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T'm Not Afraid of “Any Bill of Fare If You Use a Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tab- det After Each Meal You Can Eat What You Like. not make any difference what it you will provide your sys- I with the wherewithal to digest It. o bill of fare should appall or dis- + = man who wants to eat. There imple, sure way and that is by ine » Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablet rocket er purse to be eaten 1 Love to Get My Hand On a Bill of Fare.” This tablet will go into your stom- ach like food. It will mix with your digestive juices, strengthen them to ir correct proportions. Then it will llow the food Into the intestines estion. en lh(\ugh you eat too much at meal a little tablet taken at the se of your di r will cause that dinner to be thoroughly digested with- out harmful effects. Acute indigestion has no fears for the man who will occasionally use a Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablet. ‘We are a nation of “high livers.” We travel exceedingly fast in all we do and eating rich food at all hours has nade indigestion and stomach trouble our national disease. A Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablet. will make you free from this danger and the best of it all i= that you may test vourself at any time and prove this statement true. Go to vour drugglst today and buy a ox, price 50 cents. | Shaker Knit Sweater Coats For Ladies or Men All the new colors, heavy weights and excellent qualities of all grades at The Toggery Shop 291 Main St., Norwich, Ct. THANKSGIVING We are booking orders for Ledyard, North Stonington and Lebanon turkeys. We ask our customers to send us their orders early, if 2 native is desired. ere it will agdn ald in the work oH assigned for trial. SUPERIOR GOURT s . > The superior court came in here on Tuesday morning with four cases as- signed for trial, buf none came to trial as all were settled outside of court by agreements between counsel and litigants. The case of Mrs, Minnie Sheehan of New London against Attorney Perry J. Hollandersky of that city, administra- tor, an appeal from probate, was one of them. Mrs, Sheehan withdrew her appeal. The withdrawal followed a long conference between Attorneys Morgan and Smith -which finally re- sulted in a compromise and settlement. Several months ago Mrs, Ann Cur- was admitted to probate in Montville Attorney Hollandersky was appointe administrator. Mrs. Sheehan; a daughter. of the testafrix, took an ap- peal on the ground that her brother exercised undue influence over his { mother on account of which she had !leflf\ him all the property. 1 Terms upon which settlements wers made were reached in three other cases They were those | of Mrs. Kate C. Copp of St. Louis, Mo,, and Mrs, Esther Smith of West Mys- tic, and Mrs, Esther Smith, adminis- tratrix, all against Norwich & Wes- terly Traction Co. The amount of the settlements was not divulged, but was understood to have been at a much smaller amount than that at which thoe sults were entered. Hull, McGuire & Hull represented the plaintiffs and Brown and Perkins appeared for the defendant company, The two cases grew out of a col- Agreement Reached in Appeal From Probate of Will of Mrs. Ann Curtin of Montville—Settlement Also in $35,000 Suits Against Norwich and Westerly Road. tin of Montville, on her death bed, made her son, Henry Curtin, the sole beneficiary of her estate. The will SIHTS SETTI.EB lision about two years ago when a surrey in which they were two of four occupants was struck by an express car of the company at Avery’s cross- ing in North Stonington, The party was going to the North Stonington fair and was driving across the tracks of the defendant company at Avery's crossing when the car approached at a high rate of speed, striking the ve- hicle and throwing the occupants to the ground. Mrs. Copp and Mrs. Smith each brought suit against the company for $15,000 for personal injuries alleging that the company or its agents were negligent in not giving a warning of the approach of the car, that the car was being run at a high rate of speed and that It was obstructed from view by obstacles beside the track. As administratrix of the estate of her late husband, David Smith, Mrs. Smith also brought suit for the stat- ugory sum of $10,000, ‘With Mrs. Copp and Mrs. Smith in the carriage were Miss Emily Copp, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Relton A. Copp of Groton and Mrs. Smith’s hus- band, who also received injuries as the result of the accident. Mr. Smith died later and it was a contention that his injuries in the accident were the cause of his death. Miss Copp was the most seriously hurt and for a time her life was despaired of. She also instituted suit against the company | in which a settlement was effected. The court will cdme in this morn- ing for the trial of the damage suit of Margaret Kanure vs. Brainerd & Armstrong Co. of New London for $10,000 for injuries received at the mill of the company in New London. CLAIM FOR WOOD BURNED ON STODDARD MOUNTAIN. George W. Palmer Brings Suit Against New Haven Road for $500 Damages. Brown & Perkins of this city, as at- torneys for George W. Palmer of Led- vard, have brought suit against the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad company for $500 damages for the destruction of certain cord- wood, cedar posts and rails by fire on Jply 2, 3 and 4, 1913, alleged to have been communicated from the locomo- tives of the defendant company. The suit is returnable to the court of com- mon pleas for New London county on the first Tuesday in December, 1913, All of the wood In question was lo- cated on Stoddard’s Mountain, so- called, owned by B. F. S. Crandall of Stoddard’s wharf, and was burned in the same fires which destroved Mr. Crandall's standing timber. Mr. Cran- dall has brought suit' through the same attorneys in the superior court for $2,- 500 damages for his loss. The engagement was announced at Boston Monday of Louis Hunt Hills, who rowed in the Harvard varsity eight at Gales Ferry in 1912 and 1913, to Elinore, daughter of Bishop Wil- o GIVES LIFE SKETCH OF REV. A. P. BLINN‘ Golden Cross Publication Praises Its Past Grand Commander. The current number of the Golden ! Cross Journal, which is the official | organ of the Order of The Golden Cross, contains a lengthy biographical sketch of Rev. Albert Plummer Blinn | of this city, who is past grand com- mander of the order. It is from the pen of Wilbur H. Powers. After referring to the worth of an ancestry of the old New England farm- er type ,the biographer says: Of such an ancestry Albert Plummer Blinn was born in Wiscasset, Maine, on November 5 1869. He was the youngest of a family of eight, being the seventh son. Knight Blinn’s father was a farmer, and owned a farm upon which five generations of Blinns had lived. He | was also a cattle drover, buying cat- tle and driving them to Brighton liam Lawrence, of the Massachusetts diocese. HAVE COLOR IN YOUR CHEEKS Be Better Looking—Take Olive Tablets. It your skin is yellow—complexion pallid—tongue coated—appetite poor: vou have a bad taste in your mouth— a lazy, no-good feeling—you should take Olive Tablets. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets—a sub- stitute for calomel—were prepared by Dr, Edwards after 17 years of study with his patients. Dr. Bdwards' Olive Tablets are a purely vegetable compound mixed with J. M. YOUNG & SON Main and Market Street Telephone 1238 Corner Full Set Teeth 98 FIT GUARANTEED DON'T PUT OFF YOUR DENTAL WORK any longer through fear. After the first + h hae been filled or extracted The King Safe System of Painless ntistry you will laugh at your fears and wonder why you waited so long. Don't pay exorbitant prices for your dental work. Gold Fillings. . .... $1.00 up Silver Fillings....... 50c up Pure Gold Crowns... $5.00 Bridgework ......... $5.00 EXAMINATION and ADVICE FREE Painless Extracting FREE when testh are ordered. DR. F. C. JACKSON OR. 0. J. COYLE DENTISTS S.uccesscrs to the King Dental Ce. 203 Main Street Next to Boston Store. 9amtoSp m Sunday 10 to L Lady Attendant. Phone 1282-8 e e LEGAL NOTICE. DISTRICT gr NORTH STONINGTON, Court of robate Nov, 2o, 1913, tate of Zebulon Y. Brown, lafe of itolmxlan, T #said Distriet, de- a « Administrator having exhibited sdminisiration aceount with said te to this Court for allowance, it 13 *ihe Probate Court in North Stoning- Le. and the same 13, assigned for 1o cite all persons interested there- in to appear at sald time al\i place, by publishing this order in some news- paper having a circulation h'l said Dis- trict, amd by posting s copy on the publie signpost in the Town of Nort nington, where tue deceased Tast awelt, CHARLES C. Gfilc‘Y, nevikd §o. olive oil. You will know them by their olive color. If you want a clear, bright no pimples, a feeling of buoyancy like childhood days, you must get at the cause. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets act on the liver and bowels like calomel—yet have no dan- gerous after effects. They start the bile and overcome constipation. That's why millions of boxes are sold annual- 1y at 10c and 25c per box. Take one or two nightly and note the pleasing results. The Olive Tab- let Company, Columbus, O. All drug- | glsts, pink skin, Fresh Wakefield Oysters : Opened Daily at 40c Qt. l SHELL 50c Pk. Fresh and Salted Fish | OF ALL KINDS IN SEASON jand commenced to fit himself for the Fresh Block Island Cod 8¢ Ib. | SALTED MACKEREL, 6 for SALTED SWORDFISH, 13¢ Ib, Bl s S LONG and ROUND CLAMS The Pubic Fish Market 40 Franklin Street ALL ORDERS DELIVERED Phone 1217-2 | him his duty and to lead him into the | pastor of the First Spiritualist U: | beyond, BASED ON QUALITY | the monuments we erected years| ago testify to the endurance of our | work. TAKE NO CHANCES Place your order with the old-reliable T Chas L ook Go Tel. 561. country in 1629. He has in his pos- session the linen chest which his ai cestor brought with him from En; land,—a rare and valuable relic of “ye olden dayes.” Jamges Blen, a descendant of Henry, and an ancestor of Albert, was in the Revolutionary war, and, after the war, settled in Wiscasset. The spelling of the name was changed after the war by some of the sons. On his mother’s side, Knight Blinn is a descendant of Joseph Bailey, a lieutenant in the War of the Revolu- tion, who with his son-was present the surrender of Burgoyne. His ndfather, Benjamin Bailey, was a jor in the War of 181 When Albert was four ) parents moved to Boston. Something like a year later, he jumped on be- hind an omnibus on Washington street, slipped and was thrown on his knees. Frightened by a policeman calling out to him, he held on until the flesh was scraped off to the bone. This caused 2 lameness from which he has never fully- recovered. He was graduated from the English High school in Boston, and from the Bryant & Stratton Commercial col- lege, and for nine years was a suc- cessful accountant, We used to hear much about a call to preach. The young man was told to consider the matter carefully and prayerfully, and the pastor would of- | ten come to the house to call and kneel | down in praver in the presence of the young man, and ask the Lord to show ars old, his great work of saving souls. Today more is said about flitness and mental zmd moral qualities, but in the days of ur grandfathers these were kept in the background, while the “call” was much to the front. A brother, who had passed to the other side, came back to Albert and made himself known in various ways, referring to matters which only the two knew. This brother urged him to go into the ministry and enforced his advice by argument. Knight Blinn was convinced of the reality of the return and of the legitimacy of the call mifistry. He studied theology under the Rev. Moses Hull and Prof. Wi liam M. Lockwood and began to take | | part in spiritualist conventions znd meetings. In 1905 he was ordained on Connecticut, and still re- osition. His congregation preciate his work and will at Norwich, nnection. He also becn Presi: f the Ocean ’,)!'H\'E‘ Campmeeting sociation of Norwichnort, Mass. for eight vears and secretary of the LaKe Pleasant Campmeeting association for nineteen years, both of which positions Le still holds. He is also editor of the Banner of Life. The years of success have confirmed | him in"his belief that his brother gave him a message from the mysterions So rnany ideas come to him waile speaking that he feels they are sug- gested to him by some power outside himself, and he is known as an in- spirational speaker. His addresses upon moral and religious topics are remarkable In their logic, historic re- search and moral inspiration, yet the text or topic may be chosen only the night before, or even after he gues upon the platform or into the puipit. He is of a studious nature, and much of his addresses or sermons show his wide reading, but while he is speak- ing the most brilliant thoughts leap from his lips and are more of a sur- prise to him than to others. He is a pleasant, easy, logical, inter- esting and instructive speaker. Wit and wisdom combined make his coun- }?1 to the commanderies impressive. e has always been ready, at a mo- ment’s notice, to meet any emergenc or_assume any responsibility ‘Warm and enduring in his friend- ships. always ready to sacrifice himself for his friends, never a self seeker, those who know him best love him most. His gratitude is a marked fea- tude of his character, and at times it makes him do things which to some seam inconsistent, but those who are near to his heart life appreciate and understand, He never dodges respon- sibility, but assumes all that belongs to him; he never tries to throw it upon someone else, especially if the act is likely to incur criticism; and he never claims an honor even though it is rigitfully his. Wherever he goes he finds himselr | in the house of his friends. Snashing Reductions in Women's and Mises’ Women’s, Misses’ and Juniors’ Suits Women’s and Misses’ Coats smart stylish models. Coats, Suits and Dresses We must dispose of the greater part of our large stock of stylish garments before the approach of Christmas, and in order to do so we have made some startling reductions in price. Read these prices, but above all, come and see for yourself. Women’s and Misses’ Suits of “2nei® $19.75 The assortment also includes some diagonals, broadcloths and weaves in the best colorings. All beautifully tailored and finished in the very best manner. The suits in this group were selling as high as $27.50. $14.75 We are going to sell our $20.00 Suits at this sacrifice price. Some stunning designs in the lot including the new draped style skirts. The materials are cheviots, diagonals and novelty weaves of late design. Sport and Three-quarter Coats $8.50 MANNISH $11.75 (AL this price a splondid assortment Some striking designs in clever of choice Two-toned Bouoles, Chin- ; chillas, and other much wanted weaves WISy Conte SRS S8 SHIH a8 in the desirable colorings. Some very $1250. For those who want freedom of motion and stylish appearance. SAW BURNING SCHOONER IN THE SOUND |1 \well had dropped the Chelsea astern | it m;]dangered the lives of T o nearly an hour before that, so the fire | in their care. It was believed by the Capt. C. C, Pettigrew of Chelsea Re- |, 1,011y started between that time | steamboat men today that the tug ported Seeing Craft About Mid- |and the time the Chelsea came alons. | had signalled another craft, which may night. sistance and the ~Chelsea, the name of either vessel. The location of the tug and burning tow was 14 minutes in running time of the Chelsea to eastward of Falkner Island. The ( sea passed Falkner Island about 12.30 a m . No one could be seen aboard schooner. Captain Pettigrew and crew of the steamer believe that tug had taken off the schooner's c and was towing her to shoals in hope of scuttling her and then being able to work better at putting out fire. The stern of the schooner was burn- the cabin was enveloped ing and flames when the Chelsea sighted It was apparent the fire had started in made the cabin. Captain Pettigrew brief report of the fire and brou Chelsea here to flnish dischar, Steamer City of Lowell of the London line passed Falkner Islan 11.43 and Pilot Walter Penn seeing the three masted continuing to New London, was unable to learn recal schooner in officers of Sound liners sa have hesitated to approac The schooner was not ptain Penn saw her. The tow of a tug. afire when the fire ¢ -amer Maine of the Providence line, New London that | gered tow of Falkner Island said upon arrivin the fire was not recorted by his it would have been ordinates as the pilot, quartermaster or bow watch- had her I man seen It. New London was Brief Visit in Rhode Island. the | probably two and 25 miautes | Hilliard Bruce has been in Provi- ‘hel_ | ahead of the Chelsea. dence and Westerly this week. I Pilot James F. Smith of steamer they should | the 1atte was then three miles east he was the guest Sweeney and in Wes- city f | Judge John W. ngers | terly he met among other friends Judge Herbert W. Rathbun, Deputy Sheriff | W. H. Casey and others. It was his first stop on Rhode Island soil in four not have been observed from the Chel- | years, market, as was the custo min those which reported the fire by wireless, | sea, and that help-was coming, so the | R G days. 'He was also a butcher and| Capt, Charles C, Pettigrew of steam- eral miles astern of the Lowell | towing steamer did not call on the pas- | Eliminate Eagleville Grade Crossing. owned a meat market in Wiscasset. | er Chelsea reported on arriving at New | The wind was northwest and blew a \ senger carrie The public utilities commission on In addition to this, he had interests|London Tuesday morning, a _three |fresh breez Steamer Maine’s wireless operator Tuesday approved a petition of the in_shipbuilding. masted schooner afire in Lang Island Capt. William S. Durkee of Central | informed the o r short- | Central Vermont railway for the elim- Brother Blinn traces his ancestry|sound. The schooner was in tow, | Vermont lin eamer New London, |ly after midnight that n sight | jnation of a grade crossing at Eagle back to Henry Blen, who came to this|bound west. The tug declined which came up the sound last night, | of the burning schooner. The endan- | ville, in Mansfield, the entire expense ;m which is to be borne by the com y. The changing of the location of crossing and (he taking of land for _purpose i roved. ne light F4 consumes Aas | " i much air as four aduits. Mohawk of the Fdll River line, who came from Fall River Tuesday morn- ing to visit his home in New London, said that his steamer did not sight the burning schooner. Mr. Smith was on watch at the time. For a time on the Chelsea it seemed | as if the tugboat crew did not know that the schoonmer in tow was alire. There appeared to be mo acti | board either vessel beyond the r. | of navigating at ni; Whigtle sig- nals either were not answered or were | | too indistinct to be heard. It is be- lieved the crew of the tug was carm the the | the rew the | the in her. Within five mi: Situation ideal. i the | | | for those rescued from the sc sbleooms - - €5, 56, 87, 88 Sew | Several steamers could hav o 3 , , ~Jouble bedrooms, boudoir =y at | secured to fight the fire with stream Vairon H Marshell L hfi;fl;;flu:; SN o {:? lled | from their force pumps had they been | e i g called, it Is believed, but masters auu L e VANDERBILT HOTEL 342SL.EAST wMRKAW “An hotel of distinction with moderate charges” utes of principal railway terminals. Each room with bath va-wuu per any—ss 34, 85, 86 This Store Open Until 10 o’clock Tonight — Clesed All Day Thursday, Thanksgiving Day Mohican Fresh Creamery BUTTER, 3 lbs...... 95¢ Roquefort CHEESE Large, Fine EGGS % Fisher’s Island BUTTER CRISCO for Shortening Ib. Seeded, Seedless RAISINS, 3 pkgs. MIXED NUTS 2 Ibs. 25¢|; The Mohican Store “A Horn of Plenty for Thanksgiving” The High Cost of Li'ving»Can Be Greatly Reduced Through Qur Low Market Prices Imported —1b....... 3 One Pound Print . . ... 37 VERMONT YOUNG e FORKEYS == Our Whole Turkey Family Is Wonderfully Fine This Year—So Is Our Other Poultry HEN-TOM 6sto 10 1b. avg. Fancy Milk Fed Native, Roasting CHIC KENS, lb. ZSC g::siyl(mca FOWL Ib. 22¢ & YOUNG Very Plump White, Tender Extra Choice o B IMICKS 8 Ib. 25¢ iy HANS 28" . 1b. 17¢ Fresh Little Pig SHOULDERS, Ib. . Small, Lean PORK LOINS, Ib. . 14c 15¢ FRESH FROM OUR OVENS DAILY Fresh Baked Pies, Macaroons, Lady Fingers, Rye Bread, Biscuits | Plenty of Bread for Turkey Dressing“ PURE LARD pound 13c Yellow ONIONS 3 lbs. Yellow-White TURNIPS 4 QUBEES 7. o seeiei oo TOKAY GRAPES CRANBERRIES O S s Sugar Rolled DATES 21 ) 17, N 0 17, L) Sweet Florida ORANGES, 17 for 25¢