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Hack. l.wary. . and Feed STABLES Up-to-date Equipmen: and Guaranteed Satisfactory Service. 14 1o 20 BATH STREET, NEW Y()HK Chelsea Line Fare $1.00 Unexcelled freight and passenger Berviee direet to and from®New York. All Outside Staterooms. From Norwich 'rueldnys. Thursdays, Sundu, at 5.156 (Tormerly Chapman's.) 5 lcu'= Piler lll‘ E:at m;sr,d foot oouv-l treet, Mondays, Wednes- Telophone 0. | baiadl £7¢ Pridays. at's p. m, hone or write for folder. P. 8. Freight received until § p. m C. A. WHITAKER, Agent. may4d T0 NEW YORK NORWICH LINE Via STONINGTON The water way — the comfortabls way of traveling. Steamers City of Lowell Richapd Peck-—safe, staunch vessels that have every comfort and conven- fenge for the traveler. A delightful voyage on Long Island Sound ang a superb view of the won- Why Don’t You visit our store and fake advan- fage of ’excepllonl bargains offered this week. AN ILLUSTRATION: A 10-wire Tapestry Rug, 9x12, seam- less, for $12.50. * Linoleums, 42%c per square yard ,in floral and beautiful cak patterns. A big stock to choose from and prices derful sky line and water front of reasonable, New York, Steamer leaves Stonrington at 11,15 REFRIGERATORS, m. week days only: due Pler 40, RANGES, orth River, 7.4 the next morning. DINING ROOM SETS, PARLOR SETS, GO-~CARTS, BABY CARRIAGES, CHAMBER SETS, SEWING MACHINES, Anything and everything in the fur- niture line you can find in our store eand we are selling at the very lowest prices. ~ Schwartz Bros., ““Home Furnishers,”’ 9-11 Water St, Washington Sg. Tel. 502, 1~ Fare Norwich 1o New York $1.75 Write or telephone W. J. PHILLIPS Agent, New London. Cann. octid " |The New Schedule on the Norwich & Westerly Railway kives good connections at Westerly for Providence and Boston and way sta- tions. Also by trolley to Watch Hill, Potter Hill, Ashaway, Stonington, Mystle and Noank. Use the short cut and save time and money. ‘ Coupons redeemable at 27 stores. Telephone 601-4 for time table. mayl2d ¥ Open Evenings. junid rand Union H Hotel Opp. Grand Central Station, New York City Rooms, $1.00 a Day AND UPWARD Baggsge to and from Station free. Send 20 stamp for N.Y¥. Oity Guide Book and Map || Just Arrived a Cudo;d of Maxwell Automobiles. Can be seen at Auto Garage, No. 21 Chestnut Street. Free Demonstration. N. B.—Automobile Painling, Trimming and Repairing. 8. J. xln',-l::::.‘". unfl‘.":lfln;. Mg M. B. RING.| . i S attention pald to Commercia = Mossup, Comm. Tel. 98-13 JRWETT CITY HOTEL, New and Up-to-date Hotel In every reicular. IKA ¥. LEWIS, Pronrlator M. HOURIGAN, © Jeweit C FUNERAL DIRECTOR. Furniture and Crawford Cooking Ranges. 'Phones—8tere 61-2; house 35-5 Death ——— ARSENATE A STOLEN BASE. In the great and glorious National Game, “a slide to base” is frequently of great advantage to the slider. Make our store your bhase for Wines and Liguors, and slide in as often as you can. You will find the Wines and Liquors right in eveyy particular none better obtainable, and our ~rices the lowest on which to base your standard of value. Ours the base for High Quality and Low Price. PARIS GREEN Geo. Greenberger, 47 Franklin Street, Telephcne 812. Lamb, Veal, Fowls, Broiling Chickens, Etc., Etc. Extra quality. ALL SBEASONABLE VEGETABLES. PEOPLE’S MARKET, 6 Frankliin St. JUSTIN HOLDEN, Prop. Norwich, Conn HELLEBORE INSECTIGIDES CHAS. 036000 & O, 45 and 41 Commerce Streal. may26d may28d IF YOUR HORSE IS INSURED AND DIES you can laugh at the other fellow. E. G. RAWSON, Agt,, 227 Main 8t, "Phone 550, June Brides Those who are about to furnish new homes. We have the utmost confidence | HOuse 854-2 that we have the finest display of apriod House Furnishing in Bastern Connecticut. We can talk interestingly with ¥0u about the styles, finlshes and quelities 6f the furmiture we carry, but suffice it to say we carry ] the best that is manufactured and stand back of every piece of furniture we sell by our own guarantee. BUY YOUR TOMATO PLANTS from CARDWELL junza ‘J. F. CONANT. Whitestone 1 Cigars are Try them WHEN *ca waig 8 pefore (ne ou better tuan % Mg CUluius vl bue 11 Franklin Street. and the J. F. C, 10p the best B Qur prices are right.” . M. HOUBIGAN, Tel. 123-4, §2:66 Main Street, dunsd on the market. marléd and- l Jewett City Advertisers | ‘Boarting| All m Routs|. The renowned M. Blowitz once | wrote from Paris to the London Times: “La Liberte is one of those | the gardener’s belief that the death of | being cited where trees and flowers | have died under such circumstances. | tions are like the wind, while gpiritual acts as the sunshine, in vi- ! burdened with baftling with other per- | sons has enough to fight his own per- | what most of | he comes home and..finds his wife 8 ruvu lvillnnuf PART - WITH A mn. —_— ‘In Maly Red Hul.wmm In-t signia of the Male, and Blue of the Female — Luck in Auburn Locks, - The parfiality for the eolor red may |: not be mere chance, for it has played an important part in the art and deco- ration of all races of men, and to it are attached many old superstitions. In our earliest forms of art ws learn that various colors had special sig- nificance; generally in distinguishing the sexes. Striking examples of this custom are found in Italy, where red was the insignia of the male and blue of the female. This explaing why in the old paint- ings we find the Madonna and other Biblical women always in the latter color, while the apostles and mascu- line saints wore red. Hven to-day in Rome and some other sections of ‘Italy, 'says Harper’s Weekly, the spe cial color of its sex is pinned to the dress of the child at the time of bap- tism. There still remaip many curious superstitions concerning this interest- ing color. For instance, a great aver- sion tp red hair exists among the peasants of England and Wales, and often the presence of a person with “auburn” locks is considered unlucky. When a fisherman of northern Eng- | land is mending his tackle the ap- proach of a red-haired individual is solemnly believed to presage il for- tune unless the end of the line or net ie immediately passed through a flame. In olden time the efficacy of red as & cure-all for disease was strictly fol- lowed, and this superstition has not entirely died out. The physician to Edward IL of’ England, John of Gad- deston, tells us that he brought about a complete cuge for one of the royal princes who was syffering with small- pox by surrounding the sick bed with various red hangings, wrapping the patient in red blankets, covering him with a secarlet eounterpane and administering red mulberry wine. In the west of Scotland and in the West Indies it is customary to wrap a bit of red cloth or flannel around children’s throats to ward off the whoeping cough. In the early part of the last century a London shop in Fleet street sold pieces of red cloth | to those suffering with scarlet fever, the supposed remedy lying not in the fabric but in the color. In New Zealand the house in which death has occurred is painted with this color to keep out the bad spirits, and the path of the funeral procession is blazed with streaks of red to pre- vent the demons from following. Even now the Chinese plait their children's hair with red silk to ward off the in- fluence of evil spirits. Palms Died with Their Owner. A discussion has arisen regarding plants is a natyral resuit of their owner’s death, a number of instances Among others is one related by an English gardener, whose employer, a lady, was specially fond of some su- purb palms in her conservatory. The lady died suddenly, and the next day to the man’s surprise he found these palm trees withered, dead. Explain it. The Aura. Around each one there is a lumin- ous mist which corresponds to the at- mosphere around the earth. In this atmosphere, called the aura, the thoughts, good and bad, strong and weak, are imprinted. The body cor- responds to the earth, the emotions to the dew and rain. The mental condi- the talizing the reality of self.—Science and Key of Life. Cheerful Courage Needed. The mental condition has to . do with working power. Man is fearfully and wonderfully made; so is woman. Each has a dual nature, and if not sonal demon. ,A cheerful courage is us need. Who Would Think It? amphibious journals that, waiting to see which way the wind blows, times unexpectedly turn the scaic.” Christian Register. some- | He Knew Whereof He Spoke. Three-year-old Jack had a little “ex- perience” with a hornet, and upen seeing one on the window next day, exclaimed: *“0, mamma, here is an- other one of those sharp-shooter flies in the house.”"—Delineator.g Evidently, a Clubman. A prominent man called to condole with a lady on the death of her hus- band, and concluded by saying: “Did he leave you very much?” “Near- ly every night,” was the reply.—Tit- Bits. His Knewledge Limittd. “After all, this is a ' very small world,” said the ready-made philoso- pher. “I gather from that remark,” rejoined the precise person, “that you have not bheen compelled to figure much on rs is\\-ay or steamshjpfuves.” s o) Usually a Short Time. “The honeymoon,” pher of Folly, “may be defined as that brief period In a ndan’s life during which he thinks it's a go6d joke when hasn’t got dinner omw time.” An evidence of Argentina's growth in agriculture was the importation in 1908 of farm machinery and imple- ! m)enn. to ll; tune of !l31-512 ull which the United Butu supplied §. 87638 | EupHRASIA: sdys the” Philoso- | | m Q MISS M. C. ADLES, Rl'l,ldmdhuimflul THE STAMP OF s'rvu is given a woman' way her hair ‘is Do not top | pect to look up-to-date with a ll” coffture ! Have with ,1°" cos- w.l In Common Use, Yet It Is Doubtful If Many Know the Circumstances Connected with Epigram x and lllfll- We all have m« away in the drawer of our brains odds and ends of | Cutft and-a Colo apt sayings, very convenient when we | 70T B SOVIORPOAE MO wish to give a bright touch, a chic | give you the newest hur style for the turn, to our dull, everyday speech, | summer. She will be in Norwich all vet in using them few of us have the | the week of June 7th. remote idea where they came from— WA]JII:GAN HOUSE, Nerwich whether the cage in point be a bit of | Boston, New York. old lace epigram or an up-to-date twist | Telephone 704. jun7d of slang off a bargain counter. When we accuse the greedy member of our family of “taking the lion's share” we are borrowing the naive sar- casm of Aesop's fable, where'at the Have You Noticed the Increased Travel? It's a sure sign of good weather and fine roads. People like to get out into end of a joint hunt the animals wish o e Al Pw. byt dofh ¢ gl s to divide their booty, and the 1iOn | metnod, and if youw'll take one of our claims one-quarter of the spoils by | teams you'll say the same, right_of prerogative, one for superior | MAHONEY BROS., Falls courage, one for his dame and cubs,| -marl7d and “as for the fourth, let who will dare dispute it with me.” To !palvi w@ owe that delightfully wicked slogan: “Every one for himself, and the devil catch thé hindmost!” You no doubt remember that at one time his Satanic majesty kept a school of magic at Toledo. At the end of thel term the graduating class ran through a long subterranean hall, the president of the school being entitied to the hindmost if he could cateh him. As the ope caught was forced to take a post-graduate course, it would have been a distinet advantage, had he not been obliged to barter his soul for the privilege. ‘When we plume ourselves with some pretty ostrich tip of flattery few of us know that the expreesion “a feather in jyour cap,” arese from a custom of woodcraft enthusiasts, and that in Scotland to-day the one who kills the first woodcock plucks out a feather and proudly wears it in his cap. However flippantly we may flaunt the phrase, Oliver Cromwell gave it dignity of thought and diction when Avenue. Buying Direct From th: Manufacturers 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 name= to our increasing list of customers. BRADY & SAXTON, Norwich Town, Telephone 306-2. may27d E. H. WARNER, General Agent H. C. LONG, Special Afent. Jus248 HARTFORD, CONNy |For June ROOSEVELT llottest Africa Can keep cool more easlly than ocan the suffering housewife who tnies to ook with a coal stove, ESTATE GAS RANGES Insures a clean, cool kitohen, are ece- nomical, safe and easy to cpewale Call and see the latest models, @S & ELECTRICAL DEP'T. Alice Building, 321 MAIN STREET. aprdod ‘3 Wedding Decorations AND ERIDAL BOWQUETS Weddings. We would like to call your attention to the fact that we are one of the few people in this eity im this who know how_to make up mr"fi',“&.' ;:r:l‘mw;or yourseif ": we say isn't true. GEDULDIG’S, Telephone 868. 77 Cedar Strest. mayi2d WHEN you want to ness before the publle, dinm better than th. ing columns of Th he declined England’s offered erown. “Royalty is but a feather in a man’s cap,” he said; “let children enjoy their rattle.” As a pure-breed game cock has onl) red and black feathers, and a cross- | breed is known by a white feather in | his tall, “to show the white feather” forcibly pictures cowardice, since it is } averred that theé least impurity of | blood destroys the bird’s pluck. While in the barnyard, we must lol- | ter long enough to clear up the mys- | tery of being “as poor as Job's tur- | key,” for the elusiveness of this bird | has no doubt tnnttliz.d many a search- | er of Scriptures whe had not paused to consider that a turkey is as much an American institution as the eagle on our coins. With the unfortunate patriarch’s poverty in mind, Judge Haliburton— the British-American humorist, Sam Slick+—created Job's turkey from his own vivid imagination, describing the bird with only one feather in his tail, | and of so weak-kneed a constitution that he was obliged to lean against the fence to gobble. P — What It Does for THOMAS JEFFERSON KING, D. D 8, Originator of Dr. King's Restor- ation Method for the natural restoration of teeth — originator of the King Safe System of The czarina of Russia is said to pos- Palnless Dentistry and Inventor ) “N " Set of sées the most expensive single plece of of the “Natural Gum fur. It is a sable eloak worth $80,000, (| Tecth, Etc, Iite. Al rights re- USE ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE, A powder to be shaken into the shoes. If you have tired, aching feet. try Allen’s Foot-Ease. It Tests the feet snd wakes new or tight shoes easy. Cures aching, swollen. hot. sweating feet. Relieves eorrs aund bunlons of all paln and gives rest and comfort. Try it today. Sold by all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25c. Dom’t accept any substitute. For FREE _tsial kage, also Free Sample of the FOOT-EASE Sanftars CORN-PAD, a new Invention, address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. ¥, L] teeth in on pegs! natural teeth were originally. Every Old Thing Made New. An old chair with a small can of L. & M. Home Finish Varnish Stain. Any old furniture with a small can of L.& M. Home Finish Varnish. A kitchen floor, perch floor, with a small can’ of the L. & M. Home Finish Floop Paint, Old kitchen chairs, benches, any old small things with a pound or two of the L.& M. Home Finish Do- mestic Paint. A carriage, a buggy, with about a dollar's worth of L. & M, Fome Finish Carriage Varnish Paint, Porch furniture, lawn swings, iron railings with a small can of L., & M. Heme Finish Porch Enamel Palint in al' colors. An qld, leaky roof made tight, with a can of Eelipse Roof and Pridge Paint. All old things made new with these little cans of L. & M. Home' Finish Paints. Cost is trifling. Be sure to get them. Sold only by L. W. Carroll & Son, Norwich; J. P. Kingsley & Son, Plainfield. tions, and In order that they may be fort they would enjoy If every tooth ‘While the Restoration Method is dental practitioners as well. tricate plece of porcelain work, our xubllc done In a one-man office, for the op the very highest skill. They need dental students. Foley's Honey and Tar is especlally ating chair and in the laboratery. recommended for chronic throat and | lung troubles and many sufferers from bronchitis, asthma and consumption | have found comfort and relief by using | Foley’'s Honey,k and Tar. Lee & Os- good Co. Dr. Jackson, Manager. Yoi ean't fail with Gold Medal Flour. apr13TuThs Noga. 25 MILLIONS 25 Million Barrels and 5ack‘ %4 GOLD MEDAL fLOUR Baked into.beautiful bread. yolls, cal and pastry last year.® Because — the flour was gooc WASHBURN-CROSBY T QUALI UR. fing’s Restoration Method A PAINLESS PROCESS An impression has gone forth that there is some surgieal operetion oomnected with this method of restering missing teeth. Some have written in to know if we bore down inte the bene and past Others have an ldea we set the new testh into the sockets where the It is guite natural that some unthfaking people would ask such gues there is no bering, no outting, no implantation about this method, woth- ing about the work that is painful while it is being dens or I‘.x Patients leave the office with these teeth in place and at emce chewing meat, eating candy, toast, or anything else with eezne oowA- [] there. If we couldn't promise this and meke good on the pi storation Method would net be a sucoess. It would be no ordinary bridgework or partial plates. WE ARE GENERAL PRACTITIONERS All Forms of Dentistry Treated by Experts. From L::rafm :lt filli.w '&“ Bunglers would not be tolerated in our office for a We demand the finished eraftsman, KING DENTAL PARLORS, Franklio Square, Norwich, Cons, Toothless People By means of this wonderful methed we are able to give back t0 a pafient the full set of teoth he or she whart- ed in with in the begimning. 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 from in- cumbrances, Before we \om'l‘ this result we put the gums and the natural teeth in a healthy condition, tight- ening the teeth which may be loose and curing pyorvhea if the padient is afioted with that dreadful dls- ease. All of the teeth we supply are practical teeth; each set in its own socket follewt; lltfll’. plan, that the stral “A One is able to on teath and use them la manner as he teeth. They mateh nal closely as to degeive are beautiful to look u of oconetant wears them. fully answered we will gtate that in their head had we are mest In- oo of the l experts are at erators e to be te T GOLD MEDALHO