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' 113 YEARS OLD. .%fi:m.wnmw- Norwich, | Entered at the Postolfi . Conn., as second-class matter. Telephone Calla: Bulletin Business Office, 480, Bulletin Editorial Rooms, 35-3. Bulietin Job Office, 85-6. W tllimantle Office, Room 3. Murray Butlding. Telephone, 210. " Norwich, Monday, Aug. 2, 1900. AS A SUBSCRIBER VIEWS IT. The names of subscribers are com- ing in for the Jubilee book of the 250th antfiversary as fast as The Bulletin anticipated that they would. This book is essential to' the proper completion of the event, and its publication was assumed by The Bulletin as a matter of civic pride rather than as a specu- lative enterprise. There is no money in it for ¥ printer. One citizen has ordered 28 copies and one 10, and these are the only large individual orders. An order from a New York subscrib- er, who has no other interest than th2 interest awakened by a few years ol residence here, reads: “Please have my name put down for one of the celebration books. | want it for two reasons: First, | want to be able to read the whole thing and study the pictures at my leisure; sec- ond, it is an investment—your two- dellar book will be in demand at $5 or better before you and | get through selling things. There are people liv- ing in Norwich now who won't order and whose children will be begging for copies at any price in 1925." This is the truth. If The Bulletin dees not print an cdition larger than 500 copies, the book may be in such demand that it will go to a premium at once. No agents will be sent out to solieit orders, because that would add to the cest of the edition. Names of subscrib- ers should be sent in to the busincss manager of The Bulletin. It was no easy matter to get the tariff bill through the house, the ma- Jority only being 13—the vote being 96 for and 83 against the bill as pre- sented by the conferees. The demand for free hides from New England had to be recognized and honored regardless of the fierce opposition from Colorado. The de- mand for this reduction was just and it will be of direct benefit to the peo- ple, as will be the reduction of the tanifr rate on boots and shoes 60 per cent., and upon lumber 37 1-2 per cent. All attempts on the part of special nterests to hold up the bill failed, although it is claimed that had not Bpeaker Camnon exerted himsel! to marshal all his forces it might have falled of paseage. The likelthood is that the bill will not be delayed in the senate, but will be' speedily put upon its passage and be carried through. The fight between the different in- terests has been interesting. the de- bates make in print over 8,000 printed pages, and the debaters arrayed them- selves so vallantly that the people now know who in congress represent them and who represent special in- terests. The result of this will be con- siderable of a change among the per- sonnel of the congressmen at the next election. AN EYE TO BUSINESS. The Metropolitan Life Insurance company of New York has entered the lists to check preventable discases a8 a matter of business, not as a mat- ter of sentiment. This company has figured out that every 32 minutes some wolicyholder of the company dies of consumption, and it is said the Pru- dential Life Insurance company pays out $800,000 . year on account of tu- ‘dberculosis alone. If the mortality can be _reduced a great expense will be ecdhomized. It s believed, in the case of the Metropolitan, that there can be made a reduction of one-third'in the annuel death rate. This is figuring from a selfish stand- point and the company regards it as a positive paying enterprise and has made | application to the New York state insurance department for per- mission to purchase a tract of land of 8,000 acres or more, for treatment of policyholders having tubereulosis. Let us hope that this company will realize upon its investment and that ft can reduce the death rate of its clients 83 1-3.per cent. STILL THE LEADERS. here is no doubt that the Wright brothers are the leaders in air navi- @ation in heavier-than-air flying ma- ehines. Count Zeppelins flight of 220 pniles in his dirigible balloon was noth- Ang compared to Orville Wright's 42- gnile-an-hour pace at -Fort Myer, Which captured the $25,000 offered by the government. In the first official test the Wrights were required to carry a passenger nd keep their aeropiane in the air for &n hour. “This limit Orville exceeded by 12 minutes. In the test concluded Friday a speed of 40 miles an hour was required with a passenger aboard. he velocity attained was 42 1-2 miles, ® feat which insuredethe acceptance of the aeroplahe by the government. The passage of Bleriot over the Eng- lsh channel was not as great an mchievement as that of Orville Wright, which more than met the exacting conditions of the government. Now that the aéroplane has been accepted, the skilful management of it by army engineers 1s next in order. While this sountry has seemed to lag in this mgt- ter of aerial experiments, ft seems #ow to have the machines and the mmen to achieve results which will sur- prise the world. It is not surprising that Miss Wright in the delirium of delight over her big brother's achievement liked to have | kissed the wrong man. Woemen have done that before her day. - A western editor, being asked what ~ he thought of Dr. Kllot's new relig- “fon, replied: I shall have to refer that to my wife, for she regulates ‘such matters for the whole family. Spokane is doing business on mod- | erm plans. It is putting up a fourtgen- story ‘bullding, regardless 4f the %hmm of empty land it has to its | eredit, 3 ¥ ALL-N/ The Nebras state the other day passed resolution endorsing the action of ident Taft, in these words: . “We approve, commend and unqual- ifledly indorse the stand taken by President Taft in the matter of tariff revision. We are counting on him to see to it that the party's platform promise of revision is redeemed by the enactment of a tariff bill acCepta- ble to the people, and we would ap- prove of his veto on any bill that does not conform, to his construction of the platform pledge which he has said means ‘revision downward withs in the limitations of the protective principle’ We ook to our senators and representatives in congress to sustain the president in this position, and we commend them for their ef- forts in support of the party pledge and the president's policies.” ‘These sentiments are the sentiments of the rank and fle of the republican party in all parts of the countr: What Taft is working for is in the welfare of the people—he has ne pri- vate axe to grind. This message from Nebraska is all righ THE HIB-TORY OF FORTY-THREE CASES. The endeavor to free Hairy Thaw from his confinement in the Matte- awan asylum has brought out the re- sults in other habeas corpus cases. Superintendent Lamb bas collected forty-three cases and this is what he has o say of them: “In thirty-four cases the court or- dered the relator discharged from the hospital. Our table shows that of these thirty-four declared sane by the courts fourteen found their way back to either prison or asylum. Eight after their release showed signs of mental disturbance and were troublesome to their families. Three, unable to earn their own living, were cared for by their relatives. Six disappeared from view. Two committed suicide, and a single one, when last heard of, was partially self-sustaining. Of the for- ty-three cases, twenty-seven had com- mitted criminal acts directly against persons and sixteen against property. Of the twenty-seven committing crime against persons twelve were charged with the crime of murder in the first degree, the diagnosis in a majfority of instances indicating a chronic and ir- recoverable insanity Attention is also called to the fact that in the thirty-second annual re- port of the managers and officers of the New Jersey state hospital at Mor- his Plains, Dr. Britton D. Evans, the medical director of the institu- tion, does not include a single par- anoiac in the list of those inmates of the asylum who have been restored to sanity. There were 109 patients cured during the year 1907, according to the report, but there is no history given by Dr. Evans as to the cases of inmates who were released from the asylum as having been cured. There is no doubt that it Is risky business to turn lunatics loose on the verdict of a jury, as well as upon a doctor's certificate, as experience has show EDITORIAL NOTES. A Chicago woman 64 vears voung has been glven a public position at a salary of $10,000 a year. Should Harry Thaw get released he might set up as an alienist and recov- er some of his lost thousands. The legislature of Georgia fore it a bill to make it a felony for has be- a woman to that state. ride astride a horse In « In the competition for great cheeses the line was drawn on the two-ton sample, which would cost $1,000 to make up. Tt being able to fight fits & woman for the ballot the women of Barceiona are all right. They wefe in the front of the'fray. It takes a fleet of six Dreadnaughts to protect the czar while he is in English waters. What a tax that is upon one's unc The last session of the Illinois leg- islature cokt that state $600,000, and they say there are no legislative bar- gain days there. The czar ht visit King Alfonso about this time, for Spain ought to seem very natural to him under pres- ent circumstances. Detroit is likely to be given a wide berth by the hoboes now, since she proposes to give them all a free bath with their free lunches In prohibition Georgia, they are now taking as temperance drinks “hooploo, whiskynit, ginno and winkablink.” This must be great stuff. The open season for shooting shore birds fs on in Rhode Island, and the letter of the law is to be strictly en- forced, the officials sa 1t is not very polite for a judge to teil a witness about his “exaggerated ego.” There is a great deal of lop- sidedness in that direction. Springfield, Mags, is pleased be- cauge it is six hours nearer Chicago than it was, on agcount of its connec- tion with the 18-hour fiyer. Happy thought for today: Free Hides will make no difference to western cattle, but it will make a difference in the price of shoas. It has been discovered that humié- ity properly kept up in a living room would save 12 1-2 per cent. of the cost of fuel. This is worth attending to. Minister/ Crane’s Looks. Tf the picture of the Hon. Charles R. Crane of Chicago, who has been ap- pointed United States Ambassador to China by Mr. Taft, is a good likeness, our common counfry would have lost nothing, in appearances, at least, if the president had sent Tompkins to Peking instead of Crane. Just the same; Mr. Taft, whether you appointed Tompkins or not, we are back in our father's house to' stay. After you get through with the tarift bill, ana the income tax amendment, and the cor- poration tax affair, and the Panama canal bonds and the rest of the more pressing emergencies of your adminis- tration, would it not be worth while for you to make some investigation of how much you have really taken the south into the administration of the government at Washington? You know tiat was to be one of the strong points of your administration.—Charleston News and Courler. Need Mothering. Dr. AnnaShaw of Minneapolis calm- ors for women on the police force on the ground that “the criminal needs mothering.” The old fashioned kind of mothering with a slipper or the back of a hair brugh’—The World. ‘[The readers of The Bulletin should save resipes which impress them favor- ably. 1t is impossible for us to find recipes in the files or to even tell the date of the paper in which they ap- peared.—E ) EVERYDAY LOGIC FOR EVERYDAY GIRLS, Girls and women are especially given to little tricks of manner which de- tract from their beauty and which give the carleaturlst a hook to hang & travesty on. An ordinary pretty and sweet tem- pered girl who sniffies or who hunches Per shbitlders or who emphasizes her periods of speech by some pet ges- tures easily becomes the butt of ridi- cule to her girl enemies and may even be good humoredly burlesqued by the best of her men friends. One of the ugliest traits of car- ringe, common to young zirls, Is a switching or jiggling of the hips and shoulders in walking. 1t is truly hard to determine just how this Is accomplished 1f one does not do it oneself, but many girls apy it unconsciously who would be thor- oughly shocked if they could catch a glimpse of themselves from the back as they walk. NEEDLEWORK SUGGESTIONS. Design of grapes for centerpiece, 18x 18 inches, to be transfer: to satin, jean or damask, butchers’ linen, Indian head cotton, cotton lawn, scrim or any material on that order. The border should be heavily worked in button- hole stitch and the center in solid and outline embroldery. Mercerized cotton or gilk floss is used for the working of the embroidery and If a very ornate effect is desired the edge should be trimmed with a deep edging of heavy lace or embrojdery, slightly fulled be- tween the scallops. | pepper and dusted with grated cheese. Price of pattern, 10 cents, Paris Transfer Pattern No. 8047. Poppy design for oval centerpiece, 15x28 inches, (o be transferred to linen and embroidered solidly or in the long and short stitch, as preferred. The buttonholed scalloped edge gives a neat durable finish. The design may also be transferred to scrim, lawn, damask, In- dian-head cotton or batiste, and em- broidered with very fine siik floss in he natural color of the flower and its foliage. Price of pattern, 10 cents. NEW VEILS. The latest Parisian vellings are brought over by women of fashion for their own use. In & way these veilings, while at first sight striking one as being a bit bizarre, are more practical than any others of recent yvears, for they have openings large enough to permit, when they are properly arranged over the face, the eyes to lock out through the opening” with an unobstructed view The danger in veilings lies in their | strain on the eyes. When one looks at little dots and bars the eyes are not alone injured, the most serious damage of all, but the contraction produced by the muscles around the eyes be- use of them brings wrinkles qu ly. 1If veils are worn much the’ wrin- Kles' become permanent. Indeed, the woman who is wise and would avoid wrinkles will never wear a veil save when motoring or in the most brilliant and trying light, the remedy being in most cases worse than the original, evil. Shady hats and dark parasols are invaluable, = Hair nets skilfully ar ranged will keep stray locks in placc in even the windiest of weather, so that veils are not needed. The new veils greatly enhance the brilliancy of the complexion. They are in black and colors and suggest grenadine. ‘Some of them have large diamond shaped openings, are more than an inch long. and are joined by four straight threads at least three- tourths of an inch long, to the motif, which is semi-solid in this case, but has an open square as a center, Suggestions for the Housewife. A little wire broom s excellent for cleaning the horseradish grater. Soak a lace fan for an hour in gas- oline to clean it. Then spread it out to_dry. Spermaceti added to boiled starch gives the goods a gloss; borax makes the starch stiffer. Pie pans having burned crust in the bottom should not be scraped. Soak them in hot soda water, which will clean them thorougliy. Do not wash white gilk knit under- wear with warm water or resinous 80ap. It must be washed in tepid wa- ter, with white soap, and ironed dry, otherwise it will turn an ugly yellow. Do not launder stockings with other clothes, because the lint from other garments will adhere to them. Use ammonia in water to wash them, and they will not spot. It removes per- spiration. ‘When towels become dark and spot- ted they should be bleached. If Ja- velle water is not used, wash the tow- els first in tepid suds and boil in Iye water, a boiler half full with enough lye to make the water slippy. Add a bar of shaved soap. Start the water to boil, draw the boiler aside, place on the'lid and allow the contents to steam, but not bo; ‘Wash a second time, then rinse twice in bluing wa- ter. This makes grayish towels as white as new. WEEKLY PICNIC. On wash Jay. in families where there is but one servant, or, if the family is a large one, even two, it is usually the duty of one or more members of the household to get luncheon. This is an excellent time for a picnic. Take the children off to the country or the park for a day's outing. They will have the changy, and the fresh air, and the pic- nic lunch will be a noveity and it will leave the maids free for the whole day to do the laundry work. Of course, where the washing is “done out,” or where a washwoman outside of the regular help does it. there is no par- ticular economy in this plan, but when it is done by one or more of the house servants it eases things consideramly for the whole family to be away for the day. In one housenold day morning that is clear. summer sees everybody % l“m h, pnlod' ’.'3 to to lunc] pass of doors. There is a m children, and &0 a lake, a few from or to a nearby counf club, to teh day. The children look forward to their weekly ou , and It proves a change and a rest every one. - HOT WEATHER SALADS. Creole Beef Salad—If the housekeper will remove her soup meat from the fire before it has boil to shyeds she will find it excellent for this salad. The rib portion of beef that the butcher calls the “plate piece” s the most Juicy part to use. Slice as many thick bits off as will make a and then tear these into finer fragments with the fingers; any meat so treated for salads is more tender than when cut in the cubes so often seen. Then shed two sweet Spanish peppers finely and tear up a large lettuce into narrow pieces. Add four thin slices of Spanish onion divided into rings and one tablespoon- ful of chopped olives or parsiey. Dress with mayonnaise or French dressing, using vinegar always instead of lemon juice. All meat and fish salads—indeed any salad—should be cold when serv- ed. IN THE KITCHEN. Horseradish Sandwich—Blend to- gether two tablespoonfuls grated horseradish and soft, fine bread- crumbs. Pour over enough rich milk or cream to molsten. Let stand an hour, then press through a puree sieve. Season with one-quarter tea- spoonful each of salt and sugar anl two tablespoonfuls of vinegar or lem- on juice. Spread between buttered slices of whole whead bread. Mine Sandwiches.—Wash sprigs ot mint {n cold water, pat dry and mince fine.© Add to the chopped leaves a lit,] tle thick cream and spread between thin buttered slices of white bread. it erred, blend the minced mint with three tablespoonfuls cream cheese. Spread on bread and but- tered crackers. Vegetable Sandwich Fillings.—Oth- er delicious and unusual combinations in sandwich vegetable fillings are celery mixed with cream cheese and moistened with whipped cream; green peas mashed into a paste and seasoned with salt and pepper; minced green peppers and cucumbers chopped fine and moistened with may- onnaise; olives or pimentoes sliced thin and mised with a French dress- ing: chopped onions that have stood an hour in lightly salted water, then mixed with mayonnaise, or a thin slice of tomato seasoned with salt anl Cherry Pudding.—Beat two eggs lightly, add one cup milk, little salt, tablespoon sugar and sufcient flour to make a thick drop of batter, adding one teaspoon baking powder to each cup of flour. Lastly, stir in one cup of med cherrries. urn into a but- tered mold and steam two hours or until done. Serve with a hard sauce. Mexican Eggs.—Heat half a can of tomato soup and when bubbling slip cggs Inta It without bréaking. Lec the whites cook first, then prick the volks and let them mix with the tomato_and the whites. Add a little chopped sweet pepper and serve while ! quite soft. Brolled an aluminum pan and lay thinly sliced bacon on it. Drain as the fat ooozes out, turning often and a garnish to Mexican eggs. English Muffins.—8Ift together four cups of flour, one teaspoonful of salt two teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Mix with a scant 2 1-2 cups of milk to o stiff griddle cake dough. Cook on both sides on a well-greased griddle. When done tear apart and toast light- |1y. Serve very hot. Herring salad.—Use the boneless red herrring put up in boxes or glasses, scalding the pieces well in hot water, drying them and chilling them on the ice. Shred these finely—into veritable | splinters—and mix with as many cold boiled white potatoes as are needed to soften the herring taste and yet not quench it too much. Irench dressing is best for this salad and the potatoes 11 seem more delicate if thin iced instead of being cut in chunks, Cay- enne is a necessity for even a differ- ence in pepper makes a difference in tas Sardine and Tomst Salad.—Take a dozen large French sardines, skin them and shred finely ‘Then toast as many long narrow strips of white bread till they are thoroughly browned through without being burned. Cover these with a preliminary coating of olive oil and let them stand aside. When realy to serve, mix the fish and bread to- gether with salt, cavenne and lemon juice. and add a bit of toast upon which a clove or garlic has been brisk- ly rubbed. Add more oil and cover the dish before serving for ten min- utes, o that ths salad may be thor- oughly permeated with the garlic with- out tasting of its bitter. Take out the garlic-. faces of the diners as they eat the delectable mess. If they are French creoles they will certainly beam their approval, for these folk of sophisti- cated palates know that toast in salad or soup lends a taste that nothing else with supply. NEEDLEWORK NOTES. When sewing two raw edges of fine lace together, like the tiny lace ruf- fle on lingerie blouses or dresses, do not fell it in the old-fashioned way, but place the two right sides together and bind the edg> with the finest thread, making a buttonhole stitch along the edges. Put a stitch in each mesh and you will have a neat lace seam which, when pressed. can scarce- ly be observed and it will not fray. Never try to cut linen by the eye. Draw a thread In hemming, fold over twice to the required depth, then when well brown serve as| or piossoms. cented crust and watch the | tion of borax and water, then w. boiling milk, one sugar, small piece of butter lemons. Mix the fiour in a little cold ‘water, then pour the boiling milk over it. Use only the inside pulp of the lemons, cutting oft all and inside skin. Slice the lemons, chop the rai- #ins and add to the thickened milk, then the butter (melted). This quan- tity will fill two pies, if plates are small. DOLLAR SIZE DOTS. Dots “the size of a dollar” says the last message from Paris, are seen on the new foulards in white on black and in black on white. They sound extremely Parisian and have not quite been equalled in this country, where the dime has been about the size limit. These dollar marks are on a par with the satin-finished shooting stars anl woven skyrockets that are numbered among the more daszlingly large pat- terns in foulard silk. SLEEVELESS COAT IDEAS. 5 rians A new idea in _thres-pieced suits shows the sleeveloss coat. ¢ A pretty suit of this kind is of light blue rep with a panel of lace extending rom the bust to the hem of the kirt. The yoke and collar are also made of the allover face, while the sleeves ara Jong and finished with & band of the lace insertion. The coat is elaborately trimmed with the allover. milk over one cup of grated bread | crumbs, add two tablespoons of but- ter, let stand fifteen minutes. Beat four eggs with one-quarter cup of su- gar, add grated rind and juice of one | orange and one-half a lemon, stir into bread mixture. Add two tablespoons of chopped almonds, turn into buttered molds, steam one hour. Serve with hard sauce. SMART LINEN GOWNS. Smart-looking Mnen gowns with high directorie girdles can be hed at all the good stores mt very moderate prices. By adding a velvet or silk girdle for { the plain linen one, trimming the neck with a little embroidery and changing one could make a very stume that does not look " Spiced Currants. | pounds of currants, four Seven pounds of sugar, one pint of vinegar, one pound of raisins, four tablespoons each of ground cloves and cinnamon. Cook currants till tender, then mix ali together and cook slowly till very thick. Elderblossom, Boil a_ gallon of water and three pounds of sugar together for five min- tes. Then pour it bolling on a quart When it is quite cool add a cake of compressed yeast mixed in a little water and let it stand in a large | earthenware vessel to ferment. Cover it with a thick cloth. When it has stopped “singing” strain it and to each six gallons of wine allow an ounce of isinglass to “fine” it. To each gallon of wine allow a pound of raisins cut in halves. The wine should be put away in a wooden vessel and left un- disturbed for six months. Then it must be bottled and left undisturbed again for another six months, Store the bottles on their sides. TAN SHOES POPULAR. Tan shoes are more worn this sum- mer than ever before, perhaps because they are commonly considered as cool- er than black. For country wear they are most suitable and show the dust of walking much_ less than the black shoes. y Black buckekin and suede and gray suede are also much worn. There is an especial dressing for sude shoes and after it has been applied and be- | fore the shoe dries a coarse hand brush is used to brush the nap of the shoe the wrong way and restore the | original slightly roughened surface. These shoes are more porous and therefore cooler than the glazed or | finished leathers and do not wrinkle in the way the others do when they are slightly large, as they should be [ far more comfortable for summer. PARKER HOUSE ROLLS. Dissolve one rounded tablespoon of butter in a pint of hot milk, when lukewarm stir in one quart of flour and one beaten egg, a little salt and a teacup of yeast; work into dough until smooth. If winter, set in a fwarm place; if summer, a cool one, to rise. In the morning work softly and roll out one-half inch and cut into rolls and set to rise for thirty minutes, when | they will be ready to bake. These are delicious. CORN OYSTERS. Grate raw corn from the cob, and to one cup of pulp add one egg, well beaten; one-quarter cup of flour and season with salt and pepper to taste. Drop by spoonful about the size of an oyster in deep fat or on a well greased hot griddle. SWEETBREADS. Scald in salted water, remove stringy part, put in cold water five or ten minutes, drain in towel, dip in egg and turn back and sew over and over neatly on the wrong side. The Brussels net scarf, that can be made by deft fingsrs, is eighteer. inches wide and two and one-half yards long, edged with satin ribbon one and one- half inches wide. It takes six and a quarter yards of ribbon and two and a half vards of the met. These are becoming and chic, giving a fllmy touch to a summer costume. Foulard facing for the smart revers sounds a new note in tailoring and dress combination: HEA LTH_ AN D_!EAUTY. Ice water should never be used for cleansing the teeth. It is worse than hot water. Lukewarm 1is the right temperature. This is grateful for the teeth and gums and cleanses the roof and sides of the mouth in the best wa; ‘When tartar has formed on the' teeth close to the gums have it re- moved by a dentist. It is the fore- Tunner of decay. twice a year by most persons some- times oftener, where it forms rapidly from overacidity in the system. To close pores, an excellent astrin- gent, if used judiclously, is a few grains of alum in a bowl of ice water, Shake in only enough of the alum to| place in a larger dish. give the water a slightly cloudy look. This should be done | Ones of old Spanish lace and long, nar- then cracker crumbs, fry in butter or lard mixed. They can be boiled plain. BANANA SNOWBALL. Place in a_double boiler one pint of milk, two tablespoonfuls of sugar, and the yoke of two eggs, a pinch of salt and butter the size of & walnut. Add one teaspoon of cornstarch. Stir over the fire until thick; then add a little vanilla flavoring. ‘When custard is cold beat the whites of two eggs to & stiff froth. Mix with two tablespoon- fuls of sugar. Cut three bananas into slices and place in a dish. Pour over the custard and put whites of eggs on top in shape of snowballs. IHEVIVAL OF THE SCARF. Another old-time fashion revival is the wearing of the'scarf, which always adds quaint grace and charm to & pretty costume. It % made of lace and chiffon, of soft shimmering silk, of marabou and ostrich feathers. Some of the prettiest are resurrections from grandmother's cedar chest—triangular row Japanese ones edged with wide fringe. BUTTER WITHOUT ICE. ‘Where one has nho ice box, set the butter in a saucer or soup plate, and Invert a porous flower pot ayer the Dl l:. el“lh'r ‘gn]i‘e of the rlrom. a si lhkr it IVIng Tuliness (o tha center-bACK, STEAM ORANGE PUDDING. . | hil' Suifics Torm Sirap cffects over e = | the oulders, which trimmed with Pour one and a haif cups of scalded | buttons, and the sepa; guim may out of trong_solu- Dhtter rolls, Will Keop fnsrn GARMENT MAKING. LADIES' PRINCESS JUMPER DRESS, WITH GUIMPE. Paris Pattera No. — All Seams Allowed. This stylish dress has the new lon, waisted effect which is so becoming. The skirt portion has the necessar. fullness distributed in a wide inverte: be made of any desired material. | The pattern is in six sizes—32 to 42 inches, bust measure. For 36 bust the dress requires T4 yards of material 24 inches wide, 6% vards 27 inches wide, yards 36 inches wide, 4% yards 42 inches wide or s~ 54 inches wide; the guimpe needs 31 yards 15 inches wide 28 yards 27 inches wide, 1% yards 3b inches wide or 1l yards 43" inches wide. Width of lower edge of skirt, about 3% yards. Price ‘of pattern 10 cents, Order through The Bulletin Company, | Pattern Dept., Norwich, Conn, Fine Line of Sarcasm. Some impatient schoolman suggests that we ought to quit educating so many boys to be presidents. While he does not say so in that many words, | it is tolerably plain that his remarks | are addressed to democratic parents.— | New Orleans Times-Democrat. An Honest Peach Grower. J. H. Hale of Glastonbury announces that Connecticut peaches will be in market about August 10, and that by August 20 they will be In abundance | and that the Connecticut peaches this | vear will be the best ever. Have an- other dish?—Meriden Journal. o Aid to Needy. | Secretary Wilson is to give the con- | gressmen more garden seed than here- tofore. This may help some in the case of the man whose tariff record is not entirely satisfactory to his constit- The Washington correspondents Jo- cate a_Peace dove wherever they dis- cern Senator Crane of Massachusetts and everybody knows that the Bay state man is a past master in tact. —Manchester Union. Did Other Things. John D. Rockefeller has celebrated his 70th hday. Here is another man who has reached a great age and has never touched lquor, smoked a cigar or sal in a game of poker.—At. lanta Journal 1 10ck o ok TR ey Next to Nature. A prominent doctor in Boston adyo- cates the no-underwear rule in keeping cool and 3 Natives in the hot rule one better and wear S I Servise. Mg but an amulet and & grin— 1 Gazette. Just a Bourbon, It is reported that Don Jaime, the new Carlist pretender, will continue the hopeless He I8 one of the Bour- pons, and it is proverbial that the rbons learn nothing and forget E:tnhmc. Portland Press, Another One. Dr. Eliot hacks the theological bram- ‘bles from his of faith and pours water about roots of a doctrine to which all men subscribe and which but few practice—Philadelphia Telegraph. Refers to Steel Industr Kajser Wilhelm says the battles of the future will be industrial—and at the same time orders a few more Dreadnoughts.—Detroit Free Press. g Only a Few Left. The list of senators that Mr. Bryan will find it necessary to read out of the party is believed to be now nearly complete.—Chicago Tribune. A Call to the Air. ‘There is a loud call up Lowell w for Colonel Ames' aeroplane. buryport News. Modest Compensation. “Give me neither poverty nor rich- chants Mr. Roosevelt in The Out- look. Neither more nor less than a dollar a word.—New York World. YOR BACKACHE WILL YIELD To Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Rockland, Maine.—“I was troubled for a long time with in my back | and side, and was rable in every | way. I doctored until I was dis. €0 and/ the t I should never get well. I read a testimonial about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta. ble Compound, and lhonfiht 1 would | 8] try it. After tak- ing three bottles [ was cured, and Ve * never felt so well in all my life. I recommend Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to all my friends.”— Mrs, WiLL Youne, 6 Columbia Avenue, Rock Me. is a symptom of female weakness or derangement. If you! have backache, don’t neglect it. "To | get permanent relief you must reach | the root of the troub] Nothing we knowof will do this so safely and surely | as Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com. | pound. Cure the cause of these dis. tressing aches and pains and you will | become well and strong. | The great volume of unsolicited testimony constantly pouring in proves | conclusively that L; nkham'’s | ‘Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has restored health to thou- sands of women. Mrs. Pinkham, of Lynn, Mass., invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health free of charge. Y Studio Specialty Shop MESSALINE and FOULARD GOWNS, $12.50 and $15.00—value $25.00 to $35.00. LINEN GOWNS, $10.00—valus $15 LINGERIE GOWNS, $5.00—value $8.75 to $19.50. GINGHAM DRESSES, $5.00—value SEPARATE WHITE REPP SKIRT TAILORED WAISTS, in white and colors, $1.50 and $2.50—vaiue $2.50 to $5.00. LINGERIE WAISTS, $3.75 and $5.00—value $5.00 to $10.00. DUTCH COLLARS, STOCKS AND JABOTS, 15¢ to $1.75. NOVELTIES AND ACCESSORIES reduced prices. BIRETTES, NECKLACES, PINS, i ’ Special Suite 6, 32 Telepho EXTRA SPECIAL REAL CUT JET HATPINS, 26c—value 75c and $1.00. JET EARRINGS, with pendants, 50c—value $1.25 and $2.00, THE OSGOOD, Selling .00 to $25.00 $7.50 te $12.50. 'S, $1.95—value $3.00. in the fashionable jet at greatly HANDBAGS, etc. Church Street. ne 824, ALL DENTAL WORK Dentists who KNOW HOW. We pride Good Dental work now y: can be done without pain b; ourselves on KNOWING Hi poasible b that. Eacl tistry his particular speclalty for W. crowning, extraction or bridge work, we have a SPECIALIST to do and do it positively without pain, and at from one-third it the prices prevalling at other offices for the same quality 1T Dentists of experience. of our staff of operators has made some branch of Den- is_only ears galning ‘We have been 20 years, and whether you need filling, K. WILL PAY you to investigate and consult us befors going elsewhere. We make no charge whatever for examination and advice, L Bets of testh that fit, from $8.00 Gold Crowns, 22 karat....$5.00 Bridge Work Special —our own system — absolutely impossible for testh to break off .$5.00 Fillings .... from 600 Al work guaranteed for 10 years King Dental Parlors, ' Dr. Jackson, Manager. Franklin Square. Matines and Evening Performances. . FREE CONCERT ~ Sundmy Afternoon at 330 (.. Wm. Josh | Daly’s Minstrels CASINO Dancing every afternoon and evening. Ice Cream, Scda and Light Lunthes. Purchase your car tickets, admit- ting to Park, at Madden's Cigar Store. BREED'S THE ATRE Charles McNulty, Lessee. Devoled to Firsiclass Moving Pictures and Hiustraled Songs. Feature Pleture, WAS JUSTICE SERVED? —AND— 8ix Other Fine Ones. Master Harry Noonan, Phenomenal Boy Soprano. in High Clasy and Illus- trated Songs. Matinecs, Ladies and Childvem, Get 10e. BREED HALL. ' Waskington Square RODERICK THEATRF Under New Management. Devoted to High Class Moving Pletures and Ilustrated Sougs. The Newest and Best Piclures Always Here First. Thursday, Friday and Saturday: Feature Pleture, THE LITTLE ANGEL OF ROARING SPRINGS. William Delaney in Illustrated Son. 2.30 p. m., 5 to all. Ev w 7.30 to 10 p. m., 16e. ooled by Electricity, * Matin Inug JAMFS F, DREW fiano Tuning and Repairiag Best ¥'ork Only. 18 Perkine Ava "Phune 4zz-8. sept2ld saves and tmproves the pi*na, AN work guaranteed. A. W. JARVIS, Ne. 15 Clairemont Ave., Norwich, Conn. wraduate Nilew Bryunt school of Mame Tuning, Battle Creek, Mich. Drop a postal and I'll call. docl "Phon 5 F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect St, Tel, $89-5. Norwich, C% " PLUMBING AND GASFITTING. The Vaughn Foundry l:o.- IRON CASTINGS ‘urnished promptly. Large stock of patterns. No. 11 to 25 Ferry Street jan2zd Worn Out 7Pfl1mbing The running expenses of a house are ely increased by worn-out or poor plumblug Either canses annoyance usually at the most inconvenient time. An estimate for replacing such plumbing with the modern, peace of mind kind will cost ncthing, and Pl guarantee the price will be reasonable. J. E. TOMPKINS, 67 West Mai may?7d Street. T. F. BURNS, Heating and Plumbing, 92 Franklin Streat. mwarsd lithia Water Tablets The effervescing kind. Each tablet will make a glass of sparkling Lithia Water. 50 for 25 cents DUNN’S - PHARMACY, 50 Main Street. jy13d For the balance of the sea- son I offer all my Summer weig ht Suitings at a very low figure to close. C. H. Nickerson, 128 Main St. jun20d DR. C. R CHAMBERLAIN, Denta/ Surgeon. In charge of Dr. 8. L. Geer's practwe during his last iliness. 161 Main Stroet, Norwich, Conn nov26d We have Fancy Native Chickens, Fowls _a_ni Lamb. Order Here and Get the Best PEOPLE’S MARKET, 6 Franklin St. | s . JusTix HOLDEN, Prop.