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CLEARS THE COM " OVER NIGHT Plmples, Rash, Eruptions, Etc., Quick- Iy Eradicated by New SKin Rem- edy. Siuce its discovery one year ago, poslam, th: new skin remedy. has, in its extraordinary accomplishments, ex- | ceeded the most sanguaine expectations of the eminent specialist "\Fm gave 1t 10 the werld. It has cured thousands of cases of eckema and eradicated facial and other jgurements of years standing. The terriple itching attend- 3 ing eczema is stopped with the fivst application, giving proof of its cura- tive properties at the very outset. In less serious skin affections. su as pimples, rash, hoerpes, blackhead: acne, barber's itch, etc. results show after un overnight application, onl small quantity being required to el a_ cure. these minor skin troubles can wvail themselves of the special 50-cent pac! . recehtly adopted to meet sucli needs. Both the 50-cent package and the regular $2 jar may now be obtain- ed in Norwich at Lee & Osgood's, ith’s, and other leading drug stores. m is aleo on sale in Putnam at in Danlelson at Woodward's, ‘Willimantic at Chesebro's. les for experimental purposes may be had fr direct to the Emergenc :_luW-! Twenty-fifth stre: . Po: e =Lk Laboratories, / Cream to keep the skin smooth. A good Cold Cream softens the skin | and keeps it from chapping. vents roughness and chafing, We warrant THE LEE & 0SGOOD COLD CREAM fto be pure. Not to cause hair to grow or become ranci Our Cold Cream is prepared of in- gredients of the highest quality. Generously and exquisitely perfumed and of rosy fragrance. The quality of our Oream should | commend it to all who seek the best. | In handsome porcelain g The Lee & Osgood Co. PHARMACY febbdaw FIRE NOTICE! Dr. E. J. JONES Dentist New Office at 35 Shetucket St., | over Stamp Store, BILL BLOCK, will Re-open Monday, Feb. 15th| { folh10d NOTICE! HENRY J. STEINER'S PRESCRIP- TION BOOKS WERE SAVED FROM THE FIRE AND RENEWALS CAN BE HAD AT The Lee & Osgood Co. feblod NOTICE. The Treasurer’s office of Falls and Shetucket Companies will be temporarily located af No.| 40 Shetucket St. (Third Floor). Jelephone 540. MAXTON HOLMES, Treasurer. 1eb10d LadiesTravel Miles T in DRESS G The fact that we manufacturer, saving the middleman’s profit, Is being appreciated mors eve lay. Our cus- tomers get the benefit. May we add your name to our increasing list? BRADY & SAXTON, Telephone 306-2, NORWICH TOWN. auglsd o come to ogro store for the bargains | " FRESH MUD ON ect | ect | .. These who use poslam for| now ! of charge by writing | et, New York | is the month you need Cold ! it pre- | jars—15¢ J | | | would be accurate to say dialects. Of lSoen on Their Way At the opening of the crimind@T su- perior court here Thursday morming the cross examination of Lukasz Zalypska was commenced soon after the session opened, the direct testi- mony being finished soon. | Myer Weinraub, a storekeeper at Flanders, said he knew Jurasz and saw him in New London the Saturday be- fore Labor day. YLabor day WRidisz to his store about 4 o'clock alonw, sz not being around. The next Tuesday he saw Jurasz and Ridisz in a New London saloon. Jurasz said the luwsuit was settled and Yurkowisz was | ail right. The Saturday after Labor day be saw Mike and his wife, Jurasz and two others near Judge Bush's place. When Ridisz called at his store his pants were muddy and there was mud on his sleeves. Upon being recalled, Attorney Law- less said he recelved $3 from Jurasz and $15 from his wifo as fees. : Angels Filozl testified to seeing Ridisz in Weinraub's store and of the mud on his clothes. Jurasz was not w be seen. John Yurkowisz testified that he was porn in Poland and had lived in Lyme. S| years. He knew Katie and she wus his wife but they were not mar- ried as she had a husband in Europe, but they intended to get married in time. She bought half of the farm from a man to whom it .was sold by | his son. He said he went to New York ! with his nine year old daughter the | Saturday before Labor day and they | | | returned the nexi Wednesday. He left | Katie, Ridisz and the hired man on the furip, baving had a talk with Katle | and R before he left. He saw Katie pulled out of the walaer. Jur: had hoarded with him and had borro ed money of Katle, The witness had | been sued by Jurasz and his wife, who came there in March. The witness and Katie worked the farm on shares. At the end of two-months Jurasz and his wife took and <old some butter and he pur them gut for robbing him. Jurasz | went to New Jersey and his wife fol- lowed a month later, leaving trunks behind. These he !dentified in the court room. After Mrs. Jurasz had left Jura. returned with a boy. He want to take the trunks, but Katie ! would not allow it. After Staying | three davs he was thrown out for try- i He attemnted to steal at $40. While telling or| deatn of Katie the witness was cry- JUR to Flanders Labor, Day Morning— ' Boarder Never Saw Katie After that Morning. | Mrs. Jurasz coming to Lyme. ! half-hour, \near the Raymond house in the eve- AND RIDISE Jurasz went to the Kux farm after being {Jut out and had cut brush near the hole tvhere the body of Katie was sunk under water. His wife told him about Ridisz, at whose hounse she had boarded in New Jersey. He depied | going to New York after Katiewand | g money to Ridisz for her. He met Katie at. Mrs., Kalinsky's and Ridisz brought her to the Lyme farm. Later Ridisz came to the farm a half hour before the witness and his daugh- ter started for New York ‘he Saturday before Labor day. He told of Mr. and Mike Toupaz testifled that he met | Jurasz and Ridisz together in the rcad about one-eighth of a mile fro his house. He saw them about Labor day morning and they were g ing towards Flanders. He talwed with them about getting the trunks and that their New London lawyer was no good and they were going to get another. Both had mud on their trou- sers, the mud being wet. There was more on_ Ridisz than on Jurasz, Peter Przenuk of Lyme, where he has lived ten months, testified. He knew John and Katie Yurkewicz and boarded af their house six months. He was employed in Raymond sawmill ten or fifteen miles from the Yurke- wicz house. He worked Labor day, He knew Jurasz, meeting him at the Yur- kewicz house. He left the house at 6.1 morning, He left Ridi: Katie there in the kitchen. He went| to work, returning at noon. Vladoc | was there. He talked with Vladoc, | and then went to Toupaz's, and stayed | there a half-hour. It was then aboat | 1 o'clock and he returned in about a He did not look for Ka- never saw Katle after | morning. He saw Jurasz | Mon a | 1! ning, going towards Kux's, was living. On cross-examination, he said not see Jurasz there Saturday, Sun-| day, or Monday. He described the | sleeping rooms and said he got his own | breakfast Monday morning, The other | three appeared before he left, but nothing was said. Ridisz and Katie occupied the same room. Court adjourned at 4.30 until Mon- where he | | he did | day morning at 1 oclock. There will be no session today, because of Lin- coln’s birthday anniversary and be- cause of the loss today court will sit on Monday. | FIFTY-FIFTH WEDDING ANNIVERSARY SUNDAY. | Mr. and Mrs, Louis Tetreault Were | Married in Quebec, But Have Spontl in Danielson. Ar. and Mrs. Louis Tetreault of > street, Danielson, will on Sun- fifth anmversary of ey celebrated their which occurred also | | | LOUIS TETRAULT. sundty, by a solen.n nuptial high {x church, There | m. relatives present the | They are both in excellent heaith, Mr. ! ult being about the ‘borough | daily. | Mr. and Mrs. Tetreault were both | born in Maricville, P. Q,, in which city | tthey were married Feb. 14, 1854 ve: 1 A later they moved to Daniel- * the past fifty-one year idents of thaf place. Mr but as spry as one while Mrs. Tetreault is 4 host of friends in the | few ch younger, They have MRS. LOUIS TETRAULT. borough and they will receive the calls of them on Sunday, when congratula- tions wifl be extended and their guests given a hospitable welcome. They had twelve children, four of whom' died® Felix and Amedia reside in New Bedford, but the others are residents of Danielson, they being Filias, Benoit, Mary, Isaac, Loulse and Joseph. Tt is expected there will be a family reunion in the afternoon in ob- servance of the anniversary, there be- ing but few couples privileged to cele- brate fifty-five years of married life. Work for Califor: Many people wish that California’s legislature, like those of some other states, would devote most of its atten. tion to limiting the sale of cigarettes and improving hotel accommodations. —Washington Star. ‘Work on.an elaborate hydroelectric scheme is about to be commenced in Simla. Nearly all of the details have been worked out, and great expecta- | tions are gntertained by the inhabit- | ants of the summer capital of India of comfort and convenlence that will be derived from this new improvement. | According to _the accepted authori- tics there are 3,424 spoken languages | in the world today, or, perhaps, it this number 937 are Asiatic, 587 Eu- ropean, 276 African, and 1,624 Ameri- can. By far the greater number of these belong to savage and semi-sav- age tribes and nations. | New {don in the morning between 4 and HANDLING THE BUSINESS OVER AT STONINGTON. Burned Pier at New London to Be Re- built—Loss from $75,000 to $80,000. Going over the loss carefully the England Navigation company’s officers could not sce, they said, where the damage would be less than $75,000 and expected that when all claims of shippers were presented the aggregate of loss would reach closely to $80,000. Hardly was the news made known to officials of the company before ar- rangements were begun to have the business of the Norwich line trans- ferred to Stonington, where the boats will load and unloed temporarily. It may be several months if this change | is made before the wharf can be put in shepe again. The Maine was ordered to Newport and left port at 12 o'clock Monday to repair. The steamer New Hampshire will take her place on theé line. It is said that the company will be- buiid and that they will have a modern structure that will enable the hand- ling of business at a saving of $25,000 a year when they resume. The wharf was constructed entirely of vellow pine. It was built during the winter of 1847 and 1888 at-a cost of £70,000. Thé New Hampshire left from Ston- ington for New York Monday night, the passengers being sent there from London at 10.45 o'clock, and a Stonington for New Lot oclock. g Could Not Test Cure. The recent blizzard throughout the southwest proved to be a bad time test the theory of curing rheuma- ism by walking barefooted through a jeld of alfalfa—St. Louls Globe-Dem- Hospitable. nd did you enjoy vour African| trip. major? How did you like the | Foges ™ ! “Oh. they were extren kind- | | hearted: tt for dinuer. | If Brother Myers of Orleans is re- | Guired to take a separate oath for eac of the several town offices he hoids it will keep him wearing all winter. Yarmouth Register. | Highly Recom | in these cases, mix it at home; Compound Kargon, | Home Recipe for Kidney Trouble. There is more cases of kidney trou- ver before, while ~more people succumb each year to some form of - kidney disease than any other cause, le there is sickness, examine the urine. Rheumatism is only a symptom of kidney trouble. It is nothing more or less than excessive uric acid in the blood, which the slug- glsh, inactive kidneys have failed to sift out, leaving it to decompose and settle about the joints and muscles, causing intense suffering; frequently resulting in deformity; often reach- h\g‘tho heart, when death ensues. ins across the back, frequent painful and suppressed n and other symiptoms of weak bladder are not the only signs of kidney trouble; many cases of stomach disease, head- ache, pain in the heart, inactive liver, ete., are but symptomsg; the cause of ‘which can be traced to feeble, clogged kidneys. A simple test -of the urine is to vold a small quantity in a bottle or glass and let it stand over night; next morning, if there is a reddish brick-dust sediment, or white fleecy substance present, either consult some reputable physician or take a good vegetable treatment. The following prescription is recommended highly and the sufferer can one ounce; Fluid Extract Dandelion, one-half ounce; Compound Syrup Sar- saparflla, three ounces. Shake well and use in teaspoonful doses after each meal and at bedtime. ‘Where any of the symptoms enu- merated above are present, good re- sults are sure to follow immediately the use of this simple preseription. ‘Three Sabbkaths Every Week. Morocco is a country of many Sab- baths. The first three days I spent in Tangier were all Sabbaths. Arriving on a Thursday night the next day was Friday, the Mohammedan Sabbath, which was followed by the Jewish | Sabbath—the Hebrew element in Tan- gler is comsiderable and strict in re- Hgious observance—and that in turn by the Christian Sunday. Subsequent comparisons, however, revealed little difference between any days of the week. On the Mohammedan Sabbath & black fiag is holsted on the minarets at the prayer of dawn, instead of the’ white flag that announces the time of devotions on other days. It re- mains up until the roiddle of the fore- noon, by which time everybody is sup- posed to have found out what day it is.—N. Y. Post. The Better Part. A delightful little story is told of Prosper Merimee, the French author. He was once guest at a royal hunt, when hares, pheasants and other game were driven before the emperor and his followers, and the servants picked up the victims of the sport. Among all the members of the hunt- ing party, Prosper Merimee alone had no trophy te display. “How dees this some one. “Where game is so plenty, the mer- it of a marksman seems to me to lie in hitting nothing,” replled Merimée. with grave courtesy, “so I fired be- tween the birds.”—Youth's Compan- fon. happen?” asked Upe and Downs. “Matrimony has its ups and downs,” remarked the scanty haired benedict “What's the answer?’ queried the confirmed bachelor. “It keeps the wife busy trying tc keep up appearances and the husbanc busy trying to keep down expenses, replied the other with 3 large, open face sigh. Knew He Needed It. The Chinese who gave $2) to u the benighted of Arkansas may been reading about Senator Jeff Davis of that state.—New Orleans Times- Demaocrat. The Ayes Win, ys the one desire of | irement. The desire is unan- ‘Washington P Castro = now is ret imou: “Officer,” said the whimsical tourist to the big, strapping policeman who had saved him from being run over b; utomohile, “you remind me of acter in one of Kipling's storics You've heard of Kipling?” “Kip Ling?" 1 said Officer Hooligan. “Sure! He runs a Chinese laundry about four blocks fr'm where 1 liv Trot along, son- —Chicaog Tribune. [From New York World, June 10, '08] DRUGGIST SAYS COOPER WOKE UP REGENTLY Westerner Claims Everybody Will Have To Take His Medicine Eventually. York has never before wit-| such a spectacle as may be | ery day at Broadway and Ninth | street. 1t is here that L. T. Cooper, the Western stomachologist, who | claims that stomach trouble is at the | bottom of all chronic ill health, is| meeting the public, 1t would be difficult to estimate how many people call to talk with| Cooper during a single day. The store | where he is holding forth seems to have become the Mecca for ailing | people in New York, and the amount | of medicine he is disposing is enor- | mous. In addition to what he sells himself, druggists generally through- | out New York are handling his prep- arations out In unlimited quantities, A leading druggist said recently: “The public seems to have lost its mind over this man Cooper. Person- ally, I don’t know anything about his medicine. We had nothing to do with ‘his coming to New York, and he has| until recently sold his preparation en- tirely through one company. I sup- pose he thought New York was like | one of his Western towns and every- | body could be supplied from a corner drug store. He woke up about a week 4go and put It on sale everywher Since then we have been selling it. I don't know how long this demand | wlill last, but I have never before seen anything like it.” In an interview Monday afternoon Cooper said: “I am not making any wild claims for my medicine. All it| does is to stimulate the gastric julces | and regulate the digestive organs, but people do not realize how splendid their health would be if only their stomachs wera not languid and en- feebled by vears of abuse. New nessed seer just | “Nine out of tem people who have called today have been sent here by others. Sooner or later every tired half-sick man and woman in New York, is going to try my medicine They can’t help it. After I leave New York I shall take two months’ rest and then go to London to introduce Coop- er's New Discovery In England.” Among New Yorkers who have re- cently become enthusiastics on the sul t of Cooper's medicine is George J. ott, of No, 274 West Nineteenth street, who said Monday afternoon: “It is hard to realize that any medi- cine will do all that is claimed for it. “T have taken all kinds of medicine for ten years and this is the first 1 have ever found that was worth two cents. I have had rheumatism con- stantly for ten years and have spent & quarter of what I made for doctous and medicines. T might have taken so much rain water for all the good they did me. Before I had taken this Cooper’s New Discovery a week I rea- lized it was worth something. have taken it a month and I am as well a% I ever was in my life. matism and eat like a horse. I feel | like doing something now, where a month ago I hated to walk a block. ‘When I first bought it I thought it was another fake, but now I know better. All the other stuff T have taken was worth nothing; this is worth ten, yes, twenty times what they ask for it.” Cooper’'s New Discovery is now on sale at leading druggists the country over. We will send a booklet in which Mr. Cooger tells the reason for most 1 health to anyone upon request. e Cooper Medicine Co., Dayton, I have no rheu- | - “mnor found very useful in the manufacture of tools like twist drills, where the ‘hardness has to be kept between nar- | yow limits. It consists of &' glass tube, within which & steel ball of 40 grains’ weight, treated by a special process 80 as to have jewel hardness, falls freely. The height of the rebound of the ball measures the hardness of the metal it strikes. Were the area of | contact between the dropped weight and the metal larger, so that no ap- preciable dent were made, the rebound would-be a measure of elasticity rath- er than hardness. The height of the rebound is measured on a scale, of which 100 is the average hardness of carbon steel, which s also found to be the safety limit for steel tools after reheating and tempering ready for use. Far Underground. ‘Wood 404 feet underground in a per- fect state of preservation was found at the Alabang stock farm the other day while boring for the second artesian ~well there. The drill had penetrated | to a depth of 400 feet and had just been drilling hard rock when it sud- denly struck a log which was five feet | in diameter and in perfect state of preservation. How a log could be so far under- ground and underneath a ledge of rock in perfect condition fs a question | that 1s puzzling the officials of the | bureau of agriculture—Manila Times. | The Language of Science. “I must say,” remarked the plain every-day man, “that I feel as if T had a cold in the head. And I'm so hoarse 1 can hardly speak.” “I gee,” answered the scientist. “You are suffering from & slight eohyza, causing congestion of the mucous membrane and suffusion of the optical organs, and induclng & somewhat phlogistic condition of the pieglottis. Perhaps, however, you had better send for a physician.” “Send for a physician? No., I don't want a doctor. Send for an inter- preter.” Literary Hit. “Did vour friend make a hit at the literary club?” “T guess he did. He pronounced Tes Miserables’ in a brand-new way and then alluded to it as Victor Herbert's masterpiece.” Laugh is on Him, How George F. Baer must despise such a winter as we have had!—Chi- cago Record-Herald. DONT WORRY; It Makes Wrinkles. ‘The Rl are better values than we 1t Hirsch Trousers have ever before offered. The selling has been large, but there still remains a satisfactory assortment of these EXCELLENT TR(_)USERS for your selection. WE GUARANTEE 40 to 50 per cent. on YOU a saving of from all Clothing, Hats and Fi urn;'shings purchased hgre. WAUREGAN HOUSE HLOCK, Main Street, Norwich, Conn. | Mosler Saies | ryyean Psiions Teslimonial from Nerwich’s Leading Dry Goods House. aterbury, Conn., Feb, 8, 1902. The Mosler Safe Co., Boston, Mass. Gentlemen:—In the Great Fire which occurred at Waterbury, Conn., on the third inst, we had a No, 40 large double-door Mosler Safe, which was subjected to intense heat for sixty hours. After opening same we were delighted to find all its contents in a perfect state of preservation. We had between two and three thousand Warry over lli-health does your|dollars in (greenbacks) cash in the aealth no good, and merely causes £ wrinkles, that make you look older|®%fe . than you are. i o A If you cre sick, don't worr‘{. but go | The Reld & Hughes Dry Goods Co. | about 1t to make ycurself well. To do A ke this we repeat the words of thousands i of other former sufferers from woma; For further particulars cal!ll on ty ills, similar to yours, when we say, JAMES N. LEE, Agent Mosler Safe Co., Wauregan House. feblld ke V_i_l_)gfl-O. It !s a wonderful female remedy, as vou will admit If yeu trr ' Directions for s use are printed In six languages with every bottle. Price 3125 at druggists "RANCO-GERMAN CHEMICAL CO. 106 West 129th Street, New York. mar3ld . LEGAL NOTICES. oard 0i'Reiie_ifl + The undersigned Board of Relief of the Town of Norwich will meet at| eir office in the City Hall, Monday. | uary 1st, 190! and will be in| n daily (Sundays excepted) until including the 20th day of Feb-| ruary, to hear and act upon appeals | ‘rom ' the doings of the Assessors, bate for in and do any yther business proper to be done by said board. Office hours 10 a. m. to 4 p. m, JOHN F. SEVIN, HENRY GEBRATH. | JAMES W. BLACKBURN. | Board of Relief. Norwich, Jan. 20th, 1969, | | Jan20MWF kit e s R e % DISTRIC PURT OF THE UNITED the District of Connecticut. matter of Kiias in Bankruptey, No. Upon Petition for Dischu Notice is n that s for ge. Pincus of Ne w London Cou aid DI . has filed his appli- . D. 1909, fi s debts | 1 Losses Sine Brownin; kruptey, at his o said County and District, 22d day of Feb A D. yelock in the forenoon, then and there to examine the bankrupt and to show use. if any they have, why h dfs- nge should not be grante AMOg A. BROWN e in Feb Ref rwich, Conn., 123 | Ba 10th, 1| Assets . | Surp NOTIGE Shetucket Street will be closed to public travel until further natice. Geo. E. Fellows, Strest Commissioner. feblld PEW ‘iDNDON cnunf; Mutual Fre Insurance Co., »¢ Norwich, Conn. ESTABLISHED 1840. {aiement January i, 1509 £256,517.7" ...5170,121.723 ... $66,264.570 -$842,582.84 Total income i Organization etary, W. and Asst jam H. Pro HOME OFFICE : 28 Shetucket Street, feblld DISTRICT COURT OF THE UNITED States fc. the District of Connecticut In (ne matter of F Bedard, Bank- rupt. _In Bankruptey, No. 1953 Upon Petition for Dischagge. Notice is hereby given that Bedard of Norwiclh, New London i | Felix ty, in said District, has filed his appii ed March 14th, A. D. 1908, for K in bank- itors and before Referee 2id day of February, A. D. o'clock in the forenoon, then to examine the bankrupt . to show cause, if any they have, why such dis- charge should not be granted AMOS A. BROWNING, Referee in Bankruptey. Norwich, Conn., Feb. 11th, 1909. febl2d AT A COURT OF PROBATE HELD at Bozrah, within and for the District of Bozrah, on the 3d day of February, 1969. Present—JOHN Estate of U, rah. an incapable person. Cleta L. Gardner, Conservator of said U. Selden Gardner, appeared in surt and flled a written application aying for an order to se.l cei tate belonging to the said U. Selden Garduer, fully described in said appli- cation. Whereupon, It is Ordered, That said appiication be heard and 'determined | at the Probate Office in the Town of Bozrah, in said District_on the 1Sth day of Fe ary. 1509, 4 1 o'clock in the afternoon, and that notice of the pendency of sald appliication, and of hearing thereon, be given by the pub- Heation of this order once in The Nor- wich Morning Bulletip, a newspaper having a circulation xcrf id District, at least six days e date of sald hearing. and makes return to the Court of the nptice given, JOHN H. MINER. febl2a Judge. Watch Repairing done at Frisw speaks for itseil Wil FRISWELL, 25-27 Franklin jan22daw | JOSEPFPH BRADFORD, Book Binder. Blank Books Made and Ruled to Order, 108 BROADWAY, Telephone 252. oct10d 0 mistake will be made in selecting THIS school as the one to attend. Business (0llege FABrubeck, fan, Newlondon. Conm Catalogue forg'ie asking. BR. CHAS. B. LAMB, VETERINARIAN Office, Main St, Franklin Square, House. 15 Town St. Telephone 618-5, letin for Husinees Norwich, Con~. | | HAVE BEEN FILLED ‘ by the Norwich Business College Since Jan. 1, 1909. This eught te teil the Yeumg Man or Young Woman Where Te Go To Learn. : Bookhkeeping, Shorthond, | Typewriting and Office Practice. Write or oall. | | Schlitz Milwaukee Bock Beer per dozen $1.00 | JACOB STEIN, 93 West Main St. Telephone 28-8. febsd SAFES If in need of one notify C. S. STORMS, {575 Main St, Norwich, Conn. | feblild CHROFODY AKD MAMCORNG | MRS. UNDERWOOD, 51 Broadwa | Orders taken for Pufts and other Hilr Goods; your own combings made into a Switch, Pompadour, or Puffs. ¥ and Scalp Massage, S i Hair removed Shampooin ings by appeintment. ous For Poultry. { C. W, HILL & SON 147 Franklin St., opp. Hopkins & Alien's feblld e L i 1 beg to announce to my friends and customers that owisg to the five T am compelled to discuntinue bumi- ness temporarily, but will mm“,é s00n as sultable gquarters can be ob- tained. Notice will be given Iater. All bills or mall kindly address to 215 Main Sireet A P BOMMAN,