Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
and Goufied, 113 YEARS OLD. Subscription price, 12c & week; 50c a month; $6.00 a year. Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Cona., as second-class matter. Telephone Calls: jetin B\!dncl : gtflcui 4,!50., in Edit 00! -3, H&: Job %;flca. 36-6. 7 Wilimantlc Office, Room 2. Murray Building. Telephone, 210. _————————— Norwich, Wednesday, June 2, 1908, bt bt A e . Ihe Cirealation of i The Bulletin. The Bulletin has the largest cir- culation of any paper in Eastern Conneeticut, and from three to four times lerger than that of any in Norwich. It is delivered to over 8,000 of the 4,053 houses in Nor- wich, and read b: ninety-three per cent. of the people. In Windham it is doliversd to over 900 house tn Putnam and Danielson to over 1,100, ana in al' of these places it is comsidered the local dally. Hastern Connecticut has tony-E 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. i routes In Eastern Connecticut. CIRCULATION H §1001, average ....oooicuenn. 4412} ---5,920% 6,559 1907, nvonlp......u......7' i 795 ..1543 1806, average. sesessassansan 1908, average... May 29.. sesesassssssssscenencase: THE ALASKA-YUKON-PACIFIC EXPOSITION. At noon Tuesday, President Taft touched the electric button In Wash- ington and gave the signal that the time had arrtved for the Seattle ex- position to open for 1909. The east has been duly notified that the exposi- tion has been prepared upon a scale of magnitude which those of the far removed eastern coast citles have scarcely realized. Above all things, this Alaska-Yukon exposition is sig- nifieant of the rapid expansion west- ward which the United States has made within the past quarter of a century. Twenty-five years ago Seat- tle was & mere village—not much more than a strung-out cluster of wooden shenties. It is wonderful, indeed, that this young city should in so brief a time have taken rank among the great commercial centers of the world. It is marvelous that Seattle, not on the map In 1860, should be in 1909 invit- ing the orient and the occldent to meet each' other at a world’s fair, in the preparation of which more than $10,- 000,000 has been expended. There are stfll thousands of eastern people who have never traveled to the Pacific and this inviting occasion and the reasonable rates will prompt many New Englanders to take in this won- derful show. THE LONELY BACHELORS. The lonely bachelors of the “Inland Bmpire,” composed of parts of Oregon, ‘Weashington and other: far western states, announce that they number 2,000 and are all in want of wives. As an open proposal to the 75,000 spinsters of the state of Massachu- setts this beats anything in mbdern times, * Out In the great west they belleve In mind power—in the efficicacy of auto-suggestive therapeutics — and these men have concentrated for the purpose of creating families which are the foundation of a state or of a coun- try. The announcement says that they are all good-hearted kind, affectionate and capable of true love and that they are healthy and falrly well-to-do. This opens a great matrimonial movement and there is no such word as failure. With millions of marriage- able women in the country, these 2,000 desirable bachelors wili not have to remain long on the bargain counter, A POPULAR CHILD'S CLUB. There has been formad at Philadelphia a “One Hour a Day club,” the purpose of which Is to make the children sys- tematically useful at home. That such e .club is generally needed is not to be denled, or that it will prove of more lasting good to the children than to parents. . ‘There appear to be more girls than boys ready to make pledges In this direction. The motto of the club real- ly ought to be “Saving mother steps,” for that i{s what in the main this daily service of children amounts to. The letters from the little children show that some of them are little helpers | by nature, and that helping is not new to them. It is rather surprising how many of these ten and twelve year olds read the papers daily. This 1s a nice way to spread the good habit of working to help mother among the little folks, and if accepted in the right spirit the movement will take out much of the irksomeness of these aaily chores, May these clubs multi- ply like Angell's bands of mercy. EMPLOYERS' LIABILITY ACT. Bince President Roosevelt pointed out how far In the rear America was | & in its protective laws for labor and showed the people the advantages and | justice to all of such law, the states of New York, Minnesota and Wiscon- sin have created commissions whose | duty it ls to investigate employers' l:abilitles, while other states have passed laws to this .end. These commissioners in New York, Minnesota and Wisconsin will have very Important questiong to consider. They will be met at the very thresh- old of their investigations with the in- surmountable fact that whatever new liabilitles are laid upon employers through their recommendations will ultimately be paid by consumers, through the increased cost, alleged or real, of the products of all manufac- torles wherein employers’ Habilities are largely increased. Yet this, after all, is only the mni- versally applied policy. It is the way employers’ expenses are met every it ‘recognized the justice: of ‘better protection of wbor and he advocated the of a movement in this direction, ev- ing it would bring about better labor conditions without imposing extreme hardship upon any one. GROWTH OF CANADA. Canada is certainly growing in im- portance and her good luck in attract- ing to her middle provinees about 100,~ 060 American farmers has given farm- ing a big boom there since 1803. In the three great western provinces of Canada there has been an increase of 100,000,000 bushels per annum in the annual grain output, The total pop- ulation of the Dominlon has increased a million in the ‘past six years and its trade $178,000,000. It is estimated that fully 75,000 people will leave the United States to settle in Canada during the pres- ent year. The new Canadian northwest is get- ting a class of settlers who know how to develop the soil and as well a to bring out the full resources of the country. American enterprise and capital is doing a great deal for Can- ada. THE CAPE COD CANAL. We have often to go far from home to procure the news. We are informed by the Baltimore American that this canal is now an assured fact. The American says that “the contract for the construction of the waterway has, in fact, been placed with the Degnon Contracting company and sublet by that company to the Furst-Clark com- pany of this city. A Baltimore firm is to bring to realization this big enter- prise. “The excavation work of the great diteh, which is to be elght miles long and of a depth and width to permit the passage of ships having a 25-foot draft, is probably not the most/ seri- ous phase of the construction problem. A great breakwater must be construct- ed to protect the northern entrance and to the bullding of this stone will have to be brought from a considerable distance up the coast. There is no great elevation in any section of the neck of land that must be cut through and hence no lock problems to be worked out. It is expected that the canal will be open to navigation at the end of four years and the contract cost will be something over $5,000,000.” The making of is old dream a reality as a matter 'of business shows how greater is the enterprise of to- day than that of the day when the idea was first conceived. It i§ really a work which belonged to the govern- ment. EDITORIAL NOTES. Count Zeppelin has to be recognized as the sallor of the air who stays up for a real voyage. The weather clerk should call off these wet Saturdays, They do not fit the baseball games. The world's average rainfall in a vear i8 60 Inches; and Norwich usually gets about forty of that. Happy thought for today: May June show that a good month beats a poor almanac day to death. The Texas watermelon has started north and the prospects of the doc- tors are certainly improving. Anybody looking for deadwood for summer use wil] find the democratic platforms made of the real stuff. The American housekeeper is not to blame for liking to sit down and see the vacuum sweeper do its work. This spell of pleasant weather 15 up- on g backed-in wind, something which the old seafaring men say tannot hap- pen. — Congress gives us all to understand that it proposes to take its own time to revise the tariff, regardless of con- sequences. - Can the pious Mr. Patten find any- where in Scripture that grinding the face of the poor is a commendable performance? The new senator from Illirols ‘has an interesting family of eight chil- dren; but this is not hls chief merit as a public man, The ory of “arbitration and not bat- tleships” will not take hecause the country without battleships is in no condition to arbitrate. The Providence Journal favors leather upholstery for all cars as more healthful than the red germ-incubat- ing plush in present use. The women of a Pennsylvania town beat an Englishman, who slandered them, nearly to death." The American woman is no mollycoddle. The woman behind lue sweet girl graduate deserves special mention for what she does toward her embellish- ment, but she seldom gets it. .day Tuesday Mr. Stead's wireless to the spirit world is just about as sure of re- sponses as Professor Pickering's mir- rored light to the planet Mars. The statement that the primary sys- tem has received a black eye in Iili- nols will please all who are opposed to it in other parts of the country. A Brooklyn man who took sixty-five cents from the pocket of a drunken man on the street got a sentence of seven vears in prison to impress him with the meanness of his offence. German Trade Aggressiveness. Because Cuba will purchase the rifies for the Cuban army in Germany we need not conclude that the kafser s promoting a “‘conspiracy” in the Ca- ribbean. He Is sed to see an order placed in Ge which might have = to th i States, and it is onl v 1 he should be. He rankly backs with all his prestige every German cffort to obtain trade. His policy is/ well known, and entires espectable. But our real competi- s not the kaisen except so far as he seconds the enterprise of German traders. Our campetitor is the Ger- man “drummer,” who is tireless, tact- ful, and what is more, trained. Throughout South and Central Amer- ica,and in the West Indies, an army of drummers from “the fatherland,” who speak the language of the country in which they exhibit their wares, are “pushing for business.” The result of their Intelllgent energy is seen in a great expansion of German trade. Ger- man houses follow the German drim- mer. German steamers, subsidized, bring German goods direct to all the leadng ports to the southward of us. One of the congressional party which has just returned from a tour ef in- spection of the Panama canal noted that many if not most of the leading commercial dnd banking establish- ments, of the isthmus were German.— time, The censumer must pay the bill | Boston Trauscript “do you know what o Billy mnd” .around cautiously ' be- fore he replied. His mother was out in the kitchen with Brenda. in a low voice, around the day,on my calendar. was “fraid I'd f?‘flh" 3 've been hinting around,” his fa- ther went on, “trying to find out what she would like, and she says she wants a Japanese fan to use on the porch.” “Oh, gee, 1 hate fans!" Billy cried. ‘They make you warmer to wiggle ‘em than you was before. You can give a fan.” “I have something already,” his fa- ther replied. “If you don't like the idea of a fan what do you think of a vase? We haven't anywhere near enough vases now.” “Vases get busted too easy, I was over to Jimmy’s when he busted one of his mother’s vases without hardly touching it. It was an awful uely one, but his mother feit terrible about it. “You, might get her a hatpin.” “She’s got six,” Billy said. “I was looking at 'em only yesterday.” “Well, then we fust settle it now, before she comes in. What do you think of a plant?” “They always dle, plants do,” Billy said with decision. x;‘A handkerchief is always a nice gift.” “Not if you lose ’em all the time like I do. I lost three this last week and one I sucked ice through got fuil of holes.” “A pair of scissors in a case—" “It’s bad luck to give sharp things,” ‘Billy,” said the small boy's father Ele-id‘ lfi:q:m:.:‘ufll..’ h‘t ' .. wfi, 4 rom dled” :‘;’:&%“-&‘: mc.:a up agalnst 3 i e “Oh, you're not. Have you an idea?” “Yeh; I had it a good while “Well, suppose you tell me about > J ‘1 thought maybe,” Billy sald hes- lgnnngiy!“h“l thought maybe & sort of dish would do, You know, with ct% ‘bands OH’.; i -~ 5 23 lere can lu buy one “Oh, 1 wouldn't buy ’em,” said Bob- by scornfully. “I'd make one. You know, all colors and heads of ladies and things.” “Could you get it done by Tuesday T “Yeh, sure I could.” “Yowd have to work pretty fast” “On, I do know. You see, it's all done.” “Oh, it Is1™ < “Yeh, and if you'll come up to my room pretty soon I'll show it to you. I've got it in the bottom drawer, all done up in four newspapers. I got it done yesterday and 1 was scared she'd see it. It's swell, all right. Mostly red and hardly smeared any. You can wash it. Jimmy he learned me how. T'll show you.” “Thank you.” 5 t's no pin tray, either; it's a big plate. 'Sh! Here she comes “When it began to cloud up today,” Billy’s father said ostentatiously, “It looked like-¥ain.” “Yes, sir, it did,” Billy said fervent- ly. “But it didn’t."—Chicago News. WHAT THE PAPERS SAY. Pace Does Not Always Kill, pisid Levi P. Morton, who goes to busi- ness daily in the New York financial district at the age of 85, declares that work is the only thing that enables him to live in health. Henry Dexter, formerly president of the American News company, who Is 97, also goes to business in the metropolis every day. Much is said about the New York pace which kills business men in their ut here are two notable excep- pringfield Union, Harriman’s $30,000 Sun Parlor. E. H. Harriraan witi build a sun parlor in his new home on Fifth ave- nue and Sixty-ninth street. It will practically be an open air garden, and will allow him to continue his gecently acquired habit of living out dobrs. It is to be made out of the present mansard roof, which is to be remodeled into a fifth story. The plans, which are being prepared by Jullan Peabody, architect, show extensive remodeling of the interior, besides the solarium feature. The arrangement of the so- larfum is to be such that it can be converted at will into an unobstructed roof garden, with an outlook over Cen- tral park. The changes, the architect estimates, will cost about $30,000.— New York Evening Post. The Civil War Veteran. The Springfield Republican calls at- tentlon to the fact that only a small number of the. veterans of the war have ever belonged to the G. A. R. More than 159,000 soldiers and sailors were enlisted In Massachusetts, yet at no one time have the rolls of the G. A. R. post of that state shown a2 mem- bership of 25,000, Banking Gains in Dull Times. The statements made by the national banks of the country under the call of April 28 1909, show that they had gained at that date no less than $774,- 261,000 in total reserves since the re- port of their condition made on May 14, 1908. That means an increase of nearly 9 per cent. in a year which was marked by much industrial depression and no_little discouragement in busi- ness. It might fairly be called the growth of the national banks in dull times—a gain of about $65,000,000 a month 1 resources, ‘Where such development is possible in a period of depression, what may be expected when the current of trade and industry is flowing swiftly? If that is the way the flnancial strength of the United States increases=and the na- tional banks measure less than half of it—when business is not considered good, what may be counted on when things are booming? It seems fair to estimate the growth of the banking resources of the coun- try in a good year at more than $5,- 000,000 every business day, or over a billion and a half annual If Ameri- cans feel somewhat conscious of their wealth and power and prosperity thev do not have to Jook far for facts and figures to justify thelr soaring concep- tion of the land they live in and stake their future upon.—Cleveland Leader. What He Really Meant. Never, according to Texas Balley, was the democratic party more unit- ed than now. The violent suavity of his disagreement with one Johnson is proof. Bailey must . mean that the democracy was never so nearly unit- ed on a protective tariff.—New York Sun, Would Satisfy All. George Meredith js not to be buried in Westminster Abbey. They're prob- ably keeping the only vacant niche for Alfred Austin, 48 one position he could fill to the satisfaction of everybody.— Pittsburg Gazette-Times. Something He Never Had. They may wrest from Abdul Hamid his scepter, loot his treasure and con- fiscate his harem, but there is one thing they cannot take from him—his good name~—Kansas City Journal. Odds Are on Bill, Conservative democrats are resolv- ed to make Mr. Bryan a negligible quantity, thus doing for him what he has already done for the democratic party.~New York Mail Business in Her Madness. ‘The fact that Carrie Natlon has hacked off $250,000 with her little hatchet shows there were shrewd busi- ness methods in her madness.—Wash- ington Post. No - Exception. Austria proposes to tax bachelors and widowers. It seems had to tax | sraduates as well as freshmen.—New York American. One Advantage. . One great advantage of this kind of reviston is that it will be so much casler to carry the market basket home. —Ohio State Journal. Fits Any Lock. The Szechenyis have broken .into the Austrian court, just as they said they would. A gold key scems to fit any lock.—Philadelphia Ledger. Aldrich Wi Mr. Beveridge has the oratory, but Mr. Aldrich—unfortunately—seems to have the votes.—St. Louis Republic. Let Rockefeller Tremble. He has killed a python. That comes nearer sounding like an octopus.—New York World. Mrs. Nancy M. Johnson of Wash- ington was the first person to take out a patent on an ice cream freezer. She was the wife of a naval officer. She took out the patents in 1843 and sold the rights for $41,500 YALE COMMENCEMENT. Festlvities Begin on Saturday Even- ing, June 26th—Social Affairs and Formal Exercises. Society members of the Yaie univer- sitv set partic are already pre- paring for commencement and a gay commencement indeed it is to be this year, The festivities begin on Satur- day evening, June 26. with a perform- ance 'at one of the theaters arranged by the Yale Dramatic association. On Sunday morning is the baccalau- reate sermon in Woolsey hall by Presi- dent Hadley, and that afternoon the senlors and their guests will spend at campus teas and informal recep- tions. An organ recital will be given at Woolsey hall that afternoon at which guests will have an opportunity to hear Prof. Harry B. Jepson on the Newberry organ. On Monday, class day, the scientific men will reag thelr histories and plant their tvy {n the morning, while the aca- demic men will hold their exercises in the afternoon. At b o'clock that after- noon will be the first reception of the week, when the faculty of the Shefeld Scientific school will entertajn return- ing graduates and their friends at By- ers hall. The first part of Monday evening will be given over to'the Glee club concert which will take place as usual at Woolsey hall. At the conclu- sion of the concart the senior prome- nade will bs danced there. At the v: rious chapter houses of Sheff. cotiillons will be danced after the concert. The graduates wiil all have arrived by ‘Tuesday, and that day is given over to them, with the ball game at Yale fleld in the afternoon. Tuesday evening will come the various class dinners. On Wednesday morning will be the formal commencement exercises, be- ginning with the usual academic pa- rade. In the afternoon will come the big alumni dinner at the Yale dining hall, followed by the reception by Pres- ident and Mrs, Arthur T. Hadley to the graduates and their friends and return- ing alumni and families. What Daniels Taught. Senator John W. Danlels’ fallant ef- forts to get a high protective duty la! on quebracho have apparently some- what, mystified his Virginia constitu- ents, who don't know whether that mysterious article should be classified as a liquer, a condiment, a plece of jewelry or an agricultural product.— New York Tribune. In the Corn Basket. “Your hat looks like & corn basket,” he said. “Yes,” she murmured. ‘Whereupon he kissed her twice, “What's that for?” she gasped. “For your two red ears,” he gaily answered.—Plain Dealer. Are Too Polite. Can’t help but wish these golf play- ers whb try éonclusions with the pres- ident weren't so polite, so we could get a better line on the game he p av.. —Washington T vies. Treasury Looked Up. Castro says that Venezuela will be bankrupt very soon, but perhaps he is mustaken. It is more than likely that Venezuela will not permit Castro to alight—Kansas City Star. Hold Up His Hands. hen you are abused, censured, he glad,” says Count Tolstoy. What i ‘he colonel to d0 with a man who turns the other cheek like that?—Washing- ton Herald. An Educational Problem. Why keep the boy grubbing at the dead languages when he can read the l:aveball columns and iearn a live one every day?—Galveston News. Tagging Them. Wishing to be extremenly polite, the sport writer of The—-Mobile Register calls the lady baseball enthusiasts “Fannies.”—Jacksonvills Times-Unior: Making the Boy Happy. ‘Under the new tariff !aw there will be a 50 per cent. auty on soap, which ought to tickle the small boy, anyway. — Detroit Free Press. Needs a Search Warrant. Thomas L. Higsen, Mr. Hearst's cen- dldate for president, is goihg back to democracy, if he 2an find it.—St. Louls Post-Dispatch. Will Be Popular. Venezuela-is revising its tariff. It is believed, however, thut a high duty will be kept on Castro.—Philadelphia North American., B inzing of the island empire it more strikes and greater a.mom wor:lnu '(:-n its w. Now there is a great soan- ever s ditions. They threaten Japan with ills which other countries have to be the natural fruit of such indus- trial advances as Japan has been mak- ing. It will not be long before the Japan- ese nation will be so affected, in its inmost life and character, that the mikado will mot be able to count uj such devotion and obedience as subjects have a-:‘n wont to show. of factory life for the corruption which weal amassed is sure to spread circles. The are. a luxuries—Cleveland Leader. By treaty, foreigners have the to buy land anywhers in provided the purchase has the tion of the local governor. This been uncertain and possibly hard te obtain, but by the treaty of Algeciras, 1905, foreigners have the right to Buy land within ten miles of every sea- port. Such purchases are not te be taxed by the sultan, SPECIAL at the MIill Remnant Store, 201 West Main Street, a lot of y Silks for evening and wedding dnu%n. at low prices: also t o Dress Goodi uslins and tien at half price. Come and ses them. MILL REMNANT STORE, 201 West Main St., feb27d JOHN BLOOM. Prep. PAINTING! PAINTING! That is our buseiness and is the time to have it dome. & -’6';. glad to give you estimates and our work will be done in a first-class manner at a reasonable figure. Give us a trial order. BROWN & ROGERS, 27 Chestnut St mar26d “When in Doubt” come here and select your Spring Over- coat and Sult from my showing of Choice Woolens. C. H. Nickerson, 128 Main Si. aprid Z ‘s Made of Rubber Ws Wase IL* GO TO THE Rubber Store FOR YOUR AUTO TIRES Better equipped than ever be- fore to handle your trade. All new goeds — fully guaranteed. We carry all sizes in steck all the time to meet your needs. Manuafcturers’ a“:: for Geood- rioh, Diamond, G & J and Michelin Tires. Dealers in all other makes. Buy now while the prices are Low. Alling Rubber Co., Worth His Weight in Gold. Mr. Harriman weighs only 141 pounds. He is little, but oh, my!— Brooklyn Eagle. A Community of Interest. Still the Washington club stands between us and the jumping off place. —Cleveland Plain Dealer. “My wife wonders why the papers waste so much space on mere n " i “What does she read?’ “Oh, she reads the weather probabilities, the bargain probabilities, the marriage no- tices and the love story. But an item about a big hattle or the fall of a dy- nasty looks piffing to her.”—Louisville Ceurier-Journal. English is to be taught hereafter in al] the public schools of Guatemala. If the spread of the knowledge of Eng- lish continues, it will not be man; years befere Americans can travel over the world and talk with the na- tives without having to learn any lan- Suage but thelr own. 74-7¢ Main £t. Norwieh. 102 State St., New London Operating 15 Stores. Summer Styles Call and examine our line of Worsteds and Serges for your next Suit. Our prices are the lowest, quality - and workmanship the best. Give us a trial. The Johasen Co. Merchant Tailors, 66 Broadway. e 100 'ROOSEVEL Can keep cool more easily than can the suffering housewife who tries to eook with a coal stove. ESTATE GAS RANGES Insures a clean, cool kitchen, are eco- nomical, safe and easy to operale Call and see the latest models, GAS & ELECTRICAL DEP'T. Alice Bulldiag, 321 MAIN STREET. apraed Wedding Decorations AND ERIDAL BOUQUET3 Por June Waeddings. ‘We would lke to call your attention’ to the fact that we are one of the few peorle in this city in this business who know how to make up Bridall" Bouquets and Wedding Decorations. Try us and ses for yourself If wha we say lsn't true. GEDULDIG’S, Telephone §68. 77 Cedar Street. NOTICE ‘Dr. Louise Frankliin Miner Is now located in her new office, 21 Main St. (Kenyon Biook). Office hours, 1 to 4 p. m, Telephone- 660. febl6d LAST GALL! Beloct Stook of DAHLIAS Cactus Show and Decorative. Garden and Farm TOOLS Lawn Mowers, Ho , Rakes, 8hovels, Keen Kutter and Swedish Hand- made Soythes, Soythe Snaths and Rifles. POTMEND Mende everything. STOVINK Prevents red stoves. Burns black, AVANARIUM CARBOLINEUM Preserves woed and kills vermin DRINKING FOUNTAIRS for peultry. THE HOUSEHOLD, Bulletin Buiiding, 74 Franklin St. PLUMBING AND GASFITTING. The Vaughn Foundry Co. IRON CASTINGS furnished promptly. Large stock of patterns. No. 11 to 25 Ferry Street jan224 Worn Out Plumbing The running expenses of a house are largely increased by worn-out er poor plumbing Either canses annoyance —usually at the most incopvenient time. An estimate for replacing such plumbing with the modern, peace of mind kind will cost néthing, and I'll guarantee the price will be reasonable. J. . TOMPKINS, 67 West Main Street. may27d T. F. BURNS, Heating and Plumbing, _“92 Franklin Street. “The Plank,” = Frankin_street, is headquarters far the best ALES and LAGERS in Nerwich, O'CONNELL & SHEA, maydtd ' Telephone 554-4. ut your busi- thers is no ma- “rtis- R th Lads snd Colm Except Holidays BREED’S THEATRE T AY. Charles McNulty, Lessee. Devoted to Firsi-class Moving Pictures and Hlustrated Songs. Feature Plcture: THE DAYS OF WITCHCRAFT, ~~AND— Seven Other Big Succe: 3 Matinees, Iadies and Children, Sey JAMFS F. DREW Fiano Tuning and Repairiny Best V'ork Only, "Phune 422-3. 18 Perkins Ave sept23d EXPERT TUNING saves and lm{ron- the pi-no. work guaranteed. A. W, JARVIS, 15 Clalremont A Norwich, Conn. ™ An Ne. wraduate Niles Bryant School of P'ase Tuning, Battle Creek, Mich. Drop a postal and I'll call. dec18d "Phone 51 F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect St., Tel. 889-6. Norwich, Ca A Newand Very Handsome Line Soft Shirts just recetved including some excellent ideas in White Madras Coat Shirls McPHERSON'S, The Hatter. may18d DONT WORRY; It Makes Wrinkles. Warry over fll-health does youws health no good, and merely causes wrinkles, that make you look oldee than you are. It you are 'sick, don't worry, but go about it to make ycurself well. To do this we repeat the words of thousands of other former sufferers from woman« ly ills, similar to yours, when we say, Take Viburn-0. It is & wonderful female remedy, as you will admit if you ry it Directions for 'ts Gse are printed in #'x languages with every bottle. Price $1.25 at druggists. FRANCO-GERMAN CHEMICAL CO. 106 West 129th Street, New York. marild Have You Noticed the Increased Travel? It's & sure sign of good weather and 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 marl7d Buying Direct From the Manufacturers Avenue, tells the story in a nutshell; tells why ladies come from miles to our store for DRESS GOODS. Come and learn our prices and add your nar increasing list of customers. BRADY & SAXTON, Telephone 306-2. Norwich Fown, € IEON, Ladies’ Tailor. Workmanship and Fit Guaranteed Entirely T Batisfactory. 278 Main Street May Building. ® to our DR. CHAS. H. LAMB, VETERINARIAN Office at Hodge's Stabls, Bath Street. House, 15 Town £. Telephone $13-5 The Norwich Nickel & Brass Co., Tableware, Chandeliers, Yacht Trimmings and such things Refinished. €9 to 87 Chestnut St. Norwioln Conn, octéd CHANGE IN ADDRESS. DR. N. GILBERT GRAY formerly at Hodge's Stabl rlll.daln rear of No. § ¥ra el. ECONOMICAL means* ing the most value for yous money. I can give it to you im Plumbing. R BENTON QIBSLE, & Andum 84