Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, April 20, 1909, Page 4

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and gcnfiicfi. 113 YEARS OLD. S0e a T ke e st the Postornce at Norwich, ca:::"u succnd-ciase watter. Telephone Callat 45 gutletin ;:E{:.;‘n oxgi X 0 . wg"'.?...“ h'ui"}m«'fi.' 2 Marrey Blas ‘elephone 210. Norwich, Tuesday, April 20, 1909. WHY WE SHOULD PRINK UP. Norwich need not be ashamed to admit that she has been negiigent of many little things which- would make & more favorable impression upon the people had they been attended to and | the anniversary year is a good year to reform, We must make some things look better or this generation will be written down ag glovenly housekeepers by visitors of cleanly habits and fine (astes. Milwaukee {s planning for a home- coming of its sons and daughters in| the Fall The Journal of that city| says: “The homecoming is the immediate reason for activity along the lines of | tres planting, but it is not the big or | ultimate reason. All over the country cities are ewakening to the opportuni- | tles for making themselves beautiful, | and more and more they are giving thelr attention to questions of aes- thetic improvement. Nothing plays a Jarger ghare in these plans than trees, Trees are beautiful in themgelves. | ‘When well chosen and artistically | planted, they can make the most ordi- nary street attractive. They create| cleanliness and comfort as well beauty, A city of trees is a city of homes; a city of happy and healthy | children. Surely Milwaukee cannot have teo many of these The city consclous eof Its faults should move to correct them. This | is progreas, and it is the little details well attended to which give the most | permanent fame. Norwich is going to have & great home-coming on Jt 5th and showld begin to make things| look inviting now. | THE ONE ISSUE. The anthracite coal issue is all set- | tled excepting the one point of the op- | erators reeognizing the union. The operators’ reason for declining to do it 1s a good reason and will so im- press the country. The operators point | out that the union In question, in| reality, & one of bituminous miners, | with comparatively few anthracite membere. In short, the hard coal mine workers are asking their em- ployers to recognize a union dominat- | ad by employes of another line of business, which, in a commercial sense, 8 antagonistic to, because com- petitive with anthracite interests It is not at all tmprobable that if the anthracite minerg cut loose from their organization and formed one of their own they might find their request mesting with more favorable at- | ment. The effort made to Involve Pres dent Taft in the matter ought not to sucosed, for the simple reason that the {ssue is nothing compared to that of six years ago, and s more private than public in its nature, Since the men can org of anthracite mine wo 800d chance of belng recognized, it s up to them to recognize the objections of the operators and to eliminate the objectlonable features Tt is not at all likely that the p wil] consider favorably the m nt to draw him into the fight ODIOUS COMPARISONS. A volce from the west recognized as that of Senator Albert B. Cummins of Jowa surprises as well as offends u: by its comparison of men. He tells the country that “Nelson W. Aldric is an abler statesman than Webster, Theodore Roosevelt outranks George Washington and Willlam How- ard Taft b ho & American in his His opening averment Is enough to shock Massachusetts and to elate |so much of Rhode Isiand as the senator owns. Daniel Webster o u & statesman and ag Mr. Al rich hes not finished the game o yet it ig 2 little too early to r such a conclusion. The estimate of Senator Aldrich must be made up la- ter on. As for Theodors Roosevelt, he | is not George Washington and no man | as a militery leader and statesman has | or s likely to outclass him, What is sald about President Taft may prove | to be true, but it wers better as a conclusion after his work has been done than In the dewn of his admin- | istration. It really fsn't necessary to| belittla any popular statesman or hero | in order to magnify the status of the living men of today. de TARIFF MAKING PURE BUSINESS | The tarift as a pure business prop- | osition 18 becoming more recognized by the leaders of both great political parties, and It is now sald that the|© prospect for a tariff commission was | never brighter. The tariff is a dunch of dusiness fs- sues which do not work for political unity, The diversified business inter- ests of the country make the matter | complicated and sectional rather than | national. It hag been well £ald that “the time is past when the tarift should be re- vised at one tremendous effort. It ought to be adjusted from time to time; but guch & thing as & complet revision at one time is as barbarous as the effort o Improve social condt tlons by having a revolu “Srror. -| on and a| Revision of the tarlff is the| industrial and financlal reign of ter- | ror. We have had enough of it in this | country and ought to take steps to| avold it in future, Let a tariff com- | mission measurs be passed ag the most important and enlighte section of | this years tariff measure, and country will regard it as fair compen sation for the other shortcomings of | this legislation. “The whole country now wants such a measure. It has been educated to the matter at a mafvelous speed. It understands the impossibility of present conditions continuing, and is convinced that the commission is the plan which, as it has proved success- ful In other countries, would most certainly better conditions here.” A carload of Infested lumber from Massachusetts has sent gypsy moth #88s into New Hampshire and Malne, | which indicates that the war on the pest will not soon be over. Canada is about to open to new settlers an area of cultivatable terri- tory larger than all New England with the expectation that another | crop comes on. |1t up afterward the |, Brovinos will bo developed WHAT CALIFORNIA DESIRES, Calitornia has made a success of ralsin culture and now has on hand 20,000 tons of last year's crop which it desires to sell in the American mar- ket and it has in hand a campaign to make the people acquainted with the value of raisins as & food and to en- courage a more genera] use of them. April 30th in California is “Raisin day,” and this is what the San Fran- clsco Examiner had to say of it: “That is the motto that should be kept in mind and purpose by every Californian. Also he should spread it to the furthest confines of the United States, “There are fifty million pounds of raisins In the San Joaquin valley waiting for buyers. There are ninety million people in the .United States who would get pleasure and benefit by eating these raisins. Now, let's see what can be dons to bring them together. “The first thing to do is to leok out for your own raisin supplies. The next is to urge your friends here and east to do the same. It will do good to yourself; it will do good to your friends; and it will do good to one of the leading products of our state, “Raisins are good to the taste, and they are good for the health. They are good eaten as they come in the box. They are good to use in adding flavor to dozens of dishes in cooking. They can be had In layers, as they come from the curing houses. They can be had with the seeds removed— and all at & price that makes them a cheap as weil as a palatable food. “It i fmportant to the interests of Californis to have the last years crop ot raisins cleared up before the new It can be done in a| day, if every family in the country will buy a few pounds. It can be done by a far less number if they will eat, buy and eat, s many ralsins as are good for them for the next month or two, “Get ready to eat rafsins on Ralsin day. ‘Get in practice before, and keep Thue you will favor California raisin yourself and the growers.” We all should eat more raisins, of course, and more apples and we ghould | all e better health for doing it. EDITORIAL NOTES. The grand list of Chelsea, Mass., in- creaseq three mililions last year, whic t it is thrifty and coming. A Loe Angeles man has been dis- covered who never heard of Roosevelt, and he is not reported as being deaf. What s & tariff? Why, protection | for a few men and a tax on many, of | course. But we have flourished under | it. i i The action of the Tafts has given tone everything at Beverly Cove, | and cottage prices there are !k)‘sl:rnp»‘ So long as Hartfo lature it did not need a freshet. Two | uch disturbing Incidents at once are | o much New York is to have a Hudson-Ful- | ton celebration the coming fall and|'n® spend over a million in to note that the necticut woolen mil. the time the price of the der mills run just as cider mills in states prohibition, and their sk of the Hartford is a legitimate thirst?” ly Kind of a thirst that When it the fight- yet become pieca, ald to be in onsolidat- & schooner t month v of the movements ckerel in the At- saying that 1 n put her | come obsolete, and s is too apparent to need explana- old profit of the wheat three to thirty millions. than those who corner uffs and distress a natlon are herman has excited the th of the D.A.R.-ters, she knows they will become calm and dig- nified after the election of officers has been settled. The orange growers of Florida and California are trying to get together. If it means the production of better es the fact of better prices will turbing. not be go d LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. The Maxim Noiseless Arm. Mr. Editor:—In view of the agita- fon that has appeared in your.state 1gainst the so-called “noiseless gun,” 1 would request space in which to give this aglitation Is, to founded the it refore in secrecy Those untrammeled by facts nclusion that eny gun thus means that anything in silence and in build a lurid us who ar jump to the cm rmination. It 3 the facts could be 1 is might be so. But fortu- must be taken into ac count, Now I would suggest that these s be considere I have found a way to sllence from cent. to 99 per cent. of the noise e at the muzzle of a rifle. It be thought that this cuts out all the noise of firing, but this is where the ywrong conclusion 1 jumped. It does not cut out nearly ail the noise. There is a lot ery curious nofse left. I say curlous, for it is very curi- ous, and cannot be described hy words. It seems to be a_genera?, all-pervading, reverberatory sort of noise, coming from nowhere in particular. One of jts astonishing properties is that it seems to depenc upon the configuration of the country over which you shoot. For example, a .30-40 rifle fired up into the air makes less noise than a boy’s air rifie. The same gun brought down and fired across a field in which there are trees and bushes makes & loud, curlous reverberation which may heard a long stance, Fired in ck woods, the noise is like that which comes af- ter a flash of iightning and just before the arrival of the thunderclap. It sug- gests a “tearing” or “ripping.” Now is news to a surprising number of people. I have exreriment. lod for a long time, and I have found had ths legls- | | silencer, he will first hear the | erack e builet gets to him faster n the sound of the gun can, and val he will hear the | of the gun, Greeley, portly of figure and some- what shiny as to top of head, paced the reception hall meekly, although he was beginning to feel too warm in hig overcoat. Ordinarily, after wait- ing so long for his 18-year-old daugh- ter, he would have been calling repri- mands up the stairway, but this was difterent. Iidith was calmly and deliberately dressing for the evening, Dances were an old story to her, Greeley reflected humbly as, alone there in the dimly lighted hall, he laboriously tried his waltz step, over and over, counting one-two-three, one-two-three, under his breath. Greeley had never learned to dance in his youth, but now, at the age of 48, while Mrs. Greeley was visiting her sister in California, a dancing epi- demic had swept the neighborhood, and he was having & severe attack, The particular cl into which he had been urged by his friend Hallett was made up of married couples— some of them persons who “hadn’t danced for twenty years,” but most of them beginners like Greeley. —The youngest person attending with the exception of Edith Greeley—who, in her mother's absence, was dutifully co-operating with Greeley in his seri- ous gambols—was probably 40 years old. There had been several lessons, but tonight was the first real dancing party, and the occasion was one of fm- portance to Greeley. The truth was that Hallett, since the lessons began, had assumed an irritating superiority because of al. leged dancing that he had done years before. He boasted that it 1l came back” to him as soon as he felt his feet on a waxed floor again, and the reason this was trying was that Gree- ley suspected him of diligently prac- ticing twosteps and waltzes in his of- fice behind a locked door for hours e: ery day. Perhaps one reason Greeley suspected this was that he knew what he himself was doing in his own pri- vate office. A step sounded on the stairs and Edith Greeley handed her party cape to her father. “Aren't you going to wear it, my dear?” he asked, scarcely recogniz- ing in this new role the devoted ughter who always jumped to help | him_ with hig overcoat, i i “Of course, but if you take me to a nee you must put it on for me,” she | instructed him gently. | Only to think, daddy—it's vour first dance!” she cried, mischievously Aren't you excited? T remember I was at mine.” | That evening the painstaking capers | of the serious men and women, each | filled with a solemn determination to | frollc, and edch well able to see how | absurd every other couple was, must | enjoyment to any onlooker. | v it was over Greeley considered | the dance a faflure. No one had no- ticed how much better he danced than Hallett did. Not only thi ave gi found dre a themseives tozether ng room, Hallett, face and actually ath, had had the in the mopping his puffing for effrontery to but once | | during the evening when the two men | p to that time your fourth, isn't it Gree- e had asked complacently. “You mustn't make hard work of it, even if you are so heavy. Now, I am light on my feet, naturally, and T've danced before. I donm't think there’s any use of my attending the class after this, but I shall make it & point to take,in :Fen dances. They're great relaxa- tlon Whereat Greeley, standing before the mirror, ground his teeth and mut- tered something ferocious. ¢ This was Saturday night. The next dance was to be one week later, On Monday morning, in his office, Greeley began the day's work by calling up Mrs. Isabel Scott, the dancing teach- er, and arranging to take an extreme- ly private dancing lesson for the next seven da; Not even his daughter Edith was to know about it, Saturday came agaln. The dincing teacher had Informed Greeley that his only chance for a private lesson that day would be from 8.30 to 9 o'clock in the evening. The dance was to begin at 9 and she had another pupil from 7.45 to 8.15. Accordingly, after dre: ing early, Greeley slipped away for one more stealthy half-hour of pri- vate instruction He had some distance to go to his lesson and back to the house after Edith. They missed the first two numbers but Greeley felt that he would be repaid for his trouble. Hal- lett and his wife were late, too; It happened that he and Greeley 1gid off their costs in the dressing room at the same moment, and, apparently in careless amity, turned together toward the brillinatly lighted hall, where the music for the second number had just ceased. Suddenly Hallett stopped short, “T say, what's that?" he demanded, point- ing to Greeley’s shirt front. Greeley Jooked down. There, on the broad expanse of white, was a curious blotch as if a pigeon had dipped its| claws in aniline ink and then walked round and sound on the polished lin- en, Bewildered, he lifted his eyes. “Wh-what's that!!’” he exclaimed, pointing. On Hallett's capacious shirt bosom was another purple mark, a twin to his own, In the doorway of the dressing room the rivals halted and started at each otker. Just then the sprightly dancing teacher caught sight of them. “Oh, there you are!” she called. “I meed you to make up a set. Mr, McBurney,” turning to the portly man with whom she had just been dancing, “let me present Mr. Greeley and—why!” She broke off with an astonished sasp, for Greeley and Hallett, after one sight of a big purple mark on McBurney’s shirt front, and one illu- minating glance at a huge dewy bunch of violets pinned to the dancing teach- er's gown, had burst into roars of laughter. Explanations were In order, and, though the dancing teacher hastily removed her violets in an effort to L up the matter, it was only a very short time before everybody in the hall kiew how the rivals had found each other out—Chicago News. | that this noise is entirely apart from gun. I call it “ex-gun noige,” be- e it has nothing to do, is outside the gun itself. It is made bv the ullet tearing its way through the r. hink & bullet makes a a tle or a screech. It does old-fashioned, low velocities. At msdern, high velocities it does nothing of the sort, however. It, on the con- trary, makeés a loud “crack” or explo- " if you will go down th 3 en to it. Anyone can taking up a position say 0ot 8o the bullet 3 a ear as £0 or 6b feet de Dbehind a rock if he cannot the man with the gun. When th t passes he will hear a loud crack astonish him. It r his head, standing, many hundreds of si- s from a rifleman and letting | It _the gun | 4 man who has known about this bullet noise until he began using a silencer. The thing which seems particularly surprising Js the fact that the nelse which {8 heard seems to come from “down the range” back toward the gun, instead of directly from the gun itself. Now this is just where the only advantage which the silencer giveg over game comes in. The noise heard by an animal being fired at is no different than has ever been the case, excepting in the one respect of the boom of the | gun itself. Game will not hear th and when startled by tHe bullet noise they may run toward the gun. There are many other directions which they may choose, however, so in reality the chances of advantage are really very im. This is absolutely all there Is to far as effect on game life iz con- A silencer makes a gun shoot v, as the president of the Na- Rifle assoclation has sald. It he muzzle noise and the re- , but does not make shooting by any means silent. Now this 18 all ignored by those who have gone off at “half-cock™ Editors | in_many influentlal papers have writ- ten columns about the absolute neces- sold them all over the the Maxim Silent Fire- Jarly ing silencers for all cali- res of guns to the shooters of the intry, but I have yet to find one better when serve: syrup cakes ——— =——X e New York are regu- | Wheat Cakes Cotn Cakes— Griddle Cakes of all Makes taste better, set better, are Aaro The most healthful and nutritious A book of recipes for cooking and candy-making sent free on request. sity of passing laws prohibiting the | use of a silencer, and have actually worked up a degree of hysteria which has resulted in numerous bills having been introduced in several state legis- ilatures aimed at the punishment by d with for every use, from griddle to candy. All Grocers, 10c, 25¢, 50¢ CORR PRODUCTS REFIRING COMPANY, New York ‘ MISS M. C. ADLES, Hair, Scalp and Face Specialist STRICTLY PRIVATE ATTENTION | Miss _Adles gives to all patrons, Suite 5, whers ghe is established. in the ‘Wauregan Hotel, i convenient, yet not_conspicuous. Consult her regarding the elegant | new styles. She wil be in Norwich all | the week of April WAUREGAN HOUSE, Norwich Boston. New York. Telephone 704. apriod Moth Balls in packages, pounds and half pounds, el DUNN'S BHARMACY, 50 Main Street. Agent for European Steamers. aprlis WALL —AT— YERRINGTON'S, 49 Main Street. Large Double affodil HUNT'S, The Flo 17 Telephone. L. rist, tte Street. PAPERS Mrs. Chastain is the wifeof the Master Mechanic of the Western & AtlanticR.R., und enjoys a high local fine aoobkgg Not only does she use COTTO! E in making cakes or crusts, and other ; but for fryit, ol cte., oo s it waqualled, Fos wmninez::nmmmhndn d of lard in , using COTTOLENE exclusively, 2 imprisonment of anyore found with such a harmless little device as this in thelr possession, regardless of whether it was on a firearm or not. If it were not for the effect it has in driving out of the country a growing industry it would be a huge joke. In the case of the revoiver of the assassin, there are more facts which should be taken into consideration be- fore concluding just what the effect will be of ore of my silencers fitted to a revolver. In the ordinary revolver there Is a conslderable space between the chamber and the barrel. If the gas cannot get out through a silencer on the muzzle there is no reason why it should not take the open space re- ferred to; but now suppose that a re- volver were made with no chamber or space. (‘nule this be silenced? Actnal tests show that it cannot, with any gunpowder that we know of today. The reason is because the short lengtn of the barrel enables the bullet to get ' out before the powder is burned. The burning powder inside a silencer en- tirely annuls the action of the latter. Thuas, while it may be disappointing ta many of our eddtors, the fact remains that we do not know today how to pro duce a quiet-shosting revolver. HIRAM PERCY MAXIM. Hartford, Conn. April 17, 1509, Governor Lilley Has Comfortable Day Gov. George I, Lilley's condition re- mains practically unchanged and last evening Dr. Frederick G. Graves said that the governor was as comfortable as could be expected. Dr. Graves said that he should return to Waterbury this_morning and leave the governor in charge of Dr, Charles C. Beach. He | stated that he would not return to | stay with the governor again unless there should be a change for the worse in ‘his condition.—The Courant. ‘There is more Catarrh in this sec of the country than all other dises put together, and untl the last years was supposed to be Incurab For a great many years doctors pro- | nounced local disease and pre- a3 it & is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a podnful. It acts direct- ly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure Send for circulars and_testi 1s Address F. J. CHENEY & C: do, Ohio. Soid by Drugglsts, 75c Take Hall's Family Pills for consti- pation. “I'd Rather Die, Doctor, than have my feet cut off,” safd M, L. Bingham of Princeville, Iii,, die from gangreno (which away elght toes) if you don’t,” said all doctors. Instend—he used Buckl Arnica Salve till wholly cured. s t's cures of eczema, bolls, burng and piles, 01 world, 25c at Lee & Osgood Co.'s. ‘We often wonder how any person can be persuaded into taking anything but Foley’s Honey and Tar for coughs colds and lung trouble. Do not be fooled into accepting “own make” other substitutes, The genuine con- tains no harmful drugs and is in a yel- | Dr, seribed local remedles, and by con- | stantly falling to cure with local treat- ounced it incurable. Science to be a con: - al disease therefore requires Gonstitutional tment. Hall's_Ca- | tarrh Cure. manufactured by F. I.| Chenev & Co., Toledo, Ohio, Is the only constitutional cure on the market. It Fishing Boots $3.50 to $5.00 Rubber Coats $2.50 10 $5.75 Garden Hose 8¢ to 14c foot Alling Rubber Co., 74-76 Main St., Norwich. 162 State St., New London. ‘Wholesale—Retall — 14 BStores. JOSEPH BRADFORD, Book Binder. Blank Books Made and Ruled to Order, 108 BROADWAY, Telephone 263. oct108 Watch Repairing done at Friswell's speaks for {tself. WM. FRISWELL, 25-27 Franklin janz2daw Understood Better EachDag The most successful business man s the one who knows every detall of his business and does not depend upon a pull for his success. Each day this 1s better understood. In no business is a detailed knowledge more essentlal than in the Bullding Trade. If you want an estimate on any work in my line, I'll be pleased to give you the benefit of my many years experience. C. M. WILLIAMS, General Contracting and Building, 218 Main Street. ‘Phone 370. NOTICE Loul Franklin Miner Is now located in her new office, 21 Main St. (Kenyon Block). Office hours, 1 to 4 p. m, Telephone 660. auglsd feb16d DR C. R. CHAMBERLAIN, Denta/ Su(gean. In charge of Dr. 8. L. Geer's practice during his last iliness. 161 Main Street, Norwich, Conn nov26d Have You Noticed the Increased Travel? It's a sure sign of good weather and | i | fine roads. People like to get out into | the open air. We furnish the best { method, and if you'll take one of our teams you'll say the same, | MAHONEY BROS., Falls Avenue. { maritd \ | AMERICAN HOUSE, Farrell & Sanderson, Props. | SPECIAL RATES to Theatre Troupes. | | | | Traveling Men, etc. Livery connected low package. Lee & Osgood Co. SHETUCKKET STREET. What It Does for THOMAS JEFFERSON D.D. S, Originator of Dr. King's Restor- ation Method for the natural restoration of teoth — originator of the King Safe System of Painless Dentistry and Inventor of the “Naturil Gum” Set of Teeth, Etc, Etc. All rights re- served. KING, have written in to know if we bore teeth in on pegs! Others have an idea we set the natural teeth were originally. ing about the work that is painful Patients leave the office with chewing meat, eating candy, toast, ¥t we couldn’t promise this and dental practitioners as well. I'rom Jublic. Naturally we would do such wo need ed in the very highest skill. The; Bunglers would not be tole! dental students. ating chair and in the laboratory. THEZRE Bastera C¢ 'E jual to The Bul~ letia Tor b R ™ no aaverusing medium nnecticut eqi Dr. Jackson, Manager. apri2TuThS storation Method would not be a success. ordinary bridgework or partial plates. WE ARE GENERAL PRACTITIONERS All Forms of Dentistry Treated by Experts. ' While the Restoration Method Is our great specialt- we are general DR, fing’s Bestoration Method Toothiess People By means of this wonderful method e able to give back to a patient full set of testh he or she start- ed in with In the beginning. All we require is two or more teeth In each jaw to work from, and we shall not resort to plates or ordinary bridge- work In the process of the work. Your mouth will be fres from in- cumbrances. Sefore we eccomplish this result we put the gums end the natural testh In a healthy condition, tight- ening the teeth which may be loose and curing pyorrhea if the patient Micted with that dreadful dls- of the teeth we supply are practical teeth; each set In its own following nature’s plan, so the strain is equally divided. to bite on these teeth in exactly the same would his natural They match nature's testh so to deceive experts. They ful to look at and a source of constant delight to the one whol wears them. APAINLESS PROCESS An tmpression has gone forth that there is some surgical operation eoomnected with this metho@ of resturing missing teeth. Some peonle down into the bone and put the rew teeth Into the sockets where the It is quite natural that some unthinking people would ask such qites- tions, and in order that they may be fully answered we will state that there i$ no boring, no outting, no implantation about this method, noth- while it Is being done or afterward. hess teeth In place and at once begin or anything else with the same com- fort they would enjoy If every tooth in their head had grown there. make good on the promise, the Re- It would be no better than the simplest filling to the most in- tricate plece of porcelain work;, our experts are at the service of the rk well, much better than it could de done in a one-man office, for the operators employed here are ali men of to be to do the Restoration work. our office for a day, neither would ‘We demand the finished craftsman, both at the oper- KING DENTAL PARLORS, Franklin Square, Norwich, Conn. SHEEDY'S VAUOEVILLE Week of April 19t CRIMMINS & GORE, to our BRADY & SAXTON, Telephone 306-2. NORWICH TOWN, aug19d GET IT NOW! Lawn Seed "at W. H. CARDWELL'S, pris 8 to 9 Mérket 8t WHEN you Want to put your busie : ing columns of The Bulleti AUDITORIU VAUDEVILLE Iuvin; Pictures Character Comedians and Dancers. Latest and Best Motion Plotures— AOEHINER 1Tt N Darts o house. EV urs: £0s of th 10c. ’.A few Re- rved Seats, 10 1 Martly 2 l"el‘vzn:‘l b and 8.4 3 Shows Dally Week of 2.30,7,8.45 APRIL FRENCELLI & LEWIS OPERATIC SINGERS ED ESTUS . Equilibrist CUNNINGHAM & DEVERY, Ecceniric Dancers CLIFFORD & DAHL, in an Original Piano Act ADMISSION Ifl leA' ll;""::h;l:un NS i G xets o ays AND THURSDAY. — e Roderick Theaire BREED'S THEATRE §e‘l!mHBPflktm—Bsmll Charies MoNwuity, Lesses. ty Thisse Tou o08 Devoted to First-class Moving Diamond. ing—It's the Pretty Things You Say, 5... Mr, Oelll Singing—nereli Come | protures and’ Ilustrated Songs Thrilling War Moving Ploturs, a Day. £ lon, afterneen and svening, bo. “S00TS AND SADOLES” Adm! 327 M Street, op. Post Office. By same Grn as “Stiering Days in Change of Time |7 mwewr wmesr wa dramatic phetures. In Effect Aprfl 7, 1909. it D‘*"‘“‘“’: Righ class eon; - Doo: it 3 and 7. Ferformances Norwich & Westerly R. R. Co.| 2o opes 58350 % ormances For Westerly, 6, 7, 8.30, 9.45, then |te Ladies jdren. quarter before cach hour until 745 p. m. Last through car, 9.30 p. m. Extra cars to Hallvills, 6.15, 8.30, 10.20 p. m. 6 o'clock car leaves from Preston bridge. The cars leaving Norwich at 7 & m., 12.45, 3.46, 4.45, 7.45 connect with N, Y., N. H. & H, train for Prov- idence and Boston. For return con nections, see timetadle or call tele- phone 801-4. Use short route—save LEON, aprid Ladies’ Tailor. Matinecs, Ladies and Ohfldrem, Sej en i0e. Bl HALL, Weshington Square. Garden Tools RAKES, HOES, SPADES, SHOVELS, LAWN MOWERS, ROSS BROS’ SHEDS. and OHICKEN reck bottem POULTRY NETTING prices. ‘Workmanship MOBQUITO NETTING. and )m' % —_— Guarantae o FISHING RODS, LINES, ETO. Satisfactory. STOVEINK—~will not bumn. POTMEND — mends enamel, orockery, eto. SPECIAL SALE No. 7 Wash Boilen, copper bottom . 276 Maln Street May Building. m . 3 9 Wash Boiler, ottom .. No. 7 All Copper T tles . The Household, Bulletin Building, 74 Franklin Street. WELCOME THBE NEW ARRIVAL of another joyous season — the glad springtime. But arrivals new or old 9 I ' rere always gn hand with satistac- | [\fe] S W h :;J:)r ‘Wines Igd Liquors and quick n S “mmr e u service. Look east, look west—ours U S i the spot o afrve .you best. No nion Suits, poet's song, but genuine fact. Our prices prove it, Also Imported and Domestic Beers. perfect fitting and popular priced. Men’s two-piece Summer Underwear in all grad Handsome Soft Shirts in new colors and patterns, and Holeproof Hosiery for ladies GEORGE GREENBERGER, Tel. 812, 47 Franklin 8t. mar30d Boilers, Tanks, Smoke Stacks All kinds of Plate Iron Worlk or men, at We make a specialty of Repalring. A SPEIRS BROTHERS, McPHERSON'S, Water Street, New London Bhe Hatte "Phone 840, mayTd sorica HANLEY'S PEERLESS ALE is acknowledged to be the best on the JAMES F. DREW market, It is absolutely pduze,blnd hfvl‘ that reason is recommende: y phy- fi 'I’ e d fl 2 il . Dellv d rt of Nor. e BT igng Tuning and Repaiing g O MecORMICK, Bise Vark Only, Sane 30 Tramln Birooh | vrusel il 18 Perkins Ave sept23a EXPERT TUNING New Spring Goods! saves and Improves the pi*no, AN work guaranteed: A. W. JARVIS, Garden Sets Wagons ¥o. 1§ Claizement Ave, Carts Wheelbarrows | wreayatc Niies Bryunt School of Plane ng, Hatde Cree Go-Carts Carriages Props vl Gad UL 0 Ete. F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect St., 889-6. Norwich, Ct MRS. EDWIN FAY, Franklin Squars aprild Tel. GAIN SOMETHING by a course in Book- Shorthand keeping, and Touch Typewriting A. W. BURNHAM, Eye Speclallst|§ v, ich Commercial School Twint-Gve ystre expatience tn St Broadway Theatre Bldg, permanently located at 257 Main 8t, Norwich, Ct. Satisfaction guaranteed. Office hours. 2 to § o. . i st WHEN you want to put yo ness beforg the public, there {um better than ough the ok ooliimae of Tha Batlstie

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