rest than other men, but he is trying an experiment in which fail- ure has its serious handicaps. the “Big change on ew Haven. So be it; as long as there is any change in behalf of safety, big or lit- tle, there's reason for thanksgiving. Congressman Donovan and some of the other state representatives in the lower house hold manifestly opposite opinfons concerning perfect attend- ance. Now that the pole line has been set- tled there should be no let up in the construction work until the Boswell avenue and Maplewood cemetery ex- tensions are completed. An increass in imported beef to the extent of thres million pounds may relieve the domestic supply, but there is no chance of attributing that in the high cost of llving to free trade, s Mrs. Rock—“My goodness, Carrie! Aren't veu up yet? And it’s 7 o’clock and you know it's the day of my bridge party! And {t's going to be the hottest day of the year! And I'm so afraid that woman won’t send the cake Her Sister (aged 18 and therefore ptimistic)—"“Well, everything’s done but the sandwiches, and that's only an hour’s work—" Mrs. Rock (in a sort of wail)—“Car- rie, you talk like a child! Don’t you know that always when yeu give a party millions of things to be done always turn up at the last minute? cially at a summer resort, where I almost had to brain the vegetable man to get him to promi that he'd bring lettuce! natives think the resorters are because they/ always want let- They think we stuff sofa pijllows crazy tuce! jdid I ever bring her along over herel ALL WEEK—The Talk of the To n—AL!. WEEK Homan’s Musical Stock Co. with Helen Farrington and Marten Toohey in a Repertoire of A LITTLE OF EVERYTHING THAT'S GOOD CATCHY BONGS8—PRETTY COSTUMES—DANCING SPECIALTIES N DOOR—Laughable Farce, and COUNSEL FOR THE DEFENSE—Dramatio Playlet. New Specialties. I MATINEE—ALL SEATS ... EVENING ..... 10¢, 1 Carrie, if you keep on being so delib- erate in Feluu dressed it will drive me craz You haven't a bit of sym- pathy—" Her Sister—My goodness May, I'm hurrying! I'm going out to hunt you some vines and things for the porch!” Mrs. Rock—"Well, be sure you don’t bring in any spiders on them. There were spiders on the decorations at the Wallops the other day and one got in that fat Mrs. Gordon's punch and she tipped over a table! You'd think a spider was an ogtopus the'way women act about them!” Frieda—"Please, ma’am, the olives and nuts aren’t in the groceries that came yest—" Mrs. Rock (with a shriek)—“What did I tell you, Carrie? This is just the beginning! I must telephone—no, the grocer’'s wagon from the village 4—REELS—4 HIGH CLASS PHOTO-PLAYS AUDITORIUM ;5% SPECIAL FEATURE Kiernan, Walters & Kiernan NEW SHOW TODAY with it. Now, what if he shouldn't |will have started on its rounds by this bring ti And my salad—" time! This comes of living eight miles Her What's the usé ofiwor- | from any civilized place and trying IN A BIT OF BURLESQUE ON SHAKESPEARE'S MACBETH rying? Hell bring it Or well use |{o do things! I've got to have olives! grape leave: oo S THE TWO NIGHTINGALES Mrs. Rock—“With these women | Her Sister—“T'll go get Tommy Betts N : 4 coming from the. Peabody place? I'd Iundrsend him to town in his machine® HOWARD & RYA Pretty Sister Team. die if T had to use grape leaves! Why, | Mrs. Rock—I just hate asking a they order things from New York and |favor of the Bettses! They're so dis- THE HARVEST OF FLAME l EHE IENAERED ERah San Francisco for a two table party | agreeable.” Thrilling 2 Reel Drama AND OTHERS it they happen to want them—they'd | Her Sister—“Pooh! That won't hurt never understand, never! They're the |the flavor of the olives any! And I sort that nothing ever happens to when ; might as well make Tom pay for the they give a party! And I just know |hours I entertain him on the front Frieda's going to fall ill at the last | porch.” FULL SET minute! he has that set look around Mrs. Rock (to her son)—“Oscar, her jaws that she always gets when |don't vou dare set foot on this porch ] T H I golng to have company! . OB, why |this morning! Tt's all =cleaned up, ready for the party, and—" y for g My reputation for making the most Oscar—“Aw, ma! I just want to B e~ whittle a little. Kin Johnnie Loomis ife-Hise Rusat Atiiug anid best peentitg LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. Hetch Hetchy. Mr. Editor /|Go on down to the beach and play! Hetchy, stated t ¥ Het v of ch Heteh; the High Sier creation been a thousand pec sast seven hundred have been an er v these | | | from the neighbors! enginee oldiers It is a mosquito which pour the flood wa snow is melting in the mount entrance to the ¥ ver of two « f dam, rds a s > these, now, | so | Ing two chalrs)- | My . | awtul and furnish n- ed supply of the purest | inefsco will expend on this I xty milli army engineers | have decided and most | avail and surely can’t be call 1pply y is v supplied by vately owned corporati who to supply any water one-third of our city territory and they with the aid of those who can be bribed those who can be nked or ca- joled ar to ¥ cisco its equipped inade- for twenty millions in value, as decided by court. The whole pro- inland of e Hetch our city the lack over the e had ble the tch Het 1 immense e beauties for in- ound the San Franc REFLI CliOAS EVERY DAY JA RESTING in this age that will be st We well enogh: w shirk- er will realized now be called to rest. > driv to toil f an ¥ morn to | | ablish their | © e is a peril vear hour that own. Their | e social re- n be done. 10se who can rest if who have lost the power of As there so there is an abil need cultivat both |* MR.LEWIS A. RIFFLE ¢ experience with coughs and colds that lead te nervousness and de- bility. ated. dur- ing the Summe because bow stomach order are prime auses in keep- ing a cold from getting well. Pe-ru-na. hasf very beneficial | laxative quali- es that neutral- Mr. Lewis Riffle. Its s tonie stem, nd tions. the thus invigorate the Mr. Riffle’s experience interesting at this time because it shows the cl ship there is between a ne down and a neglected cold. Pe-ru-na should be kept is especially of the year in home at all times, that a cold upon its first appearance may be treated promptly and successfully. This often SAV money and time, and what is more important, a great deal of vital- ity. Mr. Riffle, of 758 Gautenbein Portland, Ore., writes: “I have found Pe-ru-na_a most remarkable medi- cine for building up the tem and for curing coughs and colds. “I took it for four weeks a few months ago when I was all run down, nervous and debilitated, and it quick- ly restored my health. “I always keep it on hand, as a few doses will cure a cold if taken in time.” People who object to liquid medi- cines can now obtain Pe-ru-na Tablets. £ ATCHISI)N M. D, PHYSIC(AN AND SURGEON rvneclRocm 1, Second Floor, Shannon Bldg. Night 'phone 1083 ingredients tone up | the | plates is well known. 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 to detect false teeth in the mouth. This wonderful Invention |is only to be had inemy office. My sole aim come over'n whittle with me—" Mrs. Rock—*"Oscar, I can’t say what dreadful thing will happen to vou if I even lay eyes on you this morning! You're always begging to—so go on!" Her Son—"I don't wanta—" Mrs. Rock—"T'll shut you in a closet tm& minute {f you don’t g« And look is to give the best at the least possible cost. I give my personal at all the sand you've tracked in! My Lxu(mns Frieda! Frieda! Does that guniintes S5 JOLRANEN, with ki Mok look ltke a raincloud over there to THE NEW/ | you? If it should rain—and we've got to those extra tables and chairs Run like every- thing and bring them! Oh, things look horrid and soppy when it rains! Why couldn’t it put it off a day! Gra- 5, I've forgotten to phone for flow- nd then those sandwiches to get Dr. Jackson’s “Natural Gum” sets of tecth abso- lutely defy detectlo GOLD FILLINGS sl 00 UP, OTHERS 350c. Dr. JACKSON, Dentist , Successor to THE KING DENTAL €O. 203 Main St. next to Boston Store 9 a. m. to 8 p. m. Phone 1282-3 $o. This is the only office iIn Norwich where gold crowns and teeth without plates (undetectable from natural ones) are inserted positively without pain. Dental Nurse in Attendance. Painless Extraction. Frieda (breathing hard after carry- “1 think I'll lie down. head aches Mrs. those Rock—*Carrie!” Never mind vines. Ceme help with these :ndwiches! I never was so hot life, ‘neve Do you suppose = = 5 akes will get here? And there l in my hose are and sion to warning dreams. When going out to the Zulu war {n Africa, he twice dreamed that he was shot and then the covers to tie on the card tables STORIES ABOUT DREAMS. the prizes to wrap _woman gets the up—if that first prize St. Augustine recerds that a disciple | She always gets 'em! | of his, having to lecture on Cicero's | buried. On arriving at Durban he re- thousand sandwiches to | rhetorical books, was baffled by a cer- | ceived a letter from his mother telling make and T've got to get dressed in |tain passage. He slept, and in a dream | of a dream identical with his own, and half an hour exactly I could cry, |his master, who was really far away | begging him not to go to the front. He I'm so tired! I’ hed se fast that |and uncenseious of the whole thing, | obeyed her injunction, and engaged an- I'm so tired! shed so fast that | appeared to him and expounded the | other artist to go in his place. The un- I'm all trembling! I ache in every | passage. In 1893 Herr Hilprecht, pre- | fortunate substitute was almost the bene! And I came to the country to |fesser of Assyriology in the University | first man killed in the fighting. T Carrie, you finish those sand- | of Pennsylvania,was worried over two| Rebert Louis Stevenson wes a won- wiches while I squeeze the lemons! |small inscribed fragments of agate| derful dreamer and ecould dream in se- I'd forgotten 'em! Oh and the ice hasn't | found at Babylon, of which he had re- | quence, centinuing a dream from the come! Oscar! Oscar! That child is {ceivd drawings. In a am a tall, thin | point where it had b reken off the never around when he's wanted! | Assyrian priest told him they “belong- | night before. It was in this way that ear! Oscar-r-r!” ed together,” being portions ef an in- | the greater part of “Jekyll and Hyde” Sister—“Pull yourseif together, |scribed vetive cylinder which had been | was put together, Dante, too, ig said ou're getting hysterical.” cut up to make earrings for the statue| to have dreamed many cantes of “The d | Rock (twenty minutes later, as ; of a god. The professor found next| Divine Comedy,” and Voltaire records est arrives)— glad to | day that the fragments did fit and| how the ‘“Henriade!” came te him in No, voure not a bit eariv! | make a centinuous inscription | sleep, ‘Tdeas occurred to me” he I've been ready for hours!"—Chi- | Melton Prior, war artist, always aver- | wrote, “in spite of myself, and {n which News | red that he owed his life on ene occa- | I had ne part whatever.” Millinery -2 - - K- K- B B NC- I LI I - FALL OPENING The most beautiful and authoritative Fashions for Fall and Winter in an exceedingly interest- ing and comprehensive exhibition, on Thursday, Friday and Saturday. MILLINERY SUITS DRESSES COATS We cordially invite you to be our guest on these Special Exhibit Days and we want you to feel free to look around, admire and enjoy the beau- tiful and correct Fashions for Women, Misses and Children for Fall and Winter withous 1n any way being obliged to make a purchase. WE BID YOU WELCOME . GOTTHELF &8 C “The Store of Good Values” 94-100 Main Street —~ -