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et ' and @oufies, e 113 YEARS OLD. Sabacrintion price, J3¢ @ week: S0o @ th; $6.00 o yea Entered at the Postormice at Norwioh Conn., cs secin Telephome Callas Bulletin Buaingss Office, 480, Bulletin Editorinl Rooms. 36-8 Bulietin Job Offics, %-§ Willimantie Offiee Itoom 2 Mur ay Telephone 210. —_— Norwich, Saturdsy, May 8, 1909. “KEEP ON THE WALN." The new signs on the New Haven | green read “Keep on the walk,” which fro the old signs, But will the Just opposite “Reep oft the gr great American citizen ever do| elther? There Is no existing evidence that he ever will or can, The Ameri- | can does neither, He moves quick— he is in a hurry. The short cut is always Inviting to him, and If permit- ted he makes It at the street corners across private lawns and on public | grounds wherever an opportunity for a | short cut presents itself. In our cit- fes the dlagonal wire fence from the house corner to the’ edge of the walk stands as the only means of preven- tlon known and resorted to as a pro- | tection to private property. The new boy, the milkman and the grocer's| elerk all cut across wherever they can to save steps, and that accounts for the worn and beaten tracks all over the private property of New England. | No doubt every American would like | to “keep on the walk,” but he can’t— | be is In & hurry and seems to be pain. | ¢ fully conscious of the fact that “time waits for no man.” To save steps is to save time, and while it may mean “is to disfigure a lawn, i does he care for that—or “a town | why should he worry about | green,’ that? The popular American motto is “Get there!” and lsm't he getting there? Could he get there if he fol- | lowed the walk instead of the short cut? Mardly. “Kesping on the walk" is lefs to those who have time to do 50, THE CHILD AND THE PURSE. The ehild who has to earn money puts a higher value upon it than t ohtld who has coins of small'and denomination given to it, and the son is now at hand whon the small boy can be trained to do le jobs for pay—to do chores for the money he needs, with the prospect of becom- ing a better boy and man in gonse- quence of these little habits of imdus- try. The lad who cleans up the yard,| rakes the lawn and runs the lawn mower in these days for nickels and dimes, has a consc pride of being a helper and an earner. He is learn- ing what it is to earn money as well as to spend It; and he does not get to Dbe a little spendthrift before he really | * knows what the word mea Encouraging a ehild to earn money | i€ dolng one's duty by him. To train | them to think that cofns come for the | asking, and that there are plenty more where the others came to do is which he cannot easily recover | The practical Information which a| bright boy ean gain by rious habits and systematic 1w be of use to him to th that he lives, and training is ite depr aration which mu him m every This 1s & & portance of started right | s advantage over those been. t tell favor: ment of I ter, but it al) ma the 1 To who BACK TO CORN. It is recognized that t more rugged manhood a hood for this cou the coarse and simple foods of o days. Wheat flour has been ground and sifted and bleached until its adul- teration has become such an injur to the people that the government forbidden the sale of the bleached ar- ticle. How puny the people of toda would look In contrast with the co fed Americans of half a century ag To be changed from a nation of d pepties to a natlon of sound stoma and true hunger we need to go back to the days of goober bacon and corn | pone, { There are only a few women today who can take a cupful of cornmeal, a bt of water, a pinch of salt and a portable oven, and create corn br which would please the palate of connofsseur; but that was a feat w was common when this young and had as sturdy a man as any country could boast of. | Appendicitls was not common those days, and the demand for sane asylums was not greater th the supply. A return to a coarse ar nourfshing diet is the way to I adulteration and better gener: health. The American people know what corn meal Is, and as a wholesome ana nutritious food it will hold its pl for it agrees with the leanest purs and the most delicate stomach. d woman- is to return THE UNEMPLOYED. It makes no difference about Improv- ed industrial conditions, the army of unemployed is constant and so far as observation 1s to be relied upon con tinues to increase in numbers. It is independent of the army of tramps, and Is coinposed of the lazy and the self-incapacitated—those whose hah- its have robbed them of thelr man- hdod or their strength, and left them | to be rated ag bummers and loafers. They number hundreds of thousands, and they do not pine for employment, simply because they have learned that 1t Is possible for them to live without | work and even without worry., It | matters not to them that the predic. tion 1s made that the next ten years will- be . the greatest industrial era | this country has ever known. Be- | tween drink and bad habits they have become unconsclous of shame and be. reft of ambition, and are willing to| be classed among the hangers-on and the leeches. The young men of to- day who are spending too much time and money in the saloons, who are gullty of debasing excesses, are the recruits who will join the ranks of these ne'er-do-wells, It will take en- | ergetic measures to keep this great class of idlers from becoming a men- mce eventually to the peace of the | country, The courts deal too tenderly with them in the Inciplent stages of | degeneracy. It there is a soul in Norwich that can tell why ice should cost twice as mueh per 100 pounds here as In Wor- cester, and 20 cents more than in New | that is granted the more {8 demanded; { point where the nation will be asked L..d in it. | was going to join Andre. | put the portrait of Jefferson Davis up- on the siiver service which i to be \presented to the battly Mississippl in the name of that state, and it strikes many patriots as being as ab- surd as the raising of a jument in memory' of Wirz; but the southern loyalty to Davis at this late day does not endanger the peace of the coun- try and in the Intérests of harmony will probably be humored. i (Congressman Hollingsworth of Ghio, who served in the union army, protests against it, and is a at the spirit which would make, Nf pos. sible, rebellion honorable, The coun- try In its feelings coincides with Con- gressman Hollingsworth and the pol- icy of tolerating such a spirit is be- ing serious. safe men. In the Interests of the union much that is distasteful to the majority of the people has been and will be sub- mitted to. The one featurs of' these and the question must eventually be asked, Where will it all end and where shall the line be drawn? Through this line of submissiveness we are gradually drifting towards the to make Lee and Grant equal before the people and the world—equa] in the hearts of true Americans—and that n never be. The attempt to destroy the government must ever remain & stain upon the history of all concern. GARVDEN BLUEBERRIES. The Gultivated blueberry appears to be an assured fact because it has been learned ‘that it thrives upon & soil and that it can be fostered most plants cannot be. The where | chief botanist of the agricultural de- partment at Washington hds found | that the roots of the blueberry carry a beneflclal fungus, enabling them to assimilate the food which it draws from an acld soil, The retention of this lity through suitable ground covering, on nearly worthless areas possessed of the proper soil elements, ms to furnish the key to the new cultivation, With bushes six or elght feet high, closely set, the yield per acre of this berry will be many times that of the product which now reaches the mar. ket. So much of the hill country of New England is good for little else at the prediction freely made that the blueberry, repeating the ex- fence of the cranberry, will witness pment limited only by the ab- & powers of the consuming mar- Its producers will not have to lough their soll, a distinct advantage to them in rocky hilly country. The endeavor is not to make larger blueberrles, but better. It is believed the flavor can be greatly im- proved, and that the crop can be more doubled. The experiments, car- on in New Hampshire, with the have proved to be most encour- and the day of garden blueber. not so distant as one might is than EDITORIAL NOTES. When it comes to Massachusetts gh schools, 40,000 pupils start and only 10,000 are in at the finish. . Taft Is making fame as a wel] Mr anced ruler.of the White house. e entertains folbles for no one. In opposition to high trolley fares, delphians form “I-Walk and wear a sprinter's badge. never helps any town as a topnotcher in prices nable price that is always in.- to attain It is the re ting. It is estimated that there are eleven ousand poets in Ohio; but there are than ten times that number of politicians. A quarter of & million of bushels of : American market from were among, this week’s im- ought for today: While we g for warm days, do not are salting down that it is not easy eculators to get a corner in them 1d Virginia regards Tag day as “the supremacy of poor form and bad manners,” ver mind what the pre- text for it may be. is about to spend a million dollars upon her for repairs, preserved to pay. Massachusetts arter of roads aq state be It takes 5000 elephants a year to nish plano keys for clvilized peo- The plano business appears to nake music for them, e de ael would recall her that “architecture is frozen could she see some of the modern Norwich specimens. Mad me: again off for and it really looks as if he likely that he will find Peary, ladelp ve its own story of “The Wise Men and the Fools.” Other cities are show. ing ambitions in this direction. Do not say that you cannot plant thing on Arbor day. If there is no chance outside, drop a good seed- th ght into your midst. Get there! The finest eulogy It is the general assembly of » deliver upon Governor Lilley is to arry out the reforms which were nearest his heart, possible for Connecticut Rutland, Vt., is yearning for a get. together banquet at which 500 citizens may discuss city needs and come to & better mutual understanding. Isn't t worth while? The Tamed- Railroads. 1t is remarked that of late there has been a surprising change in the rela- roads. The Vanderbilitlan policy so cmphatically enunciated is no longer followed, even on the Vanderbllt roads. On the contrary, the raflroads are try- ing to find out what the people want nd getting ready to give it to them. them are golng. so far as to ppoint agents for this precise purpose. That the new policy is a good one re- quires no argument. The roads and their patrons should get along togeth- er. Their intcrests are identical. If both obey the Golden Rule there will be no troible. If each is fair to the other everybody will be happy. The advances for a better understanding come from the raflroads, as they should, questioned by sane and; compromising acts is that the more | we shall soon be yearning | They must | It is not| a claims that it wil] soon | ms between the public and the rail-! 0 G m‘ll lh’ .‘:onh de: sire!” ‘R:l cuul:-? see it are not alone. If more le could see %hll":holworlg mll a bfl!'er )ll'c: o0 live In. It pmcl'&uy cannot see that makes the puflf. of lite. We could see mowe if we would, but we must have faith to do it. To be faithless is to be shiftless, and shift- faults of ]:\l:mmp{:,o?r olthal lari; t e world, as seems to be, knows too much, and doks too little. 1t is not knovludfio that achleves, but actlon with the light of knowledge upon it. What we know Is given eoncrets fofm by what we do. nowjea?, alone s not power, but followed by action it is the unsubdue- able force. Think right and do right and the world will move for you, Our old friend “A. J. C” belleves In cheering the living rather than placing emblems of appreclation iipon the cas- ket of the dead; and the Man-Who- Talks rather expects his “Write on! Talk on! Thou canst not toil in vain!" | He has been with us all these years, and that which fires our heart fires his. We seem to respond to the same vibrations—to be moved along parallel lines. He is receptive to the truth and he realizes in a broad sense how the truth makes one free. It some- times seems to us as if he could talk better than we do, He lets us know that he sees sermons not hot air in this column, and does not lose sight of the practical value of much of it. May he “never thirst or hunger for the bread ot life. Why should a Rorun who knows the catechism, says his prayers and reads his Bible act like a man who doesn’t? 1t is so common to live-skim milk six | days in the week and cream of & Sun- day that a great many people think that it is religious living; but It ien't. We are a peculiar lot. We can’t feel real plous or wear a serious face un- less we have our go-to-meeting clothes on. We make ourselves children of circumstances when it would be moreé to our credit if we didn't. Now s the only time to live right, €0 we heed not think that we are going to live right next week. 1t we do not get in the habit of doing things now there is no assurance that theyll ever be done, The press of the state sald a great many good and true things of the late Frank T. Brown, and gave him high standing as a lawyer and as a public official; but it was left to his elients, who knew him heart to heaft, to say the nicest things of him. In his pro- fession he served the least client with | the same falthfulness that he did the greatest; and when it come to com- pensation he was never extortionate. Where he disappointed clients of mod- erate means was by the moderation of his charges. He gave £0 everyone his best counsel—he charged according to their ability to pay. The reasonable- ness of his charges now seem to be his finest memorial. It was the Elder Pliny who said “It is godlike for men to assist men, for this is the way to eternal glory.” The Norwich which is about to cele- brate its 250th anniversary July 5th is not the same oli Norwich of '59. It is an electric trolley center now, with a Washington square and a Union square such as it did not dream 'of then. Things come to Norwich by chunks. Between '69 and '73 the wa- ter works were established and the new court house and City hall bulit, the soldiers'’ monument erected; and when the late James Lloyd Greene was mayor the Breed elm was made the center of Washington square, it had before stood on private property; and Market street was widened and the crocked places taken out of a dozen streets. The placing of the court house was_the birth of Union: square, as we ee 1t today, with its modern bulldings. is the municipal center of Norwich. The progress between '69 and 'TS marked the beginning of & modern 20th century Norwich. 1 have a fondness for the man who chows a_ faint heart rather than be brutal. It may be a mollycoddle spir- it in the eyes of some persons to weak- en before the mute pleading of a dumb brute cornered I know a man who | killed one lamb and it was enough— 1 know another who killed one deer and then ceased to be a hunter. He d_he broke the animal's leg with his bullet and wenht up to despatch { bim with his knife—when the plead. irz eve and almost human wall of tlie game made it painful for him to take its life. The spirit of mercy baptized him then and there, and he made an oath that In the name of sport he could not do such work and | never would agaln. To this day he “I would not go through that ce again for a wagonload of We have paid the license fees for our dogs and they wear the state’s irass protection badge if they are not regarded as property by the courts, Some people who keep dogs do not regard them as property, either. A man who had just pald his dog’s li- cense said to a friend: T didn’t want the dog—I've tried to give him away. Like a bad penny, he always returns. 1 owned his parents and raised him. When friends call at the house he bites their heel and tears their trcu- sers to show his worth. He scems to be B c straight in the eye and, wagging tail, seems to say: “You are my best friend and the only god I know,’ and then I know I haven't the heart to hurt him. I could put a bullet int« myself as easily as I could put one Letween those honest eyes, Somctimes I catch myself wishing that ne might get lost or unbeknown to me fall a vietim to_a trolley lcar or automobile fo that I could honestly mourn his 0s8.” The aspiring young man should re- | member that the eyes of his employer are usually upon him; and that his hubits are for or agalnst him. One of the weakest reasons for an increase of salary is that one cannot live upon what he is earning. We have in mind a young man who was pald on Sat. urday and had not a penny left Mon- cay morning; and when asking for an increase so informed his employer. “That's why I don t increase your pay, he was told. “If I gave you more money you would spend more-money. and you would be no better off. You've got the habit of spending all you earn, { When you show me that you realize the worth of money and know how to | handle it, T wiil gladly increase your Pa More money would do him no ;}m?_lunnl he had ‘a better conception of life, _ At last we have authentic informa- tion that Henry Ward Beecher was the author of “The Rose of New England,” and Edward T. Clapp was the perpetu- afor of it. In the year 1850 or 1851, when the late Henry B. Norton was returning from abroad O6n an ocean liner, he made the acquaintance of Henry Ward Reecher, whom he invited to visit him at Norwich. Mr. Beecher was then a contributor to the New York Independent, and while spend- ing the day with Mr. Norton in Nor- wich entered the greenhouse at the foot of the garden and wrote the let. ter to that paper which first called Norwich “The Rose of New England.” Mr. Clapp, recognizing the beauty of he title, émblazoued it upon an arch across Eroadway in 1859 In honor of | the 200th anniversary of the town, and it impressed iteelf uron the hearts | of the peopla and promises to endure | 80 long as Norwich shall last, While we recognize that “each day has its care” we should not forget that “each care hag its dav.” If we and they will find the people ready to| come into a full consciousness of this meet them more than half way.—Low- ell Courler-Citizen, we shal] kee, the day right and the cave right. a nuisance to me until he looks | | an Interpreter, of course. When I'd say, “Move up,’ he'd wave his arms as inary like, his shoulders, turn his up! at an elevation with his shoulders and | of the par: 1 know, because I had him | ears, head and all. Say-—ans write it down: “Si servase s caballeros hagan me el favor de avan< zar sobre la linear’ That is nearly the same as saying, it pleases your worships, gentlemen,”do me the favor of advancing along the line’ Some- times he in even more agony. sort of order, had all that fuss an frills and palaver about it. The men always stopped when the Interpreter bey because you couldn’t take In a and important commuicatlon like that without givin' it consider- able attention, and they didn't git to goln’ right off atter the proclamation 2d been made, but stood lettin' it percolate through thelr understandin’s. “One night when I was lyin' awake thinkin' how I could help Taft make a success of the canal I the great idee 1 mentioned. I seen how to save millions. And I _seen, too, why the broad empire of Spain had gone down to nothin. What licked them Spay- fards when they owned half the world? Cowardice? No; they was fine fight- ers, just as brave as the English, who was principally responsible for startin’ 'em goin’ downhill. It was all along bf the Spanieh language meetin’ up with the English. “Sea fightin'? Why, what show had them Bpaniards? 'Si servase ustedes caballeros do me the favor to elevate y sort of announcement, any. ‘he Spanish ship and cutlass the cabal- leros before Qny had got through hearin’ thé whole of the polite, refined, courteous uest of their cap'n and started to busy. While they still had_thelr ears cocked to git the rest the English removey¥ “The Spanish killed Spain and I n It was in' the canal and n time would kill the republi- can party. Here we was, dependin’ on Spanish labor to dlg the canal, had 16,000 Spaniards and hoped to replace all other labor with ‘em. Every day, each Spaniard lost seventeen minutes by bein’ spoke to in the Spanish style, and that was five cents a_man and for the whole 16,000-1t was $800 a day! If we doubled or tripled the number, it would be $1,600 or $2,400 a day! Then the longer it took to dig the canal the more interest had to be pald on bonds and the lonf.f the wait befors tolls could be collected. “‘Now,’ says I to the Interpreter, ‘we’ll revise them formulas of yours, cut out all that ‘sl serva business and feferences to worships and come down to a simple, direct, explosive ‘git!” or ‘scat! 'Beat it!” will take the place of another rigmarole, and so on, economizin’ time by savin' words. ‘Well, we installed this abbreviated system on the Alcala section and I wrate a long report sbout it and sent it to headquarters. But they never paid no attention. Fact is, they fired me not long after that. Said I didn't git along with my crew—wasn't polite enough. What's the use o’ workin' out big reforms when nobody appreciates them!"—Chlcago News. i ettt bbb et et entertalned at intervals, they are good things to forget just long enough to get a little sweet sleep, If no longer. Those who forget care has its day find that care has them. Care can never become a tyrant unless he is permit- ted to. Everybody doesn't make a burden of care—but too many do. Some penplé wear thelr cares as natur- elly as they do the buttons on their clothing, They meet them as they come and smile them out of counte. nanee. You know how care looks. The careworn face, , wrinkled and gloomy, just reflects care. Care can- not stand sunshine, and if you study to get that into your soul care will floe away. mm»] SUNDAY MORNNG /LK THE SENBE OF WONDER. An intimate friend of the late Prof. Henry Drummond of Scotland told me not long ago that onme of his most beautiful traits was his keen delight in ncw experiences, He never outgrew his capacity of wonder and surprise over the curlous unfoldings of life. Yet he was a noted scientist who had penetrated Inte many secrets, who might have become, a8 many a ‘college rrofessor does, an unenthusiastic, academiec sort of person. Nevertheless, almost to ?l last day, Drummond kept the edge of his interest in the world and human life keen. Over against him I would put a boy ot whom 1 learned the other say, who at 14 is distinctively blase. He has traveled over a considerable portion of this country and of Europe, stopped at a great many first class hotels. gone to any number of theaters, ridden on merry-go-rounds, owned a vast col- lection of automatic toys—in short, has bad almost everything conceivable that might fall into the lap of a modern youth brought up in the midst of wealth and luxury. Now, at 14, the world has practically lost its charm for him. In comparison with him, the country lad brought up 20 miles from the railroad, who may not have seen a_locomotive more than half a dozen times in his life, 18 to be greatly en- vied. For thé sense of wonder Is one of God's greatest gifts to man. Watch a healthy, merry child for half a day and see how many exclamations of surprise and wonder escape his lijs as he encounters one thing after an- other which to him are strange and extraordinary, but which have become [to adults the commonplaces of exist- ence, And he who can keep his sense of the wonder and glory of the world, as he goes on In youth and middle life and even to old age, possesses a fountain of almost infinite peace and joy. Life cannot possibly cheap and dreary and tawdry. It is only the self-centered life that Icses the capacity to feel and express wonder, for the universe is throbbing with interest for those who will look avnay from themselves, and up to the star-studded night sky, or out upon the waving forests or the sparkling sea. Moreover, the world is conatant- ly growing more interesting as men discover more things in it and learn how to appiv the results of their re- gearch to art and industry. Horse- less carriages, the wireless telegraph —such inventions as these which our grandfathers could hardly imagine within the reach of their imagination are enough to excite attention. There will be more such inventions and per- haps even more remarkable ones, as men become more skilled in_ handling the forces of the world. The possi- bility sends us to our dally paners constantiy expecting staruing news. To one who does not let his sense of wender fall into disuse the revelations of human personality become more ard more fascinating, especially in these days when the subconscious mind Is under investigation and psy- chical research 18 enlisting the powers of many trained minds. If we think that we have discovered all that is within us, It Is because we have not looked deep enough to take the real measure of our emotions and aspiras tlons, the fluctuation of our moods, the strength and weakness of our will ‘Wonderful as is this external uni- verse and ths mind of man, the being of God is still more wonderful. If we have ceased to be moved by profound awe In the presence of that spiritua) being “whose dwelling is light of setting suns and the round ocean and the pleasant air,” it is because we have allowed this capacity of responsive. ness to the divine life to grow weak within us. The last words of Fran- ces Willard, the great advocata of tem- perance, were: “How beautiful God is!” Anyone who stops to reflect on the power that has brought this uni- verse into existence is thrilled by the thought of his marvelous nature and bis loving kindnesg to the children of men, Blessed be the sense of wonder, the consciousness that we have not y begun to explore the world and o selves and God. Tt redecms our exist- ence from monotony. It gives dg- nity to each new day, for at sunrise we say: “Some wonderful thing we ehall see or hear, some wonderful ex. perience we shall have ere sunset” THE PARSON. MUSIC AND DRAMA. Henry Miller will try another play by Charles Rann Kennedy, author of “The Servant in the House.” It is named “The Idol Breaker.” Busoni, the pianist, unheard in America for at least ten years, is tc return for a short tour next January playing with the chlef orchestras and appearing in recitals in. the larger cities. A One of the most interesting ftems on David Belasco's schedule will be the presentation of David Warfield in a new play on which the famous play- wright-manager is now at work. Announcement is made by Manager Charles Emerson Cook of the Hart- || ford theater that for the week begin- ning Monday, Ma- 10, Frank Keenan will appear in “The Warrens of Vir- ginla” and that the entire Belasco pro- The grape illustration is to remind the reader of the fact that this healthful raising- agent, a favorite with all who de- sire the finest, most healthful food. Royal mads of Fils 2t Rosy Cheeks or Pale Ones? A moment's reflection with your mirror will give the hint as to the condition system. Pale cheeks, muddy complexion, dull eyes, show a poverty of blood.” You require something to make a plentiful supply of rich, red blood course through your veins, To ensure this take BEECHAM'S PILLS the wonderful little blood-makers. Whatever your blood mayneed the stomach from the daily food when itisin e stomach 1o digest its food and to assimilate the blood elements, They increase the supply and improve the quality of the blood. If you are pale, weak, languid, or anaemic, & few doses of Beecham's Make all the Difference In boxes with-full directions, 10c. and 25c. is the only Baking Powder from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar good working order. Beecham’s Pills will CONCERT Auspices Young Men's Christian Assoclation, year from :ve | Agsociation Hall TUESDAY, May 11, fo six. The xmm.\w& RAN s 8 O sevel G e Tiekets, 50 cents. 4 2 1t 1s hinted in New York that muoh |y Oor B A o o o 5! into talking mechines has con- uted to the impairment of Caru- nn’..'ohts:. The mh‘ w him, % b e e o st a ume | The Daintiest Dresses I s ‘{;;:::;f‘ "h it of %e:"ln: P ¢ for thelr appearance to- s‘t‘hflrnmmo‘!moml—- Rose Stahl, whose it success in “The Chorus Lady” a_matter of stage history in Am has recelv- ed at the hands of the don pITl: what an American first-nighter de. scribes as “the greatest welcome ever extended to an American actress.” There 1s more Calarch in this section B ogether, and yatil ‘the. last: few 3 i Fears Sas sy osed to be incurable. ‘or a4 great y _years docto 0~ nounced it & I m. nn" re- scribéd local rem “T stantly falling t treat. ment pronounced it incurable. Scisnce has proven catarrh to bé & eo tional dlseass and thersfors' raqui fon!r:"“g-f"u "?.".‘R'!'..”m"fi""r%! assuring & new looking germent with. Siden &S, Foledo: GRS, e the iniy | out the. sllehtast infure to the fabric. N“"{:"""" = the mark: ‘We renovate the most costly gowns, is taken " fujte, walsts. skitts, stc, for soclety Iy on the blood and mucous sur: Hee. drops to a t fand micous s : Lang’s Dye Works, dollars for any case it fal 157 Franklin SL. are usually the. quickest to solled, sometimes from ‘Ment, but ofte are deljcat from wear. things to cledn, but ‘we do the work ectivély by the dry cleaning process, , and b re with local o Send f iroul testimonl: o:: S T CHENEY & CO. Toieto, o p-et:':&hé‘“wflg r’gilh tor constt- rt::‘.lfl& AUDITORIUM VAUDEVILLE and Moving Pictares 10c ROOSEVELT Hottest Africa Can keep cool more easily than can JETTED BANDS. | the suffering housewife who tries to Many weak, nervous women have been restored to health by Foley's Kid- ney Remedy, as it stimulates the kid- neys €o they will eliminate the waste matter from the blood. Impurities de- press the nerves, causifg exhaustion and other allments. Commence today and you will soon be well. Pleasant to take. Lee & Osgood Co. MISS M. C. ADLES, Hair, Scalp and Faca Specialist LIGHT. CONVENIENT, STYLISH. Such fs the 8ummer Coiffure design- ed by Miss Adles. Can be dohned in- stantly, that the wedrer Is sure of belng always presentable,whatever the haste of travel or the changes of weather. Miss Adles will be In Norwich week of May 10th. Make an early appoint- ment. WAUREGAN HOUSE, Norwich New York. maysd 2.30, DeVu Acroba JIM hUss Ladies and Ch FAERRRE N ‘Afternoens No Higher HAIR ORNAMENTS, SHELL BANDS, . PUFF HAIRPINS, BARRETTES, And Other Novelties for New Style Fannie M. Gibson GQS.B?.N?ES ROOM 30, CENTRAL BLDG. Tel 505 |nomical, safe and easy to aperals apr24d Call and see the latest models, e s A G4S & ELECTRICAL DEP'T. ESTATE | 715 Bosveell Ave. First-class wines, liquors and cigara e and Welch rerebit servec to srder John Tuckle. Prop. Tel 4 & Alice Building, TIEAR 1 no aavertsimng medium 1 321 MAIN STREET. Bastern Connecticat sgual to The Bul- atin for business resuits. epriod OR. King’s Restoration Method What It Does for Too:hless People By means of this wonderful method we are able to give back to a patient the full set of teeth 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 free frem In- cumbrances. Before we accomplish this result we put the gums and the natural teeth in a healthy comdition, tight- ening the teeth which may be loose and curing pyorrhea If the patient Is afficted with that dreadful als- ease. All of the testh we swpply are practical teel each set In Its own socket following nature’s plan, so that the strain is equally divided. One 18 able to bite on these teeth and use them In flcfl‘ the same manner_as hé would his natural teeth. They mateh ure’s teeth so closely as to deeeive experts. They are beautiful to look at and a source of constant deMght to the one whe wears them. APAINLESS PROCESS An impression has gone forth that there is some surgical operation oonnected with this method of resturing mlssing teeth. Some peonle have written in to know It we bore down into the bone and put the teeth in on pegs ! Others have an 14 natural teeth were originally. It is quite natural that some unthinking peeplé would ask such q:tes- tions, and In order that they may he fully answered we will stats that there is no boring, no cut! no implantation about this method, nuth- ing about the work that Is painful while it is being done of afterward. Patlents leave the office with these teeth In plaee and at once begin chewing meat, eating candy, toasc, or anything else with the same com- fort they would enjoy If every tooth in their head had grown thers. If we couldn't promise this and meke good on the promise, the Re- storation Method would not be a sticcess. It would beb no better than ordifiary bridgework or partial plates. WE ARE GENERAL PRACTITIONERS All Forms of Dentistry Treated by Experts. ‘While the Restoration Method is our freat apsciait- we are general dental practitioners as well. Irom the simpleet filling to the most in- tricate plece of porcelain work, our experts are at the servios of the ablic. Naturally we would 80 such work well, much better than it could be done in a one-man office, for the operators employed here are a1 men ot the very highest skill. They ni to be to the Restoratio: THOMAS JEFFERSON D. D. 8, Originator of Dr. King’s Restor- ation Method for the natural restoration of teeth — originator of the King BSafe BSystem of Painless Dentistry and Inventor of the “Natural Gum” Set of Teeth, Ete, Ete. All rights re- served. KING, we set the 1ew teeth into the sockets where the 0 work. Bunglers would not be tolerated In our office for a day, neither ::1:]‘ dental students. We demand the finlshed craftsmian, both at the oper- ating chair and in the laboratory. KING DENTAL PARLORS, Dr. Jackson, N}anmr. Franklin Square, Norwich, Cona. apr13TuPh) ‘ BREED HALL. 8 Shows Daily VINGENT SISTERS Except Holldays tn ¥ v Chrivimes BVE BERTHA HOLLAND, “The Double-Voiced Vocalist and Mes chanical Doll.” MOOR AND HARRISON, Novelty in Music and Songs. LATEST AND_BEST MOTION PIC- TURES. 3——8HOWS DAILY——23 Prices: Mat 100, Evening 10c and 200, may5d BREED’S THE ATRE Charles McNuity, Lessée. Devoted to First-class Moving Pictures and [iusiraled Songs. FEATURE PIOTURES: “Left Out,” Dramatie, “The Uplifting of Mr. Barker,” comedy, and six others. Washingten Square. RODERICK THEATER. Featuring for Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday Is The Beggar. Miss Jennle Heffernan singing one of Harry Lauder’s songs. Raymond O'Nefl singing Take Mo Out to the Ball Game. Admission, § cents. “war”" | Oth Gvelty Bingers and_Dancers. IE BHOTHERS ind Roman Ring Artists. Y The Yiddish Hurry Up. maysd 7, 8.45 WALDAON BHOI HERS Emperors_of_German Comedy. ildren ' PICTURES CHANGED o EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY. JAMES F. DREW Piano Tuning and Repairia Best Vork Only, Phene 422-3. 18 Perkine Ave septia EXPERT TUNING saves and | ro h - FANCY TOPPED HAIRPINS, OO0 Wi & Soas stoves work guaranteed” "o A% A, W, JARV No. 15 Clairemont Ave., Norwich, Conn. wraduate Niles Bryant sehool of Plans Tun Ba reek, Ml Drop a postal and Fll eall. decisd ‘Phone 5188 F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect St., 889-6. Norwich, Cs Change of Time In Effect April 7, 1909, Norwich & Westerly R. R. Co. For Westerly, 6, 1 quartsr before cach Tel, m. Last through car, 2.30 p. m, Extra cars to Hallville, .30, 10.40 p. m 8 o'clock car I from Preston bridge. The cars leaving Norwich at 7Tam,1 3,45, 4.45, 7.45, conmect with N. Y., H. & H. train for Prov- idence and Boston. For return con nections, see timetable or call tele« phone 601-4. U short route—save | time and money. aprs? . o » Ladies’ Tatlor. ‘Workmanship and Fit Guaranteed Entirely Satisfactory. 278 Main Street May Bullding. DR. N. GIBLERT GRAY, GRADUATE VETERINARIAN AND DENTIST, HODGE'S STABLI. 4 to 30 Bach S Tel. 10. | DR. A, F. HOWARD, DENTIST Over Boston Sters. 187 Main Steeet. The Dei-Hoff, AYES BROS., Proprietors. Brondway, .« .. .« + « Norwich, Conn Running Hot and Cold Water. Unexcelled. Service Prempt. Room3 bles reserved for Ladies febid LOUIS H. BRUNELLE BAKERY We are confident our Ples, Cake and Bread cannot be excolled. Give us & trial order. nov2d MILLINERY See our handsome ling.ef Spring Hat O0CONNOR’S, 278 Main Street, mar2éd Bulldiag. NOTICE Dr, Lowise Franklin Miner now located in her new office, 21 Main 8t (Kenyon Block). Office hours, 1 to 4 p. m, Telsphone 660, 20 Fairmount Btreet.