Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, December 3, 1915, Page 8

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Get at the ~Real Edwards’ Olive Tablets That's what thousands of stomach sufterers are doing now. taking tonics, or trying io patch up poor digestion, they are a real cause of the liver and disordered bowels. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets arouse the 1iver in a soothing, healing way. Wh the liver and bowels aré pefform digestion and stomach troubles: you have a bad_taste mouth, You should take Qlive Tabiets, the sub. stitute for calomel. Dr. Edwards' olive color. griping, cramps or pain. Take one or two at bedtime for quick Lelief, so you can et what vou lke. ‘At 10c and-25¢ per box. All druggists. bulhe; Olive Tablet Company, us, fum- UNITED STATES MARINE ASPHYXIATED AT DOVER, N. H. Another Overcome by Gas—Police Be- lieve Jot Was Opened Accidentally. Dover, N, H., Dec. 2—J. C. Brette, a private in the United States marine corps, stationed at Portsmouth, was killed, and A. Wilkerson, also a private, was overcome by gas in a room at a hotel here today. Wilkerson was sent to a hospital, where it was said he had only a slighi chance of recovery. The police believe, after an investigation, that a gas jet probably was opened accidentally. After making accurate tests a Ger- man scientist has decided that Ger- man Gothic_ type is less tiring to the eves than Roman letters. NOSTOMACH PAIN, GAS, INDIGESTION INFIVEMINUTES “PAPE'S DIAPEPSIN” IS THE ONLY REAL STOMACH REGULATOR KNOWN. “Really does” put bad stomachs in order—really does overcome indiges- tion, dyspepsia, gas heartburn and sourness in five minutes—that—just that—makes Pape's Diapepsin the largest selling stomach regulator in the world. If what vou eat ferments into stubborn lumps u belch gas and eructate sour, undigested food and acid; head is dizzy and aches; breath foul; tongye coated; your in- sides flled ‘with bile and indigestible waste, remember the moment “Pape’s Diapepsin” comes in contact with the stomach all such distress vanishes. It's truly astonishing—almost marvel- ous, and the is its harmlessness. A large fifty-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin will give yoa a hundred dollars’ worth of satisfaction or your druggist hands you your money back. It's worth its weight in gold to men and women who can’t get their stom- achs regulated. It belongs in_ your home—should always be kept handy in case of a sick, sour, upset stomach during the day or at night It's the quickest, surest and most harmless stomach regulat SERV-US MINCE MEAT Package condensed mince meat is made-up today of the best quality of driéd fruit and other items which can be found, all of which are found in the United States with the exception of spices and currants, The study of packing condensed mince meat has ex- tended over a period of 100 years and today is as near its perfection as we can possibly conceive. The sanitation in the factories in Wwhich it is packed is beyond reproach as the competition today in these lines necessitates the guarding of the most minute detail of the business. The apples used are of the best grade of. New York State, where in our opinion is grown the best flavored apple known. The raisins used are of the best quality seeded variety. No expense is con- sidered in procurring the very highest grade of spices, and sugar, as we all know, is always sugar. the different grades merely representing the differ- ent fiavors: or different granulation re- quired for different purposes. Every particle of fruit or any other article ‘used In the manufacture of mince meat is thoroughly cleaned and hand-picked by people trained to know what shouid and should not be used and.in this manner the article comes to the house- wife cleaner by far than she could possibly take the same articles in her own kitchen, regardless ‘of how clean it may be, and make up the filler for her mince pic. The old idea of dirt béing prevalent in quantity is today disputed by the greatest authorities on food products. The meat used in mince meat is of the choicest and to- day the same corn-beef which you and I would use on our table is what is being used in Serv-us Mince Meat. There are very few ples made which can be used as handily by the house- wife as mince meat for all it requires is a ijttle water and being heated for ten minutes and it is ready for the crust and then the table and she may without fear of loss carry three, or four packages of mince meat in her @antry, having it ready at any time for the chance occurrence of unexpect- ed company and it will be a good dessert free from dirt. It is. our thorough belief that,a mince meat pie made from condensed mince meat is about as cheap a dessert as can be prepared and yet as good. 54 For #many .years mince meat was considered a winter dish. Fach .year for the last ten our factory has had to increase its capacity during the summer meonths-until today it runs every day of the year with a regular force of helpers. We ship goods to every part of the country the entire year. This of course means a greéat increase in the use of theso goods over when mince meat was eaten only in the winter months which means an in- creased sale over the former winter consumption.” THE L. A. GALLUP CO. Instead of a ttacking the ailment—clogged en ing their natural functions, away goes in- in your tongue coated, appetite poor, lazy, don’t-care feeling, no ambition or energy, troubled with undigested food, Olive Tablets are a purely vegetable compound mixed with olive oil. You will know. them by their They do the work without Cause—Take Dr. Hartford, Conn., Dec. 2—William F. the state prison at Wethersfield today, Chilly a snow storm, do not constitute the proper kind of a welcome for an aged man who has been sheltered inside prison walls for some seven years; and the foreboding weather conditions un- doubtedly influenced Judge Jotin Coats of New Britain, Walker's broth- er-in-law and his sponsor while on parole, in deferring the departure from the ‘prison to a better and a brighter day. Besides, there ure numerous things to be done for Walker before he can again take his place in the world of men: there are clothes to be bought, Tooms to be engaged and. fur- nished, and a thousand other neces- saries to be secured before he can make the break from prison to free- dom with any degree of comfort. ‘Waiker will probably leave the. pris- on Friday, or possibly Saturday. It all depends on the success of Judge Coats and his wife, who is Walker's sister, in_perfecting their arrange- ments. These arrangements at pres- ent include plans for a trip somewhere, probably to a milder climate in the south, so that the aged man may have a chance to recuperate before return- ing to his former home in New Bri- tain, . ° Judge Coats and Mrs. Coats reached their decision not to take their rela- tive away from Wethersfield, this fore. noon, after a conference with him that lasted a iittle over an hour. Their ‘Walker, paroled prisoner, did not leave weather, and the approach of . at Wethersfield Yesterday Because of Wintry Weather— Appeared Indifferent and Resumed His Occupation as a Printer While His Brother-in-Law and Sister MakeAr- rangements for His Future. talk with him was held in the clerk's room of the'prison offite. and Warden Garner’ wds called in fo consult with them. Walker exhibited but little in- terest in the plans at his departure, he seems of a fatalistic turn of mind, ready for anything that happens and unepthusiastic about it when it does happen. The prison band was rehearsirg this ‘morning when Walker was called to the prison office to meat his rela~ tives, but ‘Walker ‘lifted his head’ not a whit higher, quickened his step not a bit, as he mechanically shuffled into the office to meet two of the remain- ing few who are near and dear to him. There were few about the warden's office to see Walker pass again into the prison, to_take up his work until all shall be in readiness for his de- parture. He went back to finish his work on_the Record, the little -paper published every month at the prison. Until the arrangements are completed for_his release,. Walker will continue at his old work, that of a printer. He had his dinner in' the *prison refec- tory this noon the same as he bas had for the last seven years. Although Walker's departure from the prison was postponed, another pa- Toled man, Saveggio Ricci, an Italian who has -been serving a sentence of from-7 to 15 years for manslaughter, left the prison this afternoon. Ricei ‘was convicted in Litchfield county, in February, 1909, for .knifing one of a crowd of men who, he said, set upon him. n FORMATION OF MILITARY BATTALION AT HARVARD. Discussed by President A.. Lawrence in an Open Letter to Undergradu- ates. Cambridge, Mass.. Dec.' 2.—The pro- posed . formation of a . military bat- tajon at Harvard university was dis- cussed by President A. Lawrence Lowell tonight in an open letter to un- dergraduates in which he _said that while mo authority of the university would oppose the plan as 4t could do no serious harm. it was not regarded s especially desirable. It would be unfortvate, he said, if any undergrad- uate went into it with the idea that it formed part of any organized move- ment for the training of reserve cF. ficers or was of any great milita value. -Harvard, he added, was d cidedly in favor of military instruetion in summer camps. AMERICAN SLOOP ACADEMY IS SAFE AT BALBOA. Members of Crew Tell Stories of Hardships—Yellow Fever Aboard. The American sloop vactit Academy, which had been sought for some time by British and American consular and diplomatic of- ficials, put into Balboa this morning and is now in quarantine owing to the fact that recently there were several deaths on board while the yacht was in the harbor of Buena Ventura, Colom- bia. The Acadginy came here consigned to the American consul in the canmal zone but a= there is no such official the customs oficers of the zone took Panama, Dec. fever on heard and jack of success in a mining venture in Chjle on which the vessel is said to have sailed from San Francisco. STRIKE AT VALLEY FALLS HAS BEEN CALLED OFF. At the Plant of the Rhode Island Perkins Horse Shoe Company. Valley Falls:R I, Dec, ,2—The strike which bas been in_effect at tho plant of the Rhode Island ~Perkiny ilorse Shoe company for the past three months was called off by a.vote of the unfon tonight Union officials said that the men had azreed to accept the company’s terms which_ would give then more pay and would make cer- tain changes in their working condi- tions. Three bundred hangds have been mvolved. - < The New York Clearing , House handlés $300,000,000 a day, which is more than half of all the bank clear- ings of the United States. ‘charge of hei The crew. according | to the quarantine officers, tell a story of’ much_hardship owing to veilow JRISHMEN LEAVE NEW ZEALAND TO ESCAPE MILITARY DUTY. Party of 75 Arrives at San Francisco —Say Conscription is Practically in Force. San: Francisco, Dec. 2.—Seventy Irish- men who arrived here today from New Zealand on the steamer Moana report- ed difficulty in getting away “Cénscription’ virtually is in force there,” said T. O’'Sullivan, one of the party. “Every man who can en- list has to do so. ~He is driven to it. Employers lay men off or reduce wages. “When we were aboard the Monana, government officials came to question us. We all stuck to the story that we were going to England to enlist. That was just our little Irish joke. We are going to make our homes in Cali- fornia.” O'Sullivan _said sixty-five Irishmen left New Zealand the preceding week on the steamer Niagara, which went to Vancouver by way of Honolulu, ADMINISTRATION NEW SHIPPING BILL DISCUSSED. Was Subject of Conference of Officials at Washington Yesterday. Washington, Dec. 2—The new ad- ministration shipping bill, which would create a board tocontrol deep water trafic and provide for construction uf merchant vessels designed for use |as naval auxiliaries, was the subject of a conference tonisht attended by Secretaries McAdoo and Redfieid. Sen- ator Fletcher and Representative Al- exander. chairman of the congressional merchant marine committee, Solicitor | Thurman of the department of com- merce and Commandant Berthol of the coast’ guard. " ither Senator Fletcher nor Repre- ative Alexander had seen the ft prepared by the two cabinet of: and the conference was called largely for the purpose of explaining to them the differences between the present bill an Cthe one which was de- teated in the senate last year. Arother cenference will be probably next week. held 75 PASSPORTS FOR FCRD PEACE EXPIDITION. issued by State Department—Good Only in Neutral Countries. Washington, Dee. 2. —Seventy-five passports, good only in neutral cou: tries, were issued bv the state depart- ment late today for members of the Ford Peace expedition. Several pass- ports were refused -on account faulty applications or because the ap- plicants were ‘not citizens of the Unit- ed States. Burma is exporting orchids to the United States. cal o CONGRESS FACES IMPORTANT 1| TWO The- new congress, convening _on Deec. tll_t?t have ever confronted the coun- t Democrats, 193" republieans,: 7 Pro- gressives, 1 independent and 1 So- i 6, will be called upon to face some of the most important questions The new house “of representa-’ tives .elected . in 1914, -consists- of 233 7 SENATOR PHELAN. . o8 BSU.ES: ’. NEW MEN IN THE UPPER HOUSE cialist. - The senaté has 56 Democrats, 39 Republicans and 1 Progressive. Two. of the new members of the sen- ate ‘are James W. Wadsworth, Jr., Republican, of New York, who suc- ceeds Elihu t, and James D. Phe- Jan, of California, who succeeds Geo. C. Perkins. P, Hudson' seal richly trimmed “with fox gives this handsome effect. The coat fastens with big self buttons and is belted. The muff is chunky and round and the very tip of a fox's tail affords the stick-up on the sailor hat. MERIT SYSTEM IN PUBLIC OFFICES GAINING GROUND. Council of the National Civil Service Reform League Sc Reports. Philadelphia, Dec. 2.—The merit sys- temyin public- offices ccntinues to gain ground, according to the report of the council of the National Civil Service Reform league submitted at the-open- ing session here today of the 35th an- nual meeting of the organization. “For over a third of a century,” the report stated, “the merit system® has been | gainingg round, until it is now ready, with the aid of public opinion, to storm that mediavel enirenchment of the spells system built-on the phrase ‘By and with the advice and consent of the senate’ Confirmation by the senate of those officials Who have nothing to do with the determination ‘of public pol- icy blocks the steady progress of civil service reform. The demolition of this sy: t council stated, rests with public opin- ion. | As a first -step, the report recom- mended the co-operation of dommercia bodies, labor unions and other busi ness organizations in a campaign which willehave as its special purpose to secure legislation providing for the competitive ¢ ation of first; sec- ond and third class postmaster: The council ‘reviewed the. activities in state legisiatures with _regard to clvil service reform and care. (o the conclusion. that ~progre been made in a ¥ tile attacks on so Card;nai Gibb ditional vice pre and Lewis H. V phia was made < lof directors. All | of the organization we I {e W reelected. 1GREAT BRITAIN REQUISITIONS | AMERICAN STEAMER HOCKING Without the Formality of ‘Prize Court Proceedings—Washington Informed. | Washington, Dec. an- nouncement that {he American steam- ship Hocking had been requisitioned by the British government without the formality of prize court proceedings was received by the state department late today in a despatch from Consul General Young at Halifax, where the ship has been detained since she was seized by a DBritish warship while on the way from New York to Norfolk. This procedure will be vigorously contested by the United States govern- ment as being illegal and in violation of recognized rights under. internation- al law. Officials of the department, who had been more or less skeptical regarding unofficial reports of the in- tentions of Great Britai essed amazement when they learned that the Hocking actually had been requisition- ed. The United States, it was said, will demand. that the ship be retained in prize court, on the charge that she is partly German-owned and that the prize court act promptly in the case. Confirmation of unofficial reports re- garding the action in the Hocking case led officials here to believe that Great Britain, will take over for its own use other vessels of the fleet owned by the American Trans-Atlantic company, if it has not done so already. QUESTIONING AUTHORITY OF LOUISIANA GOVERNOR. Proclaim Martial Law—Pef For Madamus Filed. To New Orleans, Dec. 2.—The right of Governor Hall to proclaim martial law in Jefferson Parish, across the river from the city, was attacked in a peti- tion for mandamus filed in the state supreme court today by attorneys for a land company. Martial law went [into effect yesterday and today Dis- trict Judge Fleury at Grana, the Par- ish seat, decliged to proceed- with the trial of a suit in which thé land com- pany was plaintiff, holding that under martial law he was without authority. The martial law decress followed ralds by the militia on several alleged gambling resorts in the parish where, the governor dcclares, local authori- tles have failed to enforce the law. GOVERNMENT HAS NO CONNECTION WITH FORD PARTY Assumes No Responsibility for Activi ties or Negotiations. Washington, Dec. 2.—Several Euro- pean mations, neutrals as well as bel- ligerents, have inquired of the United States concerning the status of the peace party’ which is to sail on the ‘vessel chartered by Henry Ford. To each Secretary Lansing has replied that the American government not only has no connection Wwith the expedition but assumes no responsibility for any actiyitles or, negotiations on the part of those engaged. in the movement. The fact that Mr. Ford has con- | Flush the Kidneys. at onée when Back hurts or Bladder bothers by 4 sensation of scAlding any reliable pharmacy and a tablespoonful in a glass of water be- fore breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with Iithia and has been used for genera- tions to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate - them to activity,” also to neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer causes irritation, thus ending bladder disorders. 3 » Jad Salts is inexpensive and can- not injure;. makes a -delightful effer- vescent lithia-water drink which all regular meat eaters should take now and then to keep.the kidneys clean and the blood pure, thereby avoiding seri- ous kidney complications. g Corn Limpers! Use “Gets-It” and Smile Corns Come Right Off, Clean and Fuss With Your Corns Any More! What's the use of spoiling .a good time for yourself by limping around with flerce corns? It's ome . of the easlest things in the world, mow, to get rid of them. “Gets-It* does it “Those Corns Come_ ‘Whistle, the new become the corn ! the biggest selling world, preferred by remember that toe-eating salve you tried, that sticky tape, ~ that toe- bundling bandage, the gouging you've it” has America “corn remedy in the millions. Do you done with knives, razors and scissors? Well, now, forget them all. No more fussing, no more pain. Whenever you use simple, easy ‘Gets-It” the corn is doomed. sure. So is every callous, wart or bunion. Never cut corns or llouses, It makes them grow that faster and increases the dange: blood polson. No cutting. is necés- 7 by using “Gets-It.” Use it tonight na your corny existence It” is sold by all druggists, 25¢ a bottle, or sent direct by E. Law- nce & Co.. Chi of ferred with President Wilson before | launching his movement to end the European war gave some of the am- bassadors and ministers here the im- pression that the Washington govern- ment might have some connection with it. It became known tonight that since publication of the plans of the party the state de; ment has been receiv- ing inquiries, most of them of an in- formal nature, through the embassies and legations here of the European powers. tary Lansing has promptly explained that the party would carry no credeutials from the state department and did not differ from any other body of Americans traveling in Europe. INDICATIONS OF MURDER OF 80 YEAR OLD WOMAN. Found Dead in Her Home—Gagged and Evidences of a Struggle. Abercorn, Que., Dec. 2—The body of Mrs. Frank Dipper, 80 years old, was found in her home here today with in- dications of a struggle which led to the police theory that she had been at- tacked by a burglar or had died of fright. She had been gasged with parts of a garment and there were fingerprints on the body. When Mrs. Dipper, who lived alone, had not been seen for several days, neighbors inves- tizated and found that the house had been entered through a window which had been broken. No arrests have been made. CYPRUS ONE OF THE MEDITERRANEAN’S BIG ISLAND Only Two Others That Are Larger or More Important—None More Cov- eted. (Special to The Bulletin.) Washington, D. C., Dec. 2—*“Cyprus is one of the most important islands in the Mediterranean,” says a bulletin given out today by the National Geo- graphic Society, which describes Eng- land’s reported offer to the Greeks for their aid in the world-war. ' “There are just two islands in the broad’ in- land sea larger than Cyprus, and these are Sicily and Sardinia. There are few islands in the world more rich in historical associations, and none, probably, more coveted by a power- ful neighbor: 3 “Tho island’lies’ in the mouth of a pocket formed by- Asia Minor and Syria at the northeastern end of the Mediterranean, being equally distant from the mainland to the north and to the east. It has an area of 3584 square miles or is as large as the states of Delaware and Rhode Island combined. Its grestest length is 141 miles and its Full of Rheumatism ° Your Case is not Hopeless When You Know Where to Seek Relief, Lee & Osgood Co. or any drusgist FINE COTTON BLANKETS $2.50 a Pair Here they are— Cotton Blankets with a finish which you cannot tell from the finest wool. They are full, double bed size, and we have them in gray, tan and white. Fine Blankeis - PRACTICAL-NOT PROSAIC CHRISTMAS GIFTS Here’s a suggestion for you, sir or madam, when you are considering the proper gift for the lady, young or old, who has the care of a house. Buy her a pair of Boston Store Blankets or a Comfortable and she will have a gift practical as well as pretty and will give years of honest WHITE WOOL BLANKETS, full size, $4.00 and $4.50 PLAID BLANKETS, a beautiful assortment, $6.00 a pair COTTON FILLED COMFORTABLES $1.00 to $3.50 You can get a good one for a dol- lar—a better one for various prices to §2.00, and the best we have for $350. They are good to look at and better to sleep under. BEACON COMFORTABLES, the reputable kind, for $2.50 BLANKETS from 75c a pair to $8.00 greatest width is 60 miles, while its averagc width is more than 35 miles. A great part of the island is taken up by two mountain ranges, one of which fills much of the southern and central ‘part, and the other of which stretches along the northern coast. “The coast of Asia Minor lies 46 miles to the north, and that of Syria between 50 and 55 miles to the east. Although nominally a possession of the Cttoman Empire up until the out- break of hostilities between the Turke and the Allies, Cyprus has been ad- | inistgred by _Great Britain since °, and now forms an_integral part of the British Empire. English occu- pation has done much to improve the conditions of health on the island, as it has been a stimulus to the com- mercial development. “The mountains of the island are wild and beautiful, and upon _their sides the forests are still growing that were famed and prized In early Egyp- tian times. They also »contain the mines of copper, celebrated among the ancients and still richly _productive. The higest altitude is attained by | Mount Troodes, with a summit 6406 ! feet above sea level. “A wide valley runs, east and west, through the central part of the island. This valley is about 60 miles lons, with a breadth varying from 10 to 20 miles. The mountain ranges on either | side send their waters to the valley | irough intermittent torrents. Much of this lowland is _uncultivated, though in the northern parts grain is grown. The soil of the whole val- ley is good, and there is no reason Why the uncertain water supply might not be supplemented, bringing all of the land under cultivation. In the Jdays when western civilization was in its swaddling clothes, Cyprus was wideiy known for its impassable for- ests, which not only clothed the sides and’ summits of its mountains with thick, dark masees of green, but which avergrew the whole floor of the val- ley between with such an interlacing | sturdy tangle of trees and underbrush, | that it was difficult to clear the land | for cultivation. | “The wonderful forests of the land, ! however, in the more than 2,000 of exploitation that have passed over Yhem have been almost entirely cut away. These forests built the ships of Egypt, of Greek Syrian rulers, of Asia Minor ‘cities, and of Turks, and all that rcmains of their once much-her- alded. glory are the pine growths on the mountains. Today the whole cen- tral plain is_bare and treeless, and with the extinction .of the forests many -disadvantages of climate have come upon the island, so that Cyprus of the present is not the bright home for man so bravely praised by the Greeks of classic times. It is, never- theless, n valuable land, and much of its former splendor could be brought back to it by the proper administra- tion and development. The English | have already begun this work. of re- habilitation. ‘The population of the islang is es- timated at 240,009, Greeks and Turks. The chief towns are Nicosia, the cap- ital, with 15,000 inhabitants, the lars- est' city, and Limasol and Larnaca. Most ¢t the people gain gheir liveli- hoods by agriculture. The methots employed are almost as ancient as are the traditions of the island, and the inhabitants are sturdily opposed to in- novation. The Olive, mulberry, grains, grapes and other fruits, oil seeds, cot- ton a2nd all sorts of vegetables are grown Irrigation works have 'been Gndertaken for the reclamation of the soil, so fruitful ‘of old, and many acres have been brought back under cultivation. In passing, it may be stated. that the miles of Cyprus have foung favor in all-of Britain's . wars since that waged against Russia in the Crimea. “Cyrrus does an annual trade of about $1.500,000. It is handicapped in the development of its commerce ow- ing to 2 want of natural harbors and to-an- Eastern fatalism too thoroughly learned to permit of much initiative, Since the British occupation some energy has been brought into the lit- tle land, put there still. remains a great deal to' be.accomplished- before a west-Europe commerce and business management can become indigenous. Great Britain administers Cyprus through a high commissioner, with the powers of a colonial governor.” We All Want to Know. Medill McCormick, we see by the papers, is going_to coax T. R. to run for president. Who coaxed _Medill to coax T. R.2—New York - Evening Sun. A quick-cutting file from England has heavy teeth cut over the usual diagonal ones. onthe of ever QYenuine bottlesf A [ DuffysPure Malt Whiskey appears label y in this city will promise to give your money back if you are not cured of rheumatism after using two bottles of genuine Rheuma. To those who know the wonderful results secured with Rheuma this offer is not necessary, but there are many who have falled to ge results with other medicines-and this offer is made to convince. the sceptical Hear what T. M. Baird, of Delton Mich., has to sa; T taken with rheumatism in my hips dnd limbs. It was all I could do to walk or work. Last spring I tried a bottle of Rheuma and three bottles did the work. I am not the only one here who has been bénefited.” Rheuma rids the system of urfc acid, the polsonous sediment which is the chief cause of rheumatism. Be sure to get the genuine—ask for Rhéuma in liquid form. 50 cents. CROWN OUTFITTING G 5759 ST7TATFE S PST AIRS HoTEL LENOX BOYLSTON ano EXETER STREETS BOSTON One block from Copley Sq. and Public Library. it Shopping and Theatre District. All Outside Rooms. Excellent Cuisine. Single R 82, with (Good Garages — 2 minutes’ walk) L. C. PRIOR, Manacen mm_mum?’m k4 PLUMBING AND GAS FITTING Phone 381 MODERN PLUMBING is as essential jn modern house as electricity is to lighting. We guaran- tes the very best PLUMBING WORK by expert workmen at the faries prices. Ask us for plans and prices. J FE. TOMPKINS 67 West Main ‘Street Robert J. Cochrane GAS FITTING, PLUMBING, STEAM FITTING, 10 West Main Street, Norwich, Cons. Agent for N. B. O. Sheet Packing. T. F. BURNS Healing and Plumbing 92 Franklin Street IRON CASTINGS FURNISHED PROMPTLY BY THE VAUGHN FOUNDRY (0 No. 11 to 25 Ferry Street COAL AND|LUMBER GOAL Free Burning Kinds and Lehigh ALWAYS IN STOCK A. D. LATHROP Office—cor. Market and Shetucket Sta, Telephone 463-13 1814—1915 Jobn A. Morgan & Son . COAL No. 2 Nut per ton 26.00 Office and Yard Central Wharf . Teiepnone 884 STETS@N & YOUNG, Carpenters and Builders ork and materials at right rices by skilled labor, gdanh:;.. 50 WEST MAIN/ST. Most Cigars are Good— THESE ARE BETTER TOM’S 1-2-3 5¢ CIGAR GOOD FELLOW 10cCIGAR Try them and ses, THOS. M. SHEA, Prop. Franklin St. Next to Palace Cafe R. R. AGNEW, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Room 214 Thayer Building Norwich, Conn. Greeneville office: Office Hours: 12-2; 2-4p.m.; 7-8 except de-dua an 7-8 Wednesday and Satur- day evenings, and by Saturday appolntment JOSEPH BRADFORD, BOOK BINDER | Slank Boaks Made and Ruled to Order, 108 SROADWAY Trommer’s Evergreen Beer REAL GERMAN LAGER Is on_draught at. H. JACKEL & CO,

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