Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 18, 1913, Page 12

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

enoughl But, sakes alive, must | soil, studied his climate, adapted a | & : BT : mk:‘lnlntlflltlncom- at $2 | to the conditions he was un- UM ( @ hundred. Are 32 bills so plenty and followed it with intelligence 21 b with us all that we'd rather pay them ; 22 out to western ‘armers than P M - them ln our own pockets? | don't know whether all of us New 5 ‘The Eigihth Wonder of the World. England farmers coul raise whea ; 1 St of s little Fared o€ Town thas | Bt i of (noC, The factitar sorae. 5,400 Dizgrees Above Zero. i sixty acres in New York state which | body else says we cuét 1t proct, g 3 310 Deg; W is bringing in its owner an average of | The fact that dozens of farmers right rees Below Zero. heti more than 32,600 & year from wheat, | here in-Connecticut actually are rals- A REVELATION OF MODERN SCIENCE ! potatoes and clover. When he took |ing corn, bunkum corn, ~profitable CIENe it the best its bed-t acre v;ould ;io was | corn, esen s to be evidence of just the Blood Rdhpe of Ch.m, Edwin All.flt less than a hundred bushels of pota- | opposite. ¢ ¥ ? — X ioos and it s im0t i e e In O’Brien from Galway in a.2-Reel Powerrs—Psychologica! Driama enough to pay for harvesting. Now |out of ten 1d re - 2 L it yields regularly about three hun- | corn and oats and such like crops that . dmfiebushef; of potatoes and from | our farm needs demand. And that we Excellent Novelty Show Appearing Here Today, S‘t“"ky thirty to forty bushels of wheat per fiould }:alse them cheaper than we can £ 5 & . Wh the ‘esent owner took it uy them. 5 s X l‘frceou]dn'te:ny “sprown taxes: now it But it is more than hke!,\' that we e e S — — maintains a family, pays the farmer | couldn’t do it. just by ").‘""”‘““nghitfull? Pm sure I'm not running -the good wages, keeps & hired man all the | methods of our grandfathe et | T T e oinie e 2 7 ra help in harvest | they failed and had to stop suggests | : u q ‘ THE BLESSING IN DISGUISE IS SLOW TO LY ear T o Prr homscs and ather | to me that thelr methods were wrong, | Jifferent. % BT B 7 stock, and, after doing all this, pays | not that the soil had become unfit. Pl oy 348 141 REVEAL ITSELF something like fourteen per cent in- ; S “On, ves, I meant to tell you that terest per anmum on the original in- | don't think this year's bad crops you'll ve to put the maitresses out HONMAN’S "Usiea GO, The First Company that playved hene and captivated theitown. Big- ger and better than ever with Miss Farrington, Mr. T. F. Thomas, Mr. vestment and the cost of all subse- | were gotten up solely for our good.|of the upper berth into mine. I'm not quent improvements. But, if we've' got the forasight ~and | ccustomed to sleeping on a hard mat- is s au) thrift which our New England an- and I simply cannot rest on one. e one ‘turning de- | .. Le began growing wheat his | cestry entitle us to, they will set us | “Yes I know you can do it. It's (Written Specially for The Bulletin.) | which tells A Connectic a s P feat into victory or a disaster into | Ry 9 . d ki e isn't 8 vay to | 5 . RS S g droughts and the comstant raise in |koetic license They don't happen iIn | Cos™ v "5" for, they said. They | which has come so hard upon this, | "“If f pay for the whole section? Well, MONDAY AND TUESDAY, LODGE NIGHT—THE BIG COMEDY es may eventually prove a | fact. Defeat is defeat, and disasteris:CoUld buy el 1t 8 :ason. In that wi o Eastorn farmers. St will | disaster. 1t doesn’t alter their natures: knew, because they had tried it and | this season orce them to return to grain-grow- |0 change their names | But it is sometimes practicable for ng if | Men, not being wholly helpless peb- ‘s | bles, to foresee’ disaster and avoid it; they may |I'm certainly not goin pay for the given it up. Well, he tried it, and|become, if not blessings in disguise, at | whole section. Ill speak to the con- | found that they were all wrong. But|least stern schoolmasters of wiser guetor. % he didn’'t follow their methods. He | farming. i f ‘Porter, you'll have to do something struck cut for himself, studied his THE FARMER. | to stop those children from running | up and down the aisle. They make such a nolse and when a person’s as and you'll have to the z t the night | pr Today—ARYHUR CHA ¢ TERDON GO. Matinee 2.30 .. .OUR NEW MINISTER Ewening 815 SATAN SANDERSON of you que Let's bit. | or to take a new road to another end | when defeated in the campaign they e < r ervous as I A whole 1ot of the “blessings” which | Siart w Speat o that we farmers get are what the poet| That's about what we mean, when i too. If that c Talled “blessings - tn | dieguise. They | we talk of “blessings In disguise’— § | 5 as it Theatre 1ICoionial are often so completely disguised that | those of us who really mean anything Pt e e M we take them for disasters when they | ahd are ot merely | parroting what G SR N R s rican be CHARLES McNULITY, Mar. EVENINGS 100 heave over the horizon. Indeed, a | We'Ve heard others say. 3 FOUL OYEE e e ———————————— A bs . . queer loaking people? There - . e = s00od many of them keep their dis- | i > Running For Office and Meeting the Cost of Same—When 050 ookine man in the ear. T iccaA MIDNIGHT MESSAGE,” Kalem —2 Reels Hilfes O Dot RAYS ore By v TRt pecenk dransinwand teeals, 8§ I you noticed? Well, I suppose I'm more ' Featuring Alice Joyce and Tom Moore anage to 4 5 E o excep of winter wheat, . F. S Sen ison—Honoring Men Active observan _people, a EXTREMITIES, i Featwring Maurice Costello, Vitagrap! S8 Sontertal Pecfinncity 1t would crop in the country seems to D. F. Steere Was t to Pri . e e st [“‘rf§i’4‘\uyi*‘l§““?’;[ “SCENES IN GINGAPORE,” ..........ec.........Wonderful Scenic Film ake at least two genera S nd a ort. The premise is for a sharp . . 3 BYIEDE (GCORBLC vy . TSt |8 “SPELL OF TKWE PRIMEVAL,” .. gt .Big Automobile Sensation {ixh_w,w,\,m AL g oo Gy ke dost ot in School Affairs—New Parklet a Decided Improvement. felammt fei L Jooking ||| “DAYS OF THE PONY EXPRESS/ .. b W are, Do nearly all grains. It certain " Biograph All Star Fil t coming into the HIiS SON 1 the habit of raisin : feed We've come to upon ' near,. and according to some of the stated that he preferred the honor but I v out west to do our work for statements filed men who were candi- should go to some of the good men the time, “everything being for the bes Whose “best lking to the » I did not really trace of blessing” showing y > s of s of t as if we might y have to pa; | young man . &uh the mflukf of some of them. SRSARG A AR B N{’m{" Y 'T hadn't noticed him before. t Fhore's 4 grest deal of loose tall > rates for other rations. { /The time Limit for candldates for|Dr. John C. Stanton, for many years haye got on at the last stoy I f | i FRCA SR e 3 S o T The ew Fngland farmers have got political offices and the treasurers and the efficient president of the board of I saw rather a nice looking man get- 1 Tl g e thes b ror the il 3 bur own chairman of commitiees 15 drawing ugh he modestly ting In with a dowdy lookfhg worr LITTLE THINGS YOU WILL NRED FOR YOUR AUTO farme: This is a rather ( COTTER PINS bR Ge Lelonol us. Now it looks f we were going dates for some of the offices permitted 'departed. | view of them. Oh, he's goin r e o pay a pretty SUff bill—and have ' the other fellow to pay the freight. et down at the end of the car. I : LOCK WASHERS 30 Bar awav At B Tk he dickens own job finding the ; There is legitimate expenses con- While in the distribution of honors 'isn’t so very nice looking, merel We Care TAPER PINS s wherewithal to pay. nected with all electiof and the : the school visitors went a step farther ' lookin trav AreY < HEXAGON NUTS light a thousand year And light travels fast around the earth se: second. It would take travelling at the candidales for the offices are supposed and effaced the old Coit Street school ' Tt's st it, v The year has been ono of crop dis- to chip in to meet the legitimate | in the records and changed the name ideas chang : I don’t suppose tmain L aster. “Our seasonal campaign has transactions in connection with the | to the Jennings school for the present 'I would have noticed that man at all at. Dow't let's mince electi There are too many of the ' supervisor of schools, who has been |in the car, but here he CAP SCREW CASTELLATED NUTS ended in def Put up in tin} boxes especially for au- a mile a v i *days and | words. We've been beaten: we are candidates who pose as lead- ected with the &chools for forty :looks B T, ek day e 20 | being beaten: we'Te going (o continue parties, or rather sections of and at fair salary. | “Po i simply must see that tomobile use., A full assortment of B ien L the soe Lioht to being’ peaten all winter. Our defeal ever ready to accept office, it m for the !t the Derth over me has an iban A the trip in eight minutes. Yet there are | IS N0t 2 matter of phra it's a fact but who never come across with the 00l visitc w school | other, | I cannot have him t il Ak ‘Die. aull Bot a5 ouis, doubts | Of hister: coin and thereby help maintein the | buildings in honor of members of the and I simply will not h . . Mersick The real question Is not whether ; party wor It is really amusing to, board, there Is objection to the cha cupying the seat in t e L D.\ Mersic . lees with planetary systems 1 % i “h farther | We've been licked, but whether we're read over the repor are filed | ing of the names of old schools fr » if you ¢ T FE. e ek Taer | oteg 1o 1o siill on the wave-pounded | With the town ~cle it demon- | those of the original chri 4t just came in to chang { 272.202 State Sk, New Haven, Gonn. Jears is longer than eight minutes, | beach and take another licking In . Stratés very cl d There are many men of { | A5} oven when we have alipsad |Some. other “storr whether w allc is cheap, but it takes mon, studled and plaved as boys in the | “If that porter thinks I'm going to | — Shan. od — - i — ‘ them we haven't really looked beyomd | $hall build some sort of sea-wall be In the list of reports of | Coit_street school who, for sentimen- | tip him {0 get him to change that man | - the threshold of the universe, For the | hind which we can cecape the next & candidate for ie office of commis | (al reasons, hate like sin to have the to anotner berth he's very much mis | ey mind is absolutely incapable of cen- | meteorological .convulsion. oner of town deposit fund on the | name changed, and for such a cause. taken don't e in ¢ | ¢ 2 : SR dle lenctiss woweves vo- : emocratic ticket was just a trifie out - = |the system of ng.. I 11 140 Main St ) Phone 1184 mote, which has nothing beyond it. Time was when the average New of the ordinary. He i No | That parklet at the junction of Mon- i money that I care about g1 S { England farm was entirely self-sup- | transaciions,” This 1s e with | tauk avenue, Bank Truman and Bank i ciple of the thing. I'd A porting. It was the source of its in- | which he 1s very miliar a8 | streets has been graded and fenced | willing to P 3 - ooy e At I O neon |come and outso, hoth. It supplied | he used is many times In the return | in and an idea s given of what a beau- | but I consid pract SATURDAY SPECIALS ot 1e e T a T IhE | itself with corn and beef and pork. It |of blanks while he held a high-sal- | ty spot it will be In the good oid sum- | de ir Sood—of the said univeree. But is ine | furnished itself and had something to aried position under a national dem- |mer time. ~The old buildings that| “There's sted Fl T = D0 & o il | 5 produced gram and | oeratic adminisivation. In the days | stood on the parklet site were an eye- |ter, why you Potted Chrysanthemums Boxes Assoisted Flowers b ol o T iy Py g Pt 8 school children and school- | gone by he was the reciplent of con- | sore and a public d e to a e end of t : L gi 5 B ih t sihive Oar every. nisters (tesmen, | siderable coin Dby reason of the as- | gressive city. Thi ng spot one in_the berth over me, an assorted colors, 35¢ 50c¢ eacl Hhing In the whole shabens is Intendad | , At present the England farm | cendency of the democratic party, and ' not been offievially and dom't Tl speak to the con- i - buys its corn and beef and pork: sees as the g tleman has the faculty of | hops been expressed that it be for d Farmer. O 3 he gen : <1 o T e Do oL o e niug | 1t3 schools dwindling: and imports its | holding Ught to his money and there- | dosignated Columbus park In recos- | crowd. When in the course of me- statesmen from abroad. fore has some at and, would seem ' nition of the large number of citiznes teorological events the storm-wind but falr that he loosen up just a little | who are descend. f the descends upon the Atlantic and sends | Quite a few Jeremiahs and Cassan- | it to help pay the party bills. Were r and who reside in go and ask if he won't Jerth over me to ¢ him don't beiieve it wi Complete line of Ferns from 10c upwwards See our new Vases, Baskets, Etc., for home degoration. - Ldidali o L x o o republican he would de o cheer- | ate vicinity. The Italian of good to talk to a towering surge crashing up Watch | dras have lamented and wailed over | D6 @ repu i cinity e A t Il beach, T1 agros With you {hat | this state of things. They have made fully and . without solicitation, but|gressive, patriotic and liber simply will not t = = the storm and the surge must have | themselves more or less unpopular | democratic office seekers rule are (and it's’a t that — et have their place in the Great Schemeo | thereby, but have produced no other | L0O Door to pay or are noted tight-|is amed of C of Things. But I don't believe that | effect wads. lumbus, fellow countrymen 1hey are intended and managed solely | Now we are having to pay more for TS will with * have a fine Colurmr feed than the kens can There is exception to all rules, how- | bus statue in the center « e encl back in eggs. We're | ever, and it is noted that at least one | ure, and see fo it that the place is kept ghter having to buy our horses over again | democrat, a poor one, financially, at|in first-class condition out with provender we feed them with, |that, has for vears been a generous| It's a pity that wh the surround- |know been usi > other fellow's | contributor to all campaign funds. |ings of that Heb int s so long that our own legs considering his means That man is| were vated - b it seems to me that the pebble | bave lost their carrying power. At George Goss, who is now asking at|ment something was not done n't justified in assuming, as the huge | 1ast the ches have broken. Shall,the hands his party a local posi-iprevent the continuous overflow comber clashes down upon him in |We buy some more at a fancy price, | tion w h he has previously s water into the street. That w shore-shaking thunder, that it was |OT shall we try to make our own legs : torily filled and is thoroughly co: opportune time but it sent purely for his good:—that the |do their own work, hereafter [ tent to fill again. He was candidate The remedy for the benefit of any single pebble on | Chick the beach. Nor that of any bushels of | pebbles in any bunch. The wave does the pounding it w sent to do: the pebbles take the oanding they were laid there to take. e: . Lindsay Gas Mantles and Fixtures tees | UPFIght .« evvvnomessbenstecnnsooo.. 10c, 18¢,20c, 25¢ '_Iinvei'i 4 e et ravie HGe R BC 20c - 25¢ enou the trip whole performance wag planned, ~ | for town rik In the recent election | _the real freezing weather | the I : o G Ta GUa Loy bnaaril staged and carried through for his| The ave New E | and made iberal party contribution, | comes for them the fountain vicinit : o beneft 5 hay orowerage New England farmer|fust as he does when he has no per- | will be a little fce fleld and not on : m r 25c Mantle,. guaranteed for 90 days | lection and this a nuisance but a real danger fountaain arklet or t something quite’ c couldn’t raise corn and other grains ' Sonal interest in the with that is what too many as cheaply as he can buy them from | he has done continuously for the past sert when we parrot over the smuk |the west. Perhiaps he can't some |len years and more in the loeal—state assertion that any' particular mis- |years. But the average New England | 8nd general elections. In the last fortune is probably meant for our |farm, if properly managed, could rhise | election he not only contributed more 7 L good. all the chicken feed its hens consume | than his equal share to the party| Speaking of parklets reminds of the | The Meant for good’—undoubtedly. For | for less than §1 181l the eore | fund, but sacrificed himself in a for- | one located on the parade, in the rear to c the good of somebody or something, | meal its animals would need for less lorn hove for the benefit of his party, ' of the Soldiers’ and Sailors monument, sometime and somewhere?—wi‘thout | than $2 a hundred. A good deal le: for without the sacrifice the voters of | which has a leaky king n auestion. But why just for our petty, |I know this, because I know farms the barty would not have the priv '[ depot end | | | "| FLOWERING BULBS EoRiGAL ou wouldn’t want him Bt FRIESIA REFRACTA ALBA. (white), per dozen..... 10c CROCUS, per dozen ........ . R L JONQUILS, per dozen ......coceves e | SRR EISEUIS s dozend s -0 o e g s i 00G h | | particular, personal good,—yours and | where it is being done. Even a poor |1ege to Vote for a party nominee. As noved forthwith and mine? We are not the only pebbles | New England farm could raise a con- | f8r 2s being a party supporter, Mr. on the beach. And there are thous- | siderable part of the | Goss ranks high above any of * the ands of other beaches in this world = candidates that are out for the offices haps | for the day fountains s in a less consplcuous 1 s gone when dr placed in the most p thing and ions of other worlds in the - a3 in the gjft of the democratic majority | lic place While it is the yol i o i K 0 et e e e e Tuizt- ar somion covrial, and 1 cibh 6 astabhiz & paek Sy | DAFFODILS, per dozen .......c.ceeeeefocces ... 20c e g A b % s L 2 “N&- | entitled to party recognition. large appropriations made TR R e g e R R e | purpose, it may be termed HYACINTHS, each .......cncesasticsnsionsieses 4 difference. Mr. Farmer-man, between [ thing. But we could and should raise | _Dwight F. Steerewhowas sentenced | on fo glishment o 2 pebbie and a human being.” practically all the feed and forage o state prison for the murder of|rhat already exisis; but a o Sartain sure there is. I've beenm |our farm animals cons thinking of one, all the while, and I'm | tite farm. 1 o pight v Frederick White in New London poor economy | Nearly forty vears ago, died Tuesday SPECIALS 3 jgot by. That parklet on t | is meither b ul or u: s not o tution, where his record i and then comes o | Was not of the best, having made |room is more de | Boing to let it out before you have a |to buy such things is dum poor | in that in: bl chance to farming? . And no L sirable th Lindsay Spetial Outfit—Burners, Mantle and Globe com- The pebble has to lie still and take {vear, like this, when it brings us several ineffectual attempts at escape|ence That parxlet sho RALgELr =0 Q < 39 Bite e 0ok i v e ais e Bl when 1S hvng | 2nd grosaly violated the prison rules. | Sooner the better the people plets, worth 50c—Sale price. . ......... . qeee.. 39¢ again: the man can climb up the bank oE ¥ | The murder occurred away back. in | Will be served, for all ar ested in | ing the increased traffic that | Roc! come to progressive New London. Y necticut’ don’t boys, and all that, were excursion at- | That parklet is In the public way and | Ancther loose phrasing is that | corn-growing. I've been told so, times | F2ctions. Special traing were run dP!ru(‘Avfrom that business section when the steamer Plymouth |2 and get behind a tree when he sees : with the chime bells, the choir the big wave coming. | ought to know, by this time, that | 1€ & most of the farmers of Eastern Con- ake any interest in AR | Handled Axes (steel S5 R T s B S } Ball Peir. Riveting Hammers ........o.cooenagn.. 25¢ for the accommodation of patrons, | The thing, not ex- THE BEST xth 35 aiad fe At o el e and among those who came from Hoting nav fhnt place(is not 1 Saw Sets, werth 35¢ ....... i ¥ e | Worcester to go on one of those ex- |in e traffic e’ Of he city, in the | J 3 7 | Hee rorth 1 e s ss e s me s . | cursions were Dwight Steere and his | most congesied section. b IN THE WORLD | Saw Files, worth 10c ........ |-ch Frederick White. On the return hat parklet was created away back . ™ 13 [ trip, Stesre lured White to the Old |in the days when James: P. Johnston | o Dt | Extension Bit Holders, worth $1.25, fer ........... $1.00 Coit wharf and there, on a pile of|Was mavor and before the citv really | f | lumber stabbed him’ to death and |was a city more than in name only, | Mot Only P But Th ColllECliaals . . .. oo st e e i atase 5c and 10c | robbed, taking his money and watch, |and at a time when the parklet per- || [s Not Only Pure Bu e f| i 75¢ the time piece subsequently figuring |haps served as a filler. Times and con- | K B £ 11 Ammeters, worth $1.25 ... ... ... .ciiitiitdonegonne . RN e z i LN Rt e in the evidence of his guilt, ~After the |ditions have changed since Mr. Johns- || Absolute Height of Qual-f| H ; 4 b e | murdor. Steere went 1o the old city | ton was mayor and the space cover- || . ! The Food Drink For Al Ages—Highly Nutritious and Convenient | hotel. the site of the present Cronin |ed by the parklet is needed for the ac- | jty. | : S 2 2 3 5 building and_spent the night there, | comodation of vehicular traffic. It is | | Rich milk, with malted grain extract, in powder form—dissolves in water—more healthful than tea or coffee. Used in training athletes. The best diet for Infants, Growing Children, Invalids, and the Aged. It agrees with the weakest digestion. Ask for ““HORLICK’S*’—at Hotels, Restaurants, Fountainsas Don’t travel without it. Also keep it at home. A lunch in a minute. In Lunch Tablet form, also, ready to eat. Convenient— nutritious, Suffering Humanity Finds thatrelief mustbe found for the illswhich may come any day, —else suffering is prolonged and thereis dangerthatgraver trouble will follow. Most serious sicknesses start in disor- ders of the organs of digestion and elimination. Thebestcor- rective and preventive,in such cases, is acknowledged to be BEESISMS This standard home remedy tones the stomach, stimu- lates the sluggish liver, regulates the inactive bowels. Taken whenever there is need, Beecham’s Pills will spare you hours of suffering and so improve your general health and strength that you can better resist disease. Tested by time, Beecham’s Pills have proved safe, certain, prompt, convenient and that they Aelufa'&s’} Lead to Better Health Seld everywhere. In boxes 10c., 25¢. each box should be read by everyone,—especially by wemen. 8 The directions with leaving New London on an early train | and the murder was not known until several hours after his departure, and, at that time, Steere was not suspected of the crime. At that time the late J. Clinton Shepard was lieutenant of the local police Yes, the same Shepard with | the long whiskers, who was so many vears a private nlght watchman in | the business centre of the city. He | the murder and to bring the murderer | to justice; and he did: Officer Shepard | attended to his regular duties on the | police force, for in those days the lleutenant had to take his' trick at patrol duty, and worked the murder case besides. He lost much sleep in | one of the best pieces of detective work ever hauled off by any local { officer, for within a month after the | muraer he had the murderer under arrest and back in New London and had secured ample evidence to con- vict. Shepard traced the murderer step by step and finally located him at work in a shop in Worcester. He was arrested, brought to New London, tried in the police court, then in the superior court and _sentenced to ‘Wethersfield for the balance of his natural life. The New London board of school visitors. believe in honering the living rather than the dead and have brush- ed side the memory of Henry P. Haven, Benjamin Stark, Joshua C. Learned, and others, who have done so much for education in' New London and at a time when the work of edu- cating the young did not come so easily as at the present time, It's a pity the innovation did not prevail when the gentlemen named were in this life. The committee has named the new school building that is to evolve from the Chappell homestead at the corner of Union and “Federal took on the self-imposed task to ferret | was removed. It never was a beauty spot, but 1 was always in the way. The granite coping and the low iron fence might be transferred to the spare section of the Dart_property at the corner Bank and Howard streets, that s n that is not used for highway purposes. THE BLOND WOMAN The elderly blond woman with the youthful Complexion sank into the seat beside the quiet little woman tourist in the section opposite. “May I sit with you while the por- ter makes up my berth?’ she in- quired languidly. ‘T feel that I must retire early; I'm really so exhausted with all this common crowd and noise. It has been almost too much for me. I have such a sensitive nature. I ought never to have come tourist, but I was simply determined to do so—for the experience, don’t you know? “I'm such a student of human na- ture and I knew that the people would be so different from anything I'd ever been accustomed to, such an entirely different class, don't you know? My friends were really quite shocked when they heard of it, I have the reputation of being so exclusive. It isn't that I intend to be, but I'm naturally fas- tidious and retiring and anything com. mon grates on me so. “Porter, is there golng to be some- ome in the berth over me tonight? No, I cannot have it. You'll have to see that he changes. I'm eptirely too sen- sitive. 1f I knew that there’s some- one in the berth over me I can’t sleep a wink. And the man that had the berth last night was such a common creature. He snored—I heard him dis- tinetly, street, the Stanton school in honor of “How can I help it if the car is time that this obstruction to progress | e the little tot in the song, | It Is The Pride of The Pro- |} ducer, P. SASSO E. FIGLI, || Oneglin, Italy. Purchase Price Returned if Sasso’s Olive QOil Fails to Meet With Your Approval. | SOMERSY Norwich, Conn. THE HOUSEHOLD ALBERT BOARDMAN, Proprietor BULLETIN BUILDING, 74 FRANKLIN STREET, For Wedding Gifls we are showing new pat- terns in Cut Glass, Sterl- ing and Silver We carry the best makes in above lines and will Guarantee Prices. Engraving Free. Take It To Lincoln’s eras a speclalty. Now located in the Steiner Block, BEstablished 1880 John & Geo. H. Bliss He Does All Kinds of Light Repairing. Typewriters, Keys Umbrellas, Cam- Palace Fool and Billiard Parlors Six Tables—five pool and one Billiara 265 Main St., rooms over Disco Bros. F. C. ATCHISON, H. D., PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Room 1, Second Floor, Shannon Bldg. Night ’phone 1083 THERE 15 oo agvertising medium in Eastern Connecticut equal to The Buls letin for business results. Tables sold and repairing'done at reasonable prices. Suppliez at all times. 48 MAIN STREET WHEN you want to put youry biusi- ness herore ine pablic, there 15 mo 1ne- Gium petter tham inrourh the achecits- s columns of The Bulietin. NOTICE In making the change from . the American to the EUROPEAN PLAN it was necessary to make some changes to the cuwlinary department of ' the Hotel. These changes are - now well under way, and we expect to open our New Main Dining Room about November first. The Parker-Davenport Co. DR. ROBERT J. COLLINS DENTIST 148 Main Street, Norwich, Conn. Phone 424-4 TuThS: WHEN you want to DUS your bus ness beiGie e Dubiic. there is no mes dium betrer than through the advertiss Aug columns of The Bulletim

Other pages from this issue: