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wich lllli ; and Coufief T Rbeeription reice. 33 & weeks 50 ~ month; & year. —_— Entered nt the Postorfice at Norwich, Cenn., cs seccnd-c.aes matter. ‘Telephone Callar PBulletin Business Office, 489. h}tlln Pditorial Rooms, 35-8. < Bulletin Jcb Offics, 5-8. antle Office Room 2 Murray Bldg ‘elephone 210. Norwich, Monday, Feb. 8, 1909. == PR The Circulation of The Buiiefin. The Bulletin has the largest cir- culation of any paper in Baster Counecticut, and from three to four f tmes larger than that of any n £ Norwich. It is delivered to over £3,000 of the 4053 houses in Nor- wich, and read by ninety-three per cent. of the people. In Windham it is dolivered to over 900 house in Putnam and Danlelson to over 1,100, ara tn all of these places it is considerod the local dally. Bastern Connecticut has forty nine towns, one hundred and sixty- five post office istricts and forty ome rural free delivery routes. The Bulletin 1s sold In every town and on all of the R. F. D. routes In Fastern Connecticut CIRCULATION £1901, average % 1905, average £ 1906, averag ssesesesanassesssnrnsne i i 1907, average i 2 ; 1908, average. . THE ASSEBSOR. "The assessor is not much more pop- | ular than the baseball any- where. We seem to lose sight of the | fact that the assessor is not the whole | thing, only the creature of a politi- | cal system which would be a disgrace to any ‘country, The burden of taxation s under it put upon real estate, and the propor- tionally larger burden is upon the | small holders, This is the complaint everywhere—the complaint in Rhede Island, in Connecticut, in New Yor! Attention is being called to the fac that under this system the prudent | and thrifty working man s often pinched between enforced idleness for himself and tenants and the increased taxes to meet alleged public exigen- cles. Commenting upon this, the Bridgeport Telegram says: “The man who owns a very small equity in his property ard who Is straining every nerve to pay the in- terest and, it possible, some of the principal, is the one who feels every added dollar of taxation. Bridgeport, ke New York, is full of such people and those who are eager to do for people who should be xompelled to stand upon their own feet, the things they ought to do for themselves, are pressing down to the level of the sub- merged tenth the worthy citizens who are trying to uplift themselves and thelr children. The small taxpayers should take more interest In city af- falrs and should watch the expenditure of public money more closely. There are fixed necessary expenses which must be met and can scarcely be less- ened, but the little leaks which mul- tiply untll they constitute a formida- ble stream of extravagance are the things that need watching.” The American system of assessing @roperty does notconsidera real estate agent or bullding contractor any more competent for rating property than a dyer, an editor or a horse jockey. Our assessors about whom we kick and thrash represent political favorites rather than judgment of selection or efficlency. The people recognize this unskilful way of having the work do and then complain bitterly of resul The Waterbury Republican has t to say of “Assessing, as Shels Don in that city: “Well, here's Judgs Wheeler award- ing $4,630 for John Henderson's prop- erty, $2,650 more than the city al- lowed, and a short time ago the court gave $18,000 more than the city al- lowed for the Hotchkiss proper! This Is a cruel jolt, but here’s hop- ing that the assessors by constant practice will bacome better guessers.” “It 18 better guessers” this system of ours calls for. The power is with the people and if they cannot improve the system they might by earnest de- votion to the cause just Improve these guessers, * This would be a real ad- vance, ' THE NEXT ARCTIC EXPLORER. Mene Keeshoo is an Eskimo youth brought from the frozen north by Peary, and now attending sehool in this country, who has awakened to the idea that the honor of discover- ing the North pole should fall to his people, and he belfeves himself c ble of making an efficient Arctic ex- plorer, He does) not O.K. the white man's way of doing the north. Criticising the white man's methods he says: “They fit out comfortable ships with a erew of fifty, carrying electric lights and things to make life pass pleasant- 1y up there, where they know they will e lonesome. They stay in a comfort- able harbor until spring and then make a dash to see how far they can 80. When summer i3 over they start back home, and when they return they write books and magazine articles. Mene Keeshoo wants this great honor to go to his own race. He is perhaps the first Kskimo who ever thought much about it. Then he wants to be the historlan of the Es- kimo people. He says he knows he can do these big things If he gets the opportunity. It is not probable that Commander Peary will make an end of the neces- sity for Arctic exploration on this trip, and there is no doubt that an American trained Eskimo might have a genfus for the work and be able to tell the world more about the farthest north than any one yet ever has, The ambition of Mene Keeshoo is a credit to him, and it may be of ben- efit to the world if encouraged. umpire, Spain 13 about to invest $40.000,000 in & navy. What does Spain need a Bavy for, anyway. | take an ' BARRING OUT MATCHES. There is a bill before the Massachu- setts legislature which is drawn to prohibit the sale of any brand of matches i that state, | except the “safety brand” The necessity for such a law Is shown by Inspector Dwight W. Sleeper of the underwriters’ bureau of New England, who makes & rough estimate of what matches cost us each year: “Massachusetts has approximately one-twenty-sixth of the population of the United States and sustains about one-twenty-sixth of the total firs loss of this country. The state police records show that in the vear 1907 we lost $658,346 worth of property in fires caused by matches. The proportion would therefore Indi- cate that $17,177,000 could be saved cach year if match fires could be pre- vented. The oppostion to the measure charg s that this lg setting up a monopoly but Inspector Sleeper replies to the of monopoly and hard- ship as follo “It is a well-known fact that the Diamond Match company already monopolizes most of the match business, but they are mot the only safety-match manufacturers doing in this country, and there are o patent laws to prevent the manu- facturers of or double-dipped from making the safety kind.| they have not done so before is uggestion simply because the demand has not | been great enough. The machinery ind the dipplng processes are the same.” BLOW AT SANTA? bill has been introduced in the ature providing that saloons be d on Christmas day, whereupon Hartford Post remarks that is a low at Santa Claus to prevent him rom recuperating from his strenuous | work the night before.—New Britain Herald There s no reason why tl.e saloon should be kept open on Christmas day any more than upon Sunday, and to| 'mit the saloon to profane Christ's ay is a disgrace to Christian civiliza- | tion. The legislature should not re- | gard such a bill as this with levity | for 1t is more than probable that nine- | tenths of it wo! the bartenders in Connec- | glad to be free to cel- ate the day with their friends or s, There fs nothing senseles about this bill—it simply asks al sotless Christmas, Put iIn this way, how many respectable citizens of Con- u, nectl would be in favor of golr think y aga NO JOKE. The Norwich police were merely a little premature when they started to inebriate to the insane asy- lum, He will eventually get there.— The Middletown Sun This is no joke. The fact that ex- cessive inebriety unbalances the mind as well as dulls the intellect and wrecks the physical body has become a matter of stat has sent tic wo- men r insane retreats in five years who were demented through the use of alcoholic beverages; but how many in consequence of the use of them by others the figures never That inebriates eventually get there is too well known and too fully realized to be contradicted. EDITORIAL NOTES. An Oklahoma woman horsewhipped a slanderer of herself into insensibil- ity, If he was a man It nezuela what 1 Castro ventures to re to y n to Ve- there no to hi live, ppen There is no union man who claims that strikes are profitable—they simply allege that they are nec The Tl man who sat a child on no a redhot stove for annoying him has the brute be at every point. Ha Many a man recklessly runs up bills without realiz that he is running himself down. Equality of opportunity for all as- ‘pirants, is the president's motto when it comes to census taking. That is not | s0 bad. Complaint is now that when Cuba attained her freedom she did not show disposition to pass dround free rs an The man who can tell his wife how any other woman Is attired is capa- ble of becoming a reporter for a so- ciety paper. Now it falls to the littlest state in the union to have the mightiest bat- tleship named after her. That Is a stunning honor, ner with compartments that she Is not what she was thought to be. The Republic did not stand the test. , A Boston paper says that the direct tate n_ Massachusetts does not ing the public to a keener sense of tate expenditures democrats carried Indiana on account of the opposition to the Han- ley anti-saloon law, but now they find they cannot repeal it. The to att spanking committee appointed g0t to business, and there is little probability that it will When there are millions to be dis- burs n making up a census Roose- velt should realize that political ex- ions must r the ma o ¥ have done g0o0d work, it may be presumed that this is just what he proposes to tell the countr; The Vekmont legislature Is a record breaker for extravagan 1t has in- creased salarfes $60,000, and made ap- propriations abovk the high water line by $100,000. Tt is not much of an honor to be king of Peter ended the throne esult of a dishonorable plot, and has never had the confidence or respect of his subjects telling | 1 to Roosevelt's case have not | The Cost of Being Good. The cost of being good is brought home to Tennessee by the passage of the prohibition bill over the governor's veto. Prohibition in Tennessee means a reduction of more than $1,000,000 in revenue to the state in Davidson, Shel- by and Hamilton counties,and involves property exceeding $10,000,000. It also means the loss of employment to heads of families representing 12,000 persons connected with the breweries and dis- tilleries.—Waterbu: American. by zst il L There are 3,000 islands in ‘Huren Lake Onions Briry Sleep. Raw onions have more than once proved a curz for Insomnia. One girl whose work keeps her out late several evenings a week and who was unable to put her work out of her mind after retiring, has found relief by eating a slica ’ bread and butter with a sl of raw onion just before going to Better . Than Oven. u Instead of putting food into the oven t6 keep it hot for latc comers, cover it over closdly and place over a pan of hotwater, The steam will keep the food hot and at the same time prevent it from drying. Lemon for Tooth Wash. A dash of lemon added to the water used for brushing the teeth will be found a pleasant change from the or- dinary tooth paste or powder. For Sunday Night Supper. A favorite Sunday night supper Jish in one home consists of slices of toast spread with butder, sprinkled with nard-boiled eggs that have had the volks powdered and the whites minced and seasone! _ever so lightly with ¥French mustard and each overlaid with boneless herring. Cucumber pickles an available accompaniment. Needlework Suggestions. to be transferred to corset { thin cambric, Persian lawn, conet, batiste or China silk, to be slipped on over the in the back. The ol buttoned edges to be scalloped and embroidered head or in eyelet design with mercerized cot- ton, the ribbon, regulating the fullness at the neck and waist, being run throngh worked buttonholes. The scal- lops at the edge should be padded beo- fore being worked and if desired the model may be embroidered with silk floss instead of the mercerized cotton Banana Croquettes. Easily prepared and fasty croquettes made of bananas, peeled, cut In . rolled in egg and bread crumbs and fried in a basket of deep Make a drawn butter sauce flavored with lemon juice and slightly sweet- | ened to go with them. To Freshen Rolls. Rolis may be freshened, even when very stale, by dipring each one quick Iy in jce water and heating in the oven until crisp. If eaten while hot they re- 1ble Beef Salad. Corne: Cut one pound of corned beel in dice. | Add one tablespoon of freshly-grat- ed horseradish and marinate with a French dressing. Serve in a bed of watercress and pass more dressing with it Cheese Digests Other Foods. Cheese iz often supnosed to be very. indigestible food. but for active peo- ple, if taken in small quantities, it really is not so, for it makes other foods, digest Whon cheese is made from new milk it and butter; therefore it Is far more whelesome than that made from skim milk. Ital Have ready a half cup of freshly- cooked rice. - Put Into a stewpan one tablespoonful each of butter and flour. Rub_together untll blended, add one cupful of grated cheese, a_cup and a balf of hot water and a pinch of an- otto. Stir rapldiy and when perfectly smooth spread this sauce over the rice, spread on a shallow serving dish. Sprinkle finely-grated cheese over the whole and serve hot with a garnish of nasturtium leaves about the edges. To Reinforce Lace. When a quantity of insertion is worn upon lingerie waists the lace should be reinforced witk a iittle strip of net. This prevents the lace from pulling. Any kind of wash net of good quali will answer the purpos 1t can be sewn on with the lace or afterward by hand. LATE WINTER FADS AND FEATURES. new fabric that looks like Direc- satin, put is more warm and sup- satig finiehed cashmere, and o be' had in all the popular A ‘ord Belts are the latest wrinkle in girdles. These come In almost any standard shade, and are fastened in front with a huge colored stone in bar- baric resign. A few hjghly fashionable women have ventured fo wear sleeves of dif- ferent. materials, one of the fabric used in the dress and the other of chiffon cloth, lace or net. All white, _even for voung girls, fs t in high favor this season. If the gown s white there is sure to be a uch of color in the sash or at the nroat in the yoke trimming. Mary women have the mistaken idea the gresent fashionabls dr which seemed extreme at first, Is try- ing to the figure; but, truth to tell, it is exactly the reverse. Policeman Blue New Serge Calor. We have long been familiar with serge in army and navy blue, but the newest color for the military coar, which has some prominence among the newest models, is the color known as the policeman blue. Tt iz shown in the same smooth sur- faced materfals and bright dark blue of their uniforms and is very smart. The idea carried out with a touch of blue and white silk introduced in the way of a walstcoat is decidedly pretty. Spangles for Slippers. Spangled heels for dancing’ slippers are very fetching. Net Tunics Numerous. Tunic effects in net or other sheer stuffs over limp robes of satin are made up in innumerable ways, and supple satin robes opencd to show contains the properties of cheese | under panels or petticoats of silk mouskeline or net are numerous. For Coat-Skirt Suit. For a walst to wear with a ocoat- and-skirt cosutme of velvet one of the best liked .is made of plain net sou- tached with the cclor of the velvet. Fanoy Chiffon Satin. Chiffon satin may be had in fancy weaves, 138 blocks and chevron stripes further embellished with coln spots be- ing favorites. Finish for Net Waist. A pretty finish for the neck and sleeves of a net walst is a plaited ruche made of the net itself. This {s made double, and after plaiting the tinuy fullness fs switched into place. Then it :an easily be basted into the waist. If the met is dark, a tiny ruche of white tulle may releve It. Chinese Robe in Favor. N Any woman who has or can get hold of a Chinese robe is highly favored, for with the addition of collar and cuffs of fur it will make the most fashion- able of motor wraps. In the past few weeks many of the Parisian elegantes, which appeared in these earments, which are not only beautiful but delightfuly warm and comfortable as well. Terrors of Rent Day. Rent day is always a worry to some women. To prevent this, calcuate how much a week the monthly rent amounts to, | 4L | and each week lay by that sum. ! It is wonderful how litle difference 2763 laying by a little bit each week makes LADIES' SHIRT WAIST. to most people, and it robs rent day of —_ all its terrors. Chocolate for Pudding. | Bread pudding takes on a new digni- | tv_when it is flavored with chocolate. Make a chocolate custard and put it {in"a baking dish with alternate layers of pread. This can be eaten either with or without cream. ptable to the | 2 ne batiste, or- gandle, Perslan lawn or nainsook. and | the ceriter should be stamped with s pretty conventional design and - embroidered with mercerized cotton in white, A yoke eftect is produced by u wide insertlon of embroldery or baby Irish_lace, & square motif of similar lace being set in the center, inside o | the square, the material being ecut | away from underneath both, the edges | carefully turned back and overhanded Sleep for Nervousne: The nervous patient should have | cight or nine hours of sleep. 77777 with cotton or finished with a £ narrow hem. The high collar Is t | Cleaning Patent Leather. med with twe rows o the inseriion o tent leather with | the long, tight-fitting cuff on the puff: A e e vhile | €d sleeve being trimmed to m i3 | warm water and letting it dry while | stilt warm rub Just a little sweet ofl in | d=ired fhe siecves may be « 1t, then rub it well out of it. allover lace or embroidery matching the insertion used on the walst. The required fullness is supplied by a tucx which extends over each shoulder, be- ing stitched to yoke depth In front and to the waist line In the back. The closing is made under the box-plait at the center-back, a slight gathering he- ing made at the waist line to hold the fullness In position. 32 to il Helps Sho; Kid shoes may be kept soft and free from cracks b§ rubbing them once a week with a little pure glycerine or castor oil. Olive Oil for Books. No Alcohol or Poisonous Drugs DR C. R. CHAMBERLAIN, Denta; Surgeon. In chargo of Dr. S. L. Geer's practice during his last lliness. 161 Main Street, Norwich, Conn. nov2éd DR. CHAS. B. LAMB, VETERINARIAN Office, 227 Main St, Franklin Square. House, 15 Town St. Telephone 618-5. The pattern is in seven sizes. 44 fnches, bust measure, For 36 bust - [ the waisi requires 3% yards of ma- terial 20 inches wide. 3 yards 27 inches Olive oil rubbed over the library shelves will, it is said, prevent the mi dewing of the books. wide, 2 vards' 36 inches wide or 1% yards 42 inches wide: 414 yards of in- Celery and Mayonnaise. Jards It was chance tha hit on a way to improve the somewhat tasteless celery salad with mayonnaise. One night at dinner a woman cut up smail blocks of ber cranberry jelly among the celery and was delighted Price of pattern. 10 cents. Order through The Bulletin Company, Pattern Dept., Norwich, Conn. Hot Watsr a Tonlec. A glass of hot water before break- with the results, both in looks and|gact §s a cleanser and tonic for the | taste. entire system. | St For an oily, greasv skin, squeezs| Sprinkle Plant Leaves. half a lemon Into the water; drink | | Instead of pouring water upon the | without adding sugar. | leaves of a plant, put the plant into the bathtub, dip a whisk broom Into 't lexion. the water and sprinkle the leaves with el iy e 2 Sudden temper, deep worry, anxiety of any kind, coupled with poor eat- ing, will make the face pale and the chin blotchy. Keap cool If you want a nice skin. Bad-temyered women generally have a poor skin. Worriers never have a nice color. The even-tempered woman has peaches in her cheeks and a tiny touch cf colo in her chin. one method of washing very eves which might be torn if the spray was turned on them. Treatment of Syrup. It maple syrup shows signs of fer- | menting. pour it Into preserving kettle and add a teapsoon of butter to each | quart. Heat the syrup to the boiling point »nd then bottle It will keep indefintely after this | treatment. For Tapering Fingers. The careful daily manicuring of the nafls and the pinching of the finge: tips softly after washing will tend to keep the fingers tapering and to pre- vent the square, stubby look so often noticed in badly kept hands. Old Colors Back. With some of the soft old colors in use this winter the combinations of cloth and gauze are passing beautifu.. Let Cold Cream Dry. To get the full value of cold cream it must be let dry on the face. It| takes time for the skin to absorb it. | Proper Handling of Lace. Pull lace gently, opening the mesh | with the left hand as yen fron with | the right. This Ad. and the recommencation of those that used it, sold ten gross of our Syrup of WHITE PINE AND TAR last year. Made and sold by the H. M. LEROU CO, 276 West Main. "Phone 477-12 Stuffed Cabbage. Boil a whole small head of cabbage until nearly done; take one pound of beef, one-halt pound of fresh pork and pass through the meat chopper twice, with one onion; add one-half cup of bread crumbs, one cup of parboiled rice, one cup of wilk, one egg, salt and pepper; now take 1ives from the cab- bage, being careful to keep them whole place In each leaf a spoonful of the meat, roll it up and fasten with a toothpick; place In a dripping pan; place on the top of each a generous piece of butter. Bake in the oven un- til nice and brown. Vegetable Soup. Buy a plece of shin, as you get the bone with the marrow right in it and that is what makes a rich soup. Re- move the outside skin; cut the meat into small pleces, put into kettle with two large onions sliced thin, pepper and salt to taste; wash a large carrot and parsnips and slice: put in after the meat has bolled an hour or so; cook slow. as the meat will be more tender. When nearly done put in two small or one medium turnip, cut in dice form, and then lastly the potatoes, cut in small pieces. Shepherd’s Pi Left-over cabbage may | in be chopped and frisd with potatoes, but it is | even nicer made Into a kind of shep- herd’s pie. First chop it, then put it in- to a well-greased pie dish, first a layer of cabbage, then a dusting of grated cheese, salt and pepper, then one of rotato (or, if no potato, bread crumbs), then more cabbage and more cheese and potatoes until the dish is full. Sometimes, to make a variety, an oc- casicnal layer of thinly sliced tomato may also be added. The top layer should be of potato, and tiny bits of dripping should be put here and there on it to make in brown nicely. Then pour into the dish, down the sides, &0 as not to disturb the top layer, either a little white sauce or some thickened brown gravy, and bake in the oven till a nice brown. For either luncheon or Sunday night supper it makes a light, appetizing dish. Any kind of cabbage, greens of caulifiower can be used for it, and if you have a tiny bit of meat on hand, a layer of it well minced may (& Adds wholesomeness to the food. veland's Boking Powder It is no trouble to make good cake and biscuit with Cleveland’s Baking Powder. sometimes be included. To Be Healthy and Beautiful. Don't get “run down” or “played out” If tired, rest. Don't live in ‘foul alr. Don't drink impure water. Don't buy dirty milk. Don’t use stale milk. Don't eat food badly cooked. cooking lessons somewhere. Don't kiss dirty children. Don't mouth dirty money. Don't try to keep “up and about” all day and ail night, too. Take Only Three Lemon Ginger Sherbet. Wipe eight lemons with a clean, damp cloth and from two of them shave off the yellow rind in thin bits, taking care to get none of the white. Cut the lemons into halves, reject all the seeds and press out the juice. Put four cups of sugar, two quarts of boil- ing water, a quarter pound of can- died ginger and the shaved lemon peel into a porcelain lined saucepan and Dboil until clear; skim well and straln through cheese’colth. Beat the white of one egg until foamy, but not stiff, and pour the strained syrup into it. Mix well, turn into the freezer, pack with part salt to thres parts ice and freeze. Superfluous Hair. Common baking soda, dissolved in ammonia, will bleach' superfluous hair and cause it to rot, after which it can be removed with a pumice. This application does not kill hair e e lied until must frequently be ed unt the hair is dead looking, For Stout and Thin. Here is a bit of advice that can be made to work two ways, for the woman who s too thin and her too plump sister: Hurry and worry are twin foes to rounded curves. A zood motto for the thin women is, “Do “not_trouble trouble till trouble troubles you.” Tips on Massage. In massaging wrinkles use the tips Special Tailoring Offer! More Days Your unrestricted choice from our entire stock of Woolens. . Suit or Cvercoa! fo Order $16.50 Formerly $20, $22, $25. TRIS SPECIAL OFFEX IS FOR TEN DAYS ONLY, commencing Saturday, Jan. 30, ending Feb. 10. he Sanhatfin 121-125 MAIN STREET. Custom Tailoring Department. BREED’S THEATRE, Main Street, FOR SALE AT T Main Strest. Nearly opposite Theatre, febsd SHEEDY’S® VAUDEVILLE il RILTLAES assisted by THO Bea The S8ingi y commenci) The Bennatt-Moult onsey Wednesday. . Thursday . Saturday . Tuesday Wednesda Thursday Baturday .. Matinee: Box Office, Wauregan House and ket, Pitchér & Co. ance. Fred S.—CAMPBELL and SHOREY-—Eihel May “ONE NEW YEAR’S EVE” JIMMY COVENEY Songs and Stories THE PLYMOUTH QUARTETTE Bxcept Friday, Feb. Matinees a& on Ce. Repertoire—XIvenings. o ., Darkest B-fi On Thanksgiving A _Cowboy's Ro; aled H O B e hipwrec nees-— . A Jealous Women ‘ The Governor's Wite .A Man Without a Country On, Thankegiving Day Ladies’ Tickets Issued for Evenings, 10c, 20c. 800 10e, !(:mn‘. ts on sale Saturday, Fob. 6. at the Seats on sale Saturda; Cars to all points after the perform- Week of Shows Daily February 215, 7, 845 S. B. STANTON in M utiful Home Drama Shorey's 1 DOROTHY COONAN Singing Comedienne ng Sensation of ths Year ADMISSION No Higher Afternoons 5¢ 10c Ladies and Children \ PICTURES CHANGED CLOVER AND TIMOTHY SWEETS are pressed close in the baled hay we supply for horses and cattle. Dust, brier and weed free, it makes good, clean eating, and adds to the pound value, milk_value and work value of vour animals. If you care at all for your live stock and your pocketbook, do your hay buving here. "All else in grain and feed, of course. CHARLES SLOSBERG, Cove Street (West 8ide), Norwich, Ct. feb2d A Grand Chance to buy a Harness, Carriage or Wagon at the right price. Must close out 1908 stock carried over to make room for new goods and new styles to be ship- ped Feb. 1st, and will be received in two or three weeks. Come and look them over If there s anything In the line you want at a price. L. L. CHAPMAN, Broadway, opp. City Hall, Nerwich, Ct. EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY. Roderick Theaire SILVA & BROWNELIL, Lessce HIGH CLASS MOVING PICTURES AND ILLUSTRATED SONGS. The programme for Monda; Tues- day, and Wednesday will be: “The Idler,” . “Dear Old Grandma" “Old d's Inheritance™ “The Innkeep- Remorse”; feature ploture, “The “Sweetheart e Elf King" ‘Notl Mr. C singing Town.” Continuous performunce from 3 o §and 7 to 10 p. m ADMISSION 8 CENTS. 327 Main Street, opp. Post Offios. febéd CADILLAG HALL 82 Market St, opp. Sheedy's Theatra, DANCING PARTIES Every Wedne nd Saturday Evening New class now opened for pupils. Ar- rangements made by phone 422-3, or J. J. KENNEDY, 117 Main SL Private Lessons any Hour. fanisa JAMES F. DREW Fiano Tuning and Repairing Best Work Only, "Phune 422-3. 18 Perkins Ave sept23d Maher’s School For Danclag, T. A. AND B. HALL, 62 Broadway, Norwich, Conn. Dancing every Friday and Saturday evenings. Baker's orchestra. Private lessons In Waltz, Two- Etc. at any hour. Classes now open. Telephone 471- oct20d ep, jan13daw OUR .... ar[(;gown Closing Qut Sale_< is still going on. Everything is being sold at exceptionally low prices. It will pay you to call at our store this week and get our prives. You can save money on anything in our line. SCHWARTZ BROS,, “Home Furnishers,” 9-11 Water Street Open evenings. Tel. connectlon. Jan12d Grand View Sanitarium for the treatment of Memm and Nerv- ous Diseases, with separats and do- tached department for Alcoholic and Drug Habits. Adaress Grand View Sanitarium, Teléphone 676 Norwioh, Conn. IYOMWE 1647 Adams Tavern 1861 offer to the public the finest standard brands of Beer of Europe and America, Bohemian, Plisner, Culmbach Bava: Beer, Bass' Pale and Burton, Muel Scotch Ale, Guinness' Dublin _Stout, C. & C. Imported Ginger Als, Bunk Hill P. B. Ale, Frank Jones' Nourish- ing Ale, Sterling Bitter Ale, Anheuser, Budwelser, Schlits and Pabst. A. A. ADAM, Nerwich Town. Telephone 447-12. ootéa of the fingers and thumb, always working across the line; never follow the lines of the creases e T EXPERT TUNING saves and improves the plano, All work guaranteed. A. W. JARVIS, Clatremont Ave., Norwich, Conn. Sclool . reck, Mich. eall, "Pho! F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect St., E Tel. 889-6. Norwich, Ct ELECTRICITY FOR LIGHTING CHANGE IN PRICE The price to be char and corporations for lighting has been change dersigned, take effect on 1908; th as of Nov. 1, 1908, ity for lighting as shown’ by motre readings taken Oect. 20-24, 1308, to have been used since the last previous readini shall be billed according to the follo: ing schedule: ¥ {o 450 Kilo-watt hours, 10 cents per e vor 450 kilo-watts, 10 centa g vor 45 watts, or 50 kilo-watts itional Kila-w Bxample: Number of kilo-watts used, 1, 450 Kllo-watts at 10 cent: 550 Kilo-watts at 5 cents. ) ov. is to say, all bills rends Amount of Bl Norwich, Oct. 1, 1908. JOHN M WILLIAMS, WILLIAM F. BOGUE, GILBERT 8. RAYMOND, Board of Gas and Electrical Commis~ sioners. oc “Dignity Is What We Use To Conceal Our Ignorance” is Elbert Hubbard's definition of the word dignity. Unquestionably Elbert 1s correct, and every thinking person will agres with him. Think of the peopls with dignity and count those having it naturally. He who has it naturally, combined with ability, is a great success in life, Those ‘with assumed dignity are—wall, they are understood and discounted by_the public, We've no dignity, natural or ms- sumed, and If its Use was attempted by us the public would dlscount it Let the public estimate us corractly: glve us credit for a thorough kuowie edge of the photograph business: for doing at reasonzble prices. Years of experience in this business exclusively entitles us to it LAIGHTON BROS,, Photographers Main Street Opxw;zuz Norwich Savings Society. a1 g2l The-Del-Hoff, HAYES BROS.. Proprietors, Broadway, . . . . . ... Norwich, Conm. Running Hot and Cold Water. Rooms Unexcelled. Service Prompt, ‘ables reserved for - “