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and Goufied, 1 13 YEARS OLD. o .-m»e.nt-vn-nu-u mouth: 8000 % Tear: the Postorfice at Norwich Enterea e Conn., &s Becind-c..sa fice, 480, in Editorial -8 Bulietin Job Office. %6-t {ifmantic Otfice Room 3 Mur ny Dl Telephone 210. Narwhh. Thundly. Apr\l 29, 1909 sasseessssnans: {he Circulation ol (he Bulletin. The Bulletin has the largest clr- culation of any paper in Easters Couneeticut, and from three to four {umes larger than that of any I inwlch‘ It is dellvered to m” !anoo of the 4,053 houses §n Nor- wich, and read b ninety-three p §oent. of the people. In Windham 21t 1s dolivered to over 900 houses. in Putnam snd Danlelson to over 1,100, ana in ell of these places t % s considered the locsl dally. Eastern Connecticut has forty nine towns, one hundred and sixty- % five post office districts and forty § one rural free delivery routes. § The Bulletin is sold in every town and on all of the R. F. D. % routes in Bastern Connecticut. i CIRCULATION 1905, avera H ] i 1908, averag 1907, average... 1908, average. . FIREPROOF BUILDINGS. The fireproof bullding !s necessary in the erowded portions of all our cit- fes, and the day is mot distant when municipal regulations will require the arection of such bulldings in crowded business or residential sections. Attention is being called to the fact that in 16 days of April five big fires in different parts of the United States resuted in & loss of $6,000,000, the death of twenty persons, the injury of seventeen, and making homeless more than thres thousand. The greatest of these fires was at Fort Worth, Texas, resulted In & loss of $6,000,000, the 38,000,000 and $4,000,000, and the wec- ond in tmportance was at Rochester, N. Y., with a loss of $500,000. Ne nation suffers what this nation does from fire losses; and It is not strange that Richard L. Humpmrey, engineer tn charge of the structural material laboratories of the United States geologioal survey says “the peo- ple of the United ~ States Jearned the lesson of the Baltimore and San Francisco fires, “Fort Worth's recent experience when more than three hundred hom were devoured by the flames is but repetition of what happened in unty Ameriean municipalities wake fo the situation and enact legislation ‘which will absolutely prevent the fur- ther construction of bulldings that are not_fireproof, “It seems difficult to make the peo- ple belleve that in 1907 fires in th United Sates cost more than a m and a quarter dollars for every day in the year, an annual tax of more than $8 for every man, woman and child in the country. We are spending a bil llon dollars & year on new buildines and construction work, while our fires cost half & billion doliars. No other nation has such an unehviable record as this. Our fires are costing from six t0 elght times as much per capita the only as any country In Europe. B total cost of fires, I refer not to the actual destruction of p which amounted to 32 also to the cost of the m fire departments and the amount insurance pald over and above money returned to relmburse own of bufldings. *Whils we are wasting seve a8 much property per capita rope, we are also destroying in these fires five times as many lives Jost in the other countries. according to the United 000,000, intenanc In 16 cer tes six thousand persons ¢ of bur and perhaps ten thousand were seri- ously injured.” TOO HASTY. The antl-Roosevelt men who are ¢ claring with apparent glee t % has departed from the policles Roosevelt, have forgotten the fact that the president has over and over again averred that he stood for them. The harassing of the trusts is held up for a little because the Sherman law needs amending to make it effective, and before Taft was elected Roosevelt was complaining about the defective- ness of that law. President Taft is proceeding in a quiet way to have a better law that the work of the ad ministration may be done more effec- of tively, He has no thought of letting the unscrupulous trusts have their sweet will, but will see that law respected by the high and the Jow, Just at present he Is absorbed in the tarift revision, and he has the ability and | power to supervise this very Import- | ant matter and to check extortionate schedules which are no less than a crime against the people. THE LEGALIZED SUNDAY SALOON | It seems queer to New England to Bee a great many ministers of New York favor the licensed Sunday saloon, | and they wonder at it; but these men claim that this is in the Interests of morality and decency, that it would be a better Sunday condition than exists there today. The Rev. Dr. Peters Is . quoted as haying said “Why, everybody knows that the sa- loons of New York are now open on Bundays all dey. What we want is 10 close them part of the day and have them open under the law and with ade. quate supervision part of the day. There is one-fifth more liquor sold in New York on Sundays than there is #old on holidays at present; why? Be- cause the conditions of obtaining it * are such as to encourage boozing.” It Is claimed that this law would the lquor drunk on Sunday at least by one-half, and that i‘lmomotumd-yhawsur have mot | the | paast and what will occur in the future lion 5| and better method than illega) selling all day. But what evidence is there that the salopn keepers will have any more respect for the law than they now have for the law which would prohibit the sale? Making people good by glving them license in this direction doesn’t seem to be in accord with the prlm‘l;slea of “the sermon on the WRONG IN PRINCIPLE. A special despatch from Washing- ton represents that President Taft does not approve of the census -bill as agreed upon by the senate and the Louse, because the measure confers | extraordinary power upon the director | of the census, making it practically impossible for the secretary of com- merce and labor and even for the president himself to Interpose in any way. in the taking of the census of 1910. The president and Secretary | Nagel of the labor bureau hold that | this is wrong, in principle, believing iat since the country at large holds them responsible for a good adminis- tration of the census bureau, exclusive power should not be vested in a sub- ordinate officer. There are all sorts of reports about | concerning Director North of the cen- | ureau, who Is alleged to have | recommended to the committee of the | congress that the features which have | proved so objectionable to the presi- | dent and to the secretary of commerce and labor be incorporated in the meas- ure. 1t is believed that Director North will retain his present position {n case the census bill is made acceptible to the president. It was believed in many quarters that Director North would certainly be dismissed from of- | fice or would be asked to resign, be- | cause of his differences with Secretary Nagel; but there is now a fair pros pect that the differences may be amic- ably adjusted. g | MUNICIPAL WIRELELS TELEPHONE SYSTEM. The distinction of being the . first New England city to have a wireless telephope system belongs to Portland, Me, by which it is now In close | communication with the fslands of | Casco bay. It is hard for old-fashioned people to belleve and it is to be ex- pected that thers should be many doubters though the first talking with- out wires has been accomplished to| the satisfaction of the islands and the | city people. It is claimed by some of the doubters that there will be no satisfactory communication in stormy weather, but that is said to be pro- vided for, It is asserted, also, that the messages will be mixed up, but | the experts say they have found & way to make all the talk independent or secret to the telephones in use for cer- tain connectlons, There seems to be no question but the invention is all that is claimed for | it, and it will in a few years be just as natural to = communicate in this| wireless way over long distances as it now is to do so over electrified wires, FIRST EDITORIAL NOTES. Horace Fletcher stands for “Che: with a big exclamation point after it. Salonica has become celebrated for moving every time that “patience has ceased to be a virtu Tt i= now noted that the first swal- ows of spring have been unjugged in | ant the prohibition towns. | . = S | Happy thought for tc study appear august, because it is too unnatural to escape observation. to Notice ven ou iing to Ran, assuming a very Maine | aspect. ssed the Jdeadline, not a n sixty vears to frighten him. Senator Tillman com- Pr it Taft doesn't indi- hange in goernmental poll- 1 of Turkey had 240 cooks, nder that he man got to of Eu- day of fame herever the | public hold The Bost: Recor: s that Bos. ton can rate Memc 1 day and| the passage of the Payne tariff bill at the same time, | 21T Soan have te bare-headed 1 is right in e we all and do not stop to ask | ow the good old The Boston Herald “Now let | every brave woman (and up in de. | fence of her own walstline, wherever she chooses to draw {t” It suggested that any does not know why motor ing Is one who | women are safer ts than men may learn by ask- nost any bartender. The fact that there 1s a great abund. | ance of anthracite coal at the South pole had nothing to do with the price going down fifty cents a ton. It is suggested that when Profes!nr‘ Pickering gets in touch with Mars the first problem to be given the Martians should be “How old is Ann?" So Mrs. Patten's heart made her op- posed to the kind of riches her hus- | band w rolling up. A fortune rest- | ing upon the starved poor did not suit Rich Senators Favor Inceme Tax. Some of the wealthlest membere v - United States senate favor a fed tax on laree incomes and will support the Cummins or Bailey bill One of them is Mr. Guegenheim of | | Colorado, whose wealth runs into tens | of millions and who would pay a per- | sonal tax «f more than $100,000 under the Cummins bill. Another is Sena- tor Stephenson of = Wisconsin, whe, spent over $100,000 in his campaign | for re-election. Washington has a story that several semators favorable to an income tax, along with Justice Harian of th: United States supreme court, dined at the, White House Sat- | urday night and talked the matier over with the president. Tt wiT be recalled that Justice Harlan wrote an extremely vigorous dissenting opinfon when the income tax law of 1894 was overthrown by a bare majorily of tue court—Springfleld Republican. There are 752 kinds of flowers found in the Arctic regions. French and evelet t that he sees any. | : 1 tof tincture It is necesgarv CONCERNING WOMEN. Cardiral Gibbons says: “When wem- an gets a false idea of liberty there is dunger for the nation.” The sexes have equal rights, he says, but this does net mean that women should take up the burdens of men but rather that they should pursue their own work while man does his, each equally responsi- ble. Miss Eleanore Sears, the young woman of Boston who, besides being a social leader, excels In most forms of athledc games and sports gener- ally, has been barred from playing polo in Callfornia and s said to have resented the fact ve strongly. The men declared it would be too much of a strain for her to enter the g:mc with them. The German empress is a woman of real influence in her own circle and is sim ply worshipped by her husband and children. Th: love her sons vear he: is well illustrated by a story told of the crown prince in his boyhood. The court chaplain was one day giving the e religious instruction and trying to impress upon him that all pe are sinners. “Well,” blurted-out imperial highness, “father may be i sinner, as you say, but I'm quite sure mother fsn't.” ‘Fhere is a bill before the Massachu- setts leglislature ~forbidding the em- ployment of waitresses in any place where liquor is sold. If this passes it will affect about 1,000 women in Bos- ton alone. Georgiana, Countess of Dudley, nas written a cook book, and she thinks that a plquancy might be addea .. home cooking by yarying the method. Most apretites tire of the same way of cooking eggs, for instance, and she gives Mumerous recipes that might be of value for the sake of change. NEEDLEWORK SUGGESTIONS. . 8046—Lazy datsy - destgn for child’s hat, with flat brim and crown to be buttoned on. The brim pattern | is in one plece and the crown has Its edge in four sections and the center separate. The hat should be of linen, pique, Incian head cotton. or some oth- er heavy material. No. 8045—Wheat 2nd‘bo.. knot de- | sign for infants’ bib,.to be transferred to may’ linen, lawn, batiste, or pique, and be all in’ solid embroidery or in as pictured. The alloped buttonholed edge may also be finished with narrow lace. Honeycomb Pudding. Cut into small bits one cupful of svet. Mix ane cupful of molasses wiih cupful of milk; add three cupfuls fied flour; beat thoroughly; add teaspoonful of baking powder; mix, then stir in the suet. Add a teu- spodnful of cinnamon, Half a grated nutmeg, one cupful of raisins aid cne Mix, turn wmould, allowing plenty for swelling. Boil continu- for three hours. This is delic- It looks like honeycomb when Fat with a hard sauce or any ¢t that is desired. of cupful of seeded currants. into buttered 0! FASHION HINTS. waist the tucked y chosen. yelet embroidery will maintain its the coming season. ed effe coatinue in favor in matter of embroidery. Large spots and tiny ones are mlx- on some of the new veils. fihe: scRer is al t indispensal'e for both day and evening wear. Keeps Bread Fresh. If one has trouble with the loaves bread drying ,before being used, wrap them, as soon as they are cuw, after coming from the oven, in paraf- fin paper. Then they will keep fresh much longer. € How to Shell Pecans. Pecan nuts can be shelled easily if the nuts are put up for a few minutes in hoiling water. This safters th shell ani makes it quite .possible to remove the meats without difficulty. HEALTH AND BEAUTY. An excellent household remedy for nnrns s puré The great thing is to exclude the ar dirt from the burnt surface, and the oil will do. A bunion cure is made of one dram each of glycerin, carbolic acld and of jodine Mix and paint the pot several times daily and at night. to wear low heels una broad shoes, that there may be no pressure on the joint, which -hould be svered hy @ corn protector made by a ring of felt. Guard the eyes as you would your most precious possession. When they et tired resl them as quickly as pos- sible and take precaution that they be spared further fatizve. Among. these precautions are silght massage of the eve at night and mornme and bathins the eyes at least once a day with weak salt water or boraic acld. Premature grayness of the hair us- ual’y accompanies a rundown condit: Af tre whele sy<tem. Evervbodv kr that the best thing for a weakened tem is a 20qd tonic and plenty of sxor cise. The same is troe of a weakene: scalp or faded eray hair, A tonle Is reeded: one evternally and rne to b= taken iniernally to build up the svs- tem. Sulphur and iron are the lack- ing elements where the hair tnrne ; ve. matyrely gray, and by supplying them the ‘original color may be partly re- stored. Rrabarh Pudding with Whinped Cream, Line a dish with a rich thick crust teke some nice stalks of fresh rhuba wash well, but do not strip. Cut in one-inch pixes and put in sugar to taste. the lined dish. crust and bake a rich brown. Gone, ek up the toj i pleces 'and stir it Stir it sliehtly and put it in Cover with rich thick ‘When Woman in Life and in the Kitchen. : hats. vaseline or olive ofl. | Place wh! cream On LOp AN« Serve. Fur the wi cream take the white, of eggs, beaten to a stiff froth. add a of thick sweet cream (coldi, with tl tablespoonfuls of white su- fi? and a teaspoonful ©f lemon juice. ix and whip it into a llln-llnz {:oth. May be made with any fruit in son, A Becoming Wrap. Wraps are long, I'nse, after redding- gote or the pelerine cut. One of " most becoming has the deep point back and front, with a deep shawl collar formingsVandykes. They are made of rajah corded silk or chiffon cioth. Cotton Crepe in Colors. Since white cotton crepe fcr blouses has so taken the popular famcy the dyers have. got hold of 1t: and it is now offerel for sale in gray, black, v{olet. two shades of blue and peach pink. Many Shades of Green. The new ens are classified as empire, 'aurel, Russlan ani ollve, and the browns as seal, wood, old gold ana chamols. Tucks ths Thing Now. Few deep yokes of crosswise trim- mings are seen in the new waists, lerngthwise tucks and insertiors having taken their place. Cotton Princess S| A Princess slips of cotton, lisle or silk arc more and more i demand by those who follow the dictates of fashion as to wearing Empire gowns. They do away with the pessibility of any wrin. kies in the undergarments, as is the case with even sheer cotton batistes or nalnscoks. Attificial Flowers, The wise woman Is taking advantaee f the sale of handsomo a 1ficial fio ers held from time to time In the f- ferent shops. They will come in ad- mirably for trimming the summer Dainty Footwear. For women who cannot afford foot- wear «to match their different gowns, slippers of patent leather with rhine- stone buckles, are a good Investment. Bone Buttons. The newest buttons are bone, with satin centers. Veiling for Skirt. Fine velling In Improved quality | and fashionable color is in excellent | 4tyle for the dressy skirt. and is som times seen with & narrow stripe or pleat, | LR REY All-Over Soutache. One of the fancles for the new s=a- son will be ali-over soutache for yokes and sleeves. Bread and Rice Pudding, One quart and a pint of »ood milk, quarter cup of rice, three tablespoon- fuls of sugar, half a nutmeg, grated, Look the rice over carefully, wash in three waters. Bake on the bottom of oven slowly one hour. Stir occasion- ally. When dene, take out of the oven, cut thin slices of the loaf of bread, Lutter well and lay on top “f the pud- ding. Beat two eggs well add half a cup of milk, pour over the pudding, grate a little more nutmeg and put on the grate of the oven fifteen minutes, til 1t gets a nice golden brown. You will have a rice and bread¢ pudding combined. Salting Soup. ‘When making soup, do not ada salt till cookiag process is completed. This is because with salt in the water the flavor of what is being cooked is not 80 easily extracted. Packing Dress Sleeves. acking dress and blouse sleeves ould be stuffed with soft paper and a sheet of it placed between the | fulds. Treating a Bruise. A paste made of fine starch and a| very little water spread on a bruised spot immediately after the blow will often prevent d'scoloration. ‘ Cameo Necklaces. | Any woman who has a colection it cameos would do well to have them set and mounted In a close fl:xmg necklace. IN THE KITCHEN. 1 Apple Custard. Peel and core six or eight tart ap- ples, slice and lay in a dish. Cover | with a cup of sugar, pour in g gill of | water and” bake fn a good oveh. Beat | three eggs very light with a quarter | cup of sugar and a gill of milk, add a dash of cinnamon, and when the wp- ples are mearly done pour this mix- ture over them. Bake a little lo; | and serve hot. Farmers’ Cookies. Cream a cup of butter with a eup of thick cream and work well into this | two/ cups >f ~ranulated ar. Add hree beaten eggs, a small teasponful of baking soda and one grated nut- meg or a teaspoonful of lemon fla- voring. Add flour to make a dough, | that can be rolled out, roll, cut into | wokies and hake. Irish Potato Cake, Boll and mash six large adding salt and pepper and spoonful of milk. = Mix flour with this mixture until it is of a consistency | that can be rolled. Roll on a fioured | | board into & sheet-about half an inch thick, cut into squares and fry In ot lat. potatacs a table- Soda Good Cleaner. Some housekeepeds add ordinary baking sodi to the warm water for A great amount of embroldery fi seen oh the new frocks. The newest is of heavy linen, the kind that fills in quickly. 4 Removing Price Marks, Try e little lethon and salt mixed the next time a price mark sticks to %he bottom of china dishes or bric-a- rac. Y Buttons Succeed Hooks. Everything buttons, Crochet ¥ut- tons are used, but there Is a prefere'ice for jet and pearl. Dark Tan Is Popular. The, Tich dark tan is becoming mere and mors popular where the question of gloves Is concerned, and not a few women have entirely adopted them in | preferayce to the more conventional white, beaver or gra Jabots Grow Larger. Jabots grow larger and larger. A yoke of ?ld embrojdery is often fin- Ished with a couple of rows of acey lace. To Wear with Dutch Neck: With the Dutch neck, which, by tha way, is the latest mde, are worn the turnover collar of lace embroidery and the cuffs to match. Big Bows on Hats. The huge bows of the past season | proved s> universally becoming that the milliners are beginning Lo fashion them again for the season to come. HOME éARMENT MAKING. ..| ‘The Bulletin’s Pattern Service. TTING COAT. v Seams Nlng slit up f the lower edg: OF FOOD Of Any Kind, Are Fully Digested By One Tablespoonful of Kodol. Any kind of food, understand—not just some certain kinds. Kodol 1s rightly termed the ‘“Perfect Digest- ant"—because it does digest any and all classes of food. Kodol does this because it contains, in liqui¢ form, every one of Nature's digestive ele. ments—therefore cannot help but di- gest food the way it does. Kodpl, as stated, digests all food—promp! and completely—and assures good health t) the stomach. Come to think of 1t—Kodol does accomplish a great deal—if one gives it a chance. Some of the commonest and surest indica- tions of more or less developed diges- tive trouble are these: Bad breath, bad taste in the mouth, rising of sour, bitter fluid, gds and undigested particles of food' into the mouth, tenderness and dull paln at “pit” of the stomach (sometimes re- lieved by eating), sensation of faint- ness, dizziness, and being “all gone,” ating of stomach and bowels, ca- ous and uncertain appetite, flabby ; pr coated tongue, uncomfortable “full” nsation after eating, ‘“heartburn,” lingering headaches, heart “flut ull, sleepv, “logy” feel- action of the bowels, gloomy forebodings, etc. ntee: Get a d r bottle of Kodol. If you are not benefited— th druggist will at once return your money. Don't hesitate; any druggist W ell you Kodol on these terms. The dollar bottle contains 215 times as much as the 50c bottle. Kodol is prepared in_the laboratories of E. C. DeWwitt & Co.. Chicago. Moth Balls in pachkages, pounds and half pounds, DUNN'S PHARMACY, 50 Main_ Street. Agent for European Steamers. apr17d > John & Geo. H. Bliss JEWELERS Watches Diamonds Cut Glass Clocks Fine Watch Repairing 126 Main Street. Silverware slim lines to the f brown cuffs_an match, sleeves ar: and the velye the The TruthH and Quality the Well-Inf eal to walk of lif in every 1 are essential to permanent creditable t cla succe: known value, bu why it is the | laxatives the the quanti It acts pleasa truly as a ive, and it parts are k m to and % by physicians, as it is free from all objection- able substances. To get its beneficial effects . always purchase the genuine— manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leading drug- gists. WE TAKE ORDERS an‘ng and Pressing, and we de- n_in a hig satisfactory 1t kes no difference how - y bric. we can or chtest in- Ve call for have t ed. While o we are qulc rkers, we like time to do our w however. lak.q s Bye Works, ‘Tdcphunc. 157 Franklin St. | |THE OFFICE OF WM. F. HILL, Real Estate | and Fire Insurance, | d in Somers' Block, over C. Room 9, third ficor. Telephone 147. M J. F, CONANT. 11 Franklin Street. Whitestone 5c and the J. F. C. 10¢ Cigars are the best on the market. Try them. mar16d OF ALL KINDS | Boston. Worth 20¢aSackMore WASHBURN-CROSBY''S GOLDMEDAL Sheely ) Vandeville Week of April 26 Daily Except Thursday, April 20th. ROSE MAYNON In Her Tratned Bird Spectacular HARRY WATWAN, The Boy Violinist. STIRLING & CHAPMAY, Comedian: Character s and Dancers. WINNIE CRAWFORD, The Girl in Trousers. Lates: and Best Motion Pletures— and Thursday. 10¢ to all parts of the honse The 01d Homestead The Greatest of All New England Plavs, Cast of 25 people, besutiful ne scenery and effects. The famo Double Quarteete, Prices—25c, 35c, §0c, T6c and $1.00. Doors open 7.30. Curtain 8.15. Seats on_amle at the Box Off Wauregan House g & Co’s on Tue 4 Bisket, Pitct . April 27th, at VAHIIEVILII THE ORIGINAL World’s Greatest Comedy Bar Act. “”,’::""' 30c. A few Rewerved Seats | o'clock Matinces 2i8; Evenings 7.15 and 8.5, | Cars o all points atter the perfom- PR ST ST R I L A R L MRS 3 Shows Daily Wesk of .30, 7, 8.45 APRIL l KIGE BROTHERS BUDD & ROTH In a Skit entitled * One- Night in Vaudevills™ RUTH GARNOLD, Singing and Datcing Commedieane Iavmg fictum Ladies and Child Ol | TP sl i1 Except Holldays CUBANOLA TR0 Singing and Dancing Girls PICTURES CHANGED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY. Change of Time BREED'S THEATRE In Effect April 7, 1900. Norwich & Westerly R. R. Co. For Westerly, 6, 7, 8.30, 9.45, then quarter before cacn hour until {.45 p. | m. Last through car, 2.30 p. m. Extra cars to Hallville, 8.16, 8.30, 10.20 p. m 8 o'clock car leaves from Preston bridge. The cars leaving Norwich at 7 a. m., 12.45, 3.45, 4.46, 7.45, connect with N. Y, N. H. & H. train for Prov- idence and Boston. For return con nections, see timetable or call tee- | phone §01-4. Use short route—save | time and money. apréd Charles McNulty; Lessee. Devoted (o First-class Moving Pictures and Iliustraled Songs. Great Feature Ploture, “THE RETURN OF ULYSSEA.* and five other Dramatic and Comedy Pictures. Madam Morelle in high elass songs. Willlum Deleney in illustrated songe. Doors open at 3 ana 7. Performances at 2.30, 3.45, 7.30, 843, Special attention to Ladies and Chl I Onilaren, Washington Bt uare. LEON, Ladies’ Tailor. | ‘Workmanship and Fit Guaranteed Entirely Satisfacto; 278 Main Street May Building. | MISS M. C. ADLES: Hair, Scalp and Face Specialis! CHEAP STORE HAIR never !mproves a woman’s appearance. If you must add to your hair in order to ‘make your Spring hat effective, wear h..lih,, natural, glossy human hi and have it matched by Miss A 8§ h will be in N"wh all this week. e T tention to callers. WAUREGAN HOUSE, Norwich New York. apr26d Telephone 704, Boilers, Tanks, Smoke Stacks All kinds of Plate Iron Work ‘We make a speclalty of Repalring SPEIRS BROTHERS, Water Street, New London "Phone 40. may7d A. W. BURNHAM, ««+ +» Eye Specialist Twenty five years exyerience in fit- ting Glassos to the Most Difficult Eyes rmanently located at 257 Main St., orwich, Ct. Satisfaction guaranteed Cffice houra. 2t 8 o. m. fan24d WALL e First Annnal Concert PEOPLE'S SINGING CLASS Town Hall, Tuesday, May 4th, 8 p. m. Solojst: MIS8 INEZ BARBOUR of New York, Chorus of 150 Voices and Orchestra. CHARLES D. GEER, Direotor. Tickets §0c. At Davis' Book Store ow from members of the class, apr27TuThS JAMES F. DREW Piano Tuning and Repairin) Best V'ork Only, ‘Phune 422-3. 18 Perkine Ave sept23d ? EXPERT TUNING saves and Improves the pi*no, Al work guaranteed. A JARVIS, Neo. 15 Clatremont Ave. Norwich, raduate Nilew Brya Tunin; attle L Mk Drop a pi and Tl eall. declsd ‘Phone 518-8. F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect 8t., 889-5. Norwich, Gt Omon Sets at W. . CARDWELL, S to 9 Water St, Tel, apr21a GAIN - SOMETHING {§ by a course in Book- PAPERS . keeping. Shorthand and Touch Typewriting Norwich Commercial Schoo! Broadway Theatre B MILLINERY ¢ our handsome line of Spring Hats, | 0°CONNOR’S, 278 Main Street, 264 xhy Buumu YERRINGTON'S, large Ilnuhle Daffols 49 Main Street. aprisd REFRIGERATORS | REFRIGERATORS We have them—a whole carload. The finest stock ever shown in this oity. Imperial, Colonial and LaBelle, rang- ing in price from $6.00 to $20.00. ‘We can surely suit you on goods. Come early and get your pick of the lot. these Schwartz Bros, ““Home Furnishers,’ 9-11 Water St, Washington Sg. We are agents for the celebrated HUB RANGE and the NEW HOME SEWING MACHINES. aprasd Open Evenings, HUNT'S, The Florist, | Telephone. Lafavetts Street f HANLEY'S PEERLESS ALE is' acknowledged to be the best en | market. 1t is absolutely pure, and | that reason is recommended b fans. Delivered to any part of D. J, MeCORMICK, 30 Franklin Steset. 0 mistake will be made in selecting THIS school as the one to attend. Bucmess llege ll&vlmmfigfl Catalogue for te NEWMARKET HOTEL, 715 Boewell Ave. First-class wines, liquors Meals and Welch rarebit order John Tuckies Prop. WHEN you want ta put ness heforo the public, there dium better then through th ing columns of The sking,