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‘=i . 138 YEARS OLD, o Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Conn., as second-class matter. Bulletin Job Offlc Bullding. T.lenhml 210. _Norwich, Saturday, Aus. 25 18, Sreiasonene §The Circulation of ‘I i The Bulletin. The Bulletin has' the largest cir- culation of any paper in Bastern 3 Connecticut, and from three to four times larger than that of any in Norwich. It is delivered to over: 3,000 of the 4053 houses in Nor-} wich, and read b ninety-three per H cent. of the peeple, In Windham 3 31t js dolivered to over 900 houses, %in Putnam and Danielson to OV. : 1,100, ana in all of these places is considered the locs! dally. H Bastern Connecticut has forty- nine towns, one hundred and sixty- five post office districts and forty- one rural free delvery routes. The Bulletin is s0ld In every own and on all of the R. F. D, outes in Bastorn Connecticut. essssessnssssnassensisssess "o CIRCULATION 1906, average... 1907, nvunn'..-...‘....--7 |79x 7,967 ssssssasessesasssessassasard 1908, average.. »m.....m..uu-muu«uu-....-mm..m.-..mm...mm.. - P H H ILLUSTRATED THE BULLETIN'S BOOK. 1t is @ot surprising that a great deal of interest is felt in the pictures which are to he a feature of the 250th an- niversary Jubilee book—what they " are to be and what they are to repre- sent. Portraits of the officers and chairmen of committees and the guests of the city will number a score or two and then there will be photographs of the decorated strests, the parade, the performances and objects of spe- clal interest, it is expected, will make about 50 pages. Where there are large assemblages of péople the pictures will be made large enough to make the identification of citizens possible. There are quits a number of these photographs which will be given a full page. It is the purpose of The Bulletin to make this book so attractive that it will be in prompt demand when it appears in December for delivery. The Bulletin has had submitted to #t for examination about 200 photo- graphs already, and expects to have others submitted. The letterpress and the illustrations will represent the best part of the an- niversary celebration, and the book will be prized for its accuracy and value by Norwich people everywhere. Order books on ‘the coupon to be found in The Bulletin's advertising columne. THE FALL FAIR SEASON. The opening of the fall fair season is only a week away and the New Lon- don County fair is this year among those that open the segson. Since fair weather is usually foul weather, let us hope this year that the days will e bright and propitidus for these rural reunions, tor it is here that many of the country folk meet each other and compare results, or discuss new ventures every year. The fair gives proof by its agricul- tural products that some farmers suc- ceed in the dryest seasons, and we are well aware that others make a failure dn the best of seasons. because they will not meet the requirements of the laws of production. The fall fair, whether state or county, s a grand good time to thousands of people and there is usually to be seen freaks in human nature as well ae from the flelds. The modern “mid- way” is usually an insult to moral decency, and if professional moral de- cency woudl just pass it by on the other side it would starve to death, as it ought. Good morals can freeze the midway out if there is enough of them. It takes all kinds of combinatiens to please a crowd and it doesn’t make much difference how odd, queer or quaint the entertainment is if it is ! people want the land and water and elean and legal. Since tastes greatly differ a variety of entertainments must be given for 20th century eyes find no pleasure in eattle and corn and custard—they just yearn for something they do not get @t home and are usually gratified. Everybody in the eight counties of Connecticut s going to the county fairs as they come off, and the state fair s so well designed and pro- grammed that none who are able to attend can afford to stay away. The damage claims of $300,000 for the depredations of the Blue and Red armies does not seem to distress the \government. Thé Yankee lads are handy, O! Kansas has things fixed so that a man cannot curse his wife. The law requires that he should go to the rural districts if he thinks he must swear. The women who furnish recipes for the newspapers put in cream and eggs in quantity so that no ome will sus- pect that they are common folks. When Parents day {head of the house assurhes all the dlg- nity but he cannot get the last word he sits up all night to get it. man who looks on the shady 5 of the street for prosperity usually et fiying recards is all right so great while to be listed among’ tl mn.. that were, and the people Who | lally fond of these greasy murn are perhaps justified in be- wailing the fact, although their loss as an article of diet is very apt to fmprove their health. What the chop | could is depends, of course, upon whether it was chopped from an old hog or a young pig. A pork chop that can ‘boast of years Is too venerable to con- sider evem in a cook book: but the weal of pork, (this term is not patent ed), has tickled the palate of gour- monds for a length of time beyond which the memory of man runneth not back, and if less nourishing than eggs was prized for its tenderness and sweetness. The editor of the Indianapolis News says: “Wafer chops of any kind; pork, mutton, lamb or veal, are an abom- ination unto the stomach and a sin in the eves of every cook. ~ They will not sustain life; they loom large only in the butcher’s bills; on the table one turns from them in disgust and despair and falls back upon toast—the regular thing. With the passing of pork chops it is safe to predict that sausages will begin to shrink and that bacon will curl up and shrivel.” No wonder a large class deplore this. It justifies the exclamation: “Aint it awful, Mabel! SELFISH INTERESTS. Men actuated by selfish interests re- sort to all sorts of methods to pro- mote them. Mr. Pinchot is having no easy time in carrying out the orders of the government with referénce to government forests reserves. The newspapers and the chambers of com- merce have'entered into the contest to have conditions changed, for the wood and do not care a picayune about the saving of American forests from destruction, the prevention of earth erosion or the prevention of floods. The Herald and Mining Review of Inyo has this to say against the agent: X Pinchot ‘“represents the powerful lumber and railway interests and the coal Interests. The government charges $1 a cord for fallen timber. Formerly men who hauled it into Bishop asked $8 u cord, but since the government claims its dollar the price to Bishop has gone to $12. Rank Pinchotism. “It only one-half of the land with- drawn by Pinchot unjustly be taken up it would add immediately $5,000,000 to the assessed valyation of Inyo county.’ “The rank Injustice (of Pinchot) stamps upon him an indelible mark of self-interest and villainy.” “An American citizen—just like an ordinary American citizen who is seek- ing for a home in this valley—cannot secure one acre from this choice land.” It is not likely that this slinging of hot shot will induce the government to remove its commissioner or to change its determingd policy with reference to the tract which is wanted for pri- vate speculation rather than public use. WOMEN AND THE SCHOOLS. No woman regards it as a matter of economy to close the schools, quite a few men, and sometimes a majority in benighted parts of the country do. Woman suftrage in school matters works well in New England and the Middle States. They are never found upon the wrong side of the issue. Speaking of recent school campaigns in New Jersey the Newark News says: “Whatever may be said for or against woman suffrage as a general proposition, the limited experiment of this policy made in New Jersey has invariably worked well. The state per- mits women to vote at school elections for appropriating money, and they can be counted on, every time, to vote in the interests of public school accom- modations for their children. An in- stance occurred on Tuesday last in Union county. The, trustees of the Con, necticut Farms school closed the hi school department to save expense, and the scholars had to go to Eliza- beth or to South Orange to complete their education. The citizens demur- red, and asked for a referendum on the question of raising $2,000 to con- tinue the high school. The women voted unanimously for the appropria- tion, and only eighteen men had the temerity to vote against it. It was the women, by the way, who catried the election which gave Bound Brook its splendid new school building, and wherever a similar question is raised the women favor the schools. §f this is an argument for woman suffrage, the opponents of the policy will find it difficult to answer.” EDITORIAL NOTES. Agriculture takes the stride of peace. There is no 27-inch military pace that can fit her. Happy thought for today: The out- put of a town talks louder for it than the outlook. There is no use of expecting an early frost for that will not make a par- ticle of difference. When the ten biggest cities in New England are counted New Bedford cannot be left out. The r‘hnufleuru who _are killed in auto races never can tell what they think of the machines. When it comes to the penalties of greatness some of our state senators are realizing what that means. There doesn’t appear to be any real g00d reason why the poorest peaches in 1909 should be bringing the high- est price. ‘When a dozen airships get Into the air at once they do not collide. How different from a dozen autos on a turn- pike road. The. person who is too sensitive to eriticism loges lots of comfort. If-crit- | icism would'kill fiies it might be turned to & good use. A Texas minister is sure that the meanness of men caused the last hot wave. Doesn't he know that usually gives out a chill, It doésn’t seem so strange to have the legislature gone. It did so little for so long that it never really seemed to be at Hartford. Hill appears to be an older man than Harriman and his physiognomy says that he worries less—that's why he doesn’t need to rest. Those who h: seen the new $30 bill are giving the artist great praise; but most of us will not be able to say & commendatory word ‘The pork chop 18 uiuy before a | s o James G. L 'fim— .-.x-—an.& A ..’z*‘-‘..."kw M«Ammfl ‘write from her mnlm‘- brct tm hmfly 1 weem to be. ock The one thi meéet the duties irit and to think as little us possi- of its adversities. No life is whol- 1y salling, and some lives chh seem to be are made to 8o ap- pear by the light and cheerful way in which burdens are met and carried. A cripple can smilingly help & blind man acrss the street. Do mnot envy peopla—Juut m: others envy you. Are you & glad-hander. The glad hand Is not as common as it lhould be. I have no fancy for the athletic grasp- er, or the high hand shaker. When I have to high-hand shake I feel as if 1 was up to nomethln' 1 was not _born for. 1 shall n find my affinity among the Ligh shakers for they are the coldest shakes <Ling about. I like the person who shakes your hand according to his heart better than I do the man who shakes according to style. The per- son who shakes as if it took & little condescension to do it ought to be ex- cused. The handshake that has the brotherhond of man in it is never out 1 like the hand that is_dependable, 7 you when it is needed. The glad hander is always good hearted and frank and his God-bless-you ~handshake beats the verbal expression of that sentiment to death. It does not as if it ought to take a million suns more brilliant than the sun of this system of planets to make a “milky way.” That belt of light we see at night was not thought to be a path in which suns and other planetary systeths travelled im such numbers, or a celestial highway for worlds. How the stars have muitipiied in these later days. The P des were first believed to be a group of ven stars—-then the naked eye improved 80 that eleven could be counted; and then came the camera which disclosed that there were 1400 stars in that one group. We do not know how many stars there are in space. Some of the most famous astronomers say that there are two million suns and five times as many planets; and above us there are planets in the formative peri- od, planets in their vigor, and dead and dark planets innumerable. The works of the Creator are fast finding out, and man has done well to make this fact clear to his mind. 1t was Theodore Roosevelt who said: “I desire to see in this country the decent men strong and the strong men decent, and until we get that combina- tion in pretty good &hape we are not going to be by any means a: ful as we should be” We all recol nize that this would be a first cla: working combination, one that cou only operate for the good of the com- munity and the good of the country. It is a concept which many will say is not practical when really they are not equipped to make it so. Khny things are ranked as theories by those who are not capable of recognizing that they are utilities. Where the practical begins and ends in this world is past finding out. It makes a difference whether you retire from business or business retires from you, but some are too dull to realize this, as clear as it 8. With all degent men strong and all-strong men decent we should have a revolution without bloodshed right away. . Sesing _the " humming birds about again reminds me that a few people have found pleasure in taming them. I knew an invalid lady who every sum- mer used to make humming birds her companions. She used to lure them to her room with bouquets of bright and fragrant flowers and then keep them in a great gauze cage, and &t times let them fly about the room and feast upon the nectar of fresh flowers which were brought daily to her room. She used to feed them with a syrup made of sugar and water, and they used to thrive the whole season. She knew when they migrated and in late August would let them escape and go with the flocks to the tropics for the winter, She was familiar with their calls and their love notes and found abundant pleasure in the study of their habits. Think of these delicate little creatures gathering mosses and weaying them into a mest not bigger than a crab apple with the finest of spiders’ webs, fleece-lined and so neat as to be among bird-woven nests the wonder. They are bold little fellows and ven- ture near to people in their search among the balms and other flowers for honey. A woman well along in years said to me several years ago: “I'm told yowre the man who taiks, and I like to read your column, but I believe on some of those topics I can outtalk you!” The man who talks does not disclose his -identity by saying “You do me great honor, thank you,” or nice little things like that. Flattery doesn't make him open any more than it does the oyster. I assured her I felt quite sure she was more than a match for the man who talks on some points— what woman's {sn't? She seemed to feel quite pleased and méi‘k that h at sl I was of this opinion, b really wished to know was i man, and getting no averment that was, she. went away with a l‘:’ppflfi:‘ ed look. The man who talks®was no| match for her—she could give him a curtain lecture that would make h sporits curdle and his hair ixx, 8| knew her power, too. 1 have' ofte thoaght of her face, and when I have, it mede me glad that all that she has ) say for the good of her fellow men isw'i said to me. The person who is nourishing se- cret regrets should expel them by ac# tive reform. A regret is a poor thing to fool with long. A resolution to re- form is the first step toward man- hood, mastery and purity. Here is a confession by one who has regretted, regolved and overcome: I have been a cigarette smoker for years, but at last 1 have managed to overcome the habit, and the feeling that overspreads me—both in mind and body—cannot be described. There is no getting around it that cigarettes are injurious, for it stands to reason that when smoke is inhaled and drawn to the lungs the lungs will be weakened in time. 1 have made it a point to notice the users of cigarettes, and in all cases have found that the cigarette smoker is not as sound in body as people that do not use the cigarette. There is no doubt that almost every one that has ac- quired the cigarette habit regrets it. There is only one way to overcome the habit, and that is to make up your inind to do so. The person that over- comes this habit will experience the finest feeling that he has ever had in life.” This is a frank statement of one man's experiences, and it reads like a song of triumph, and that is what it really 1s. The spider on the phiox is a picture of patience. He walts and watches for his prey with his calliper-like legs set like a trap making only one move necessary to actomplish his purpose. He is white and gray, end someétimes primrose yellow, and is pretty to those to whom he is not repugnant. The spider 16.0ne of the most useful insects to the farmer on account of Nis car- nivorous nabits—he destroys more files and bugs than any other creature of his size. 1lis arch enemy is the wasp m finedishness. Jher room. Fan was sitting in front of her white enameled dressing table, with the sun- shine just pouring in on her and set- ting her head on fire. And she had her hand up to her face and was flash- ing that dfamond back and forth in the light. First she'd put her finger to her cheek and smooth it like Q.hl and then she'd pretend to fix the net on her t{ont hair. All the while she was, ng smirky eyes at the red and \:lue u.nd violet lights that kept shooting all over her hand. Then, because she thought she was alone, not thinking that lovely Tip and I could see her, she bent over and kissed the ring, oh, million times. Fan is certainly getting odd. Ask Tip If you don't believe me. When she look- ed up her eyes were all wef, a8 if she'd been crying, but I can't see what for, because she and I had been peaceful. Anyway, it was all so funny that I clutched sweet Tip for support, and happened to grab hold of his ear, be- cause I didn't look to see what I was doing, for 1 didn't want to take my eyes off silly Fan. Then Tip let out the laughing kowl, thinking it was a game, you see. Fan heard it and up she jumped like lightni l".lhd slammed tha door right against Tip's nose! at was enough for mo' To hurt 'l'lp feelinge like that, and he so gen- teel’ 1 hammered with both fists on her door, and then I Kkicked. After that Tip and I went out to swing to think up something. That afternoon the house was just like a funeral. Fan shoved me away when I went to see what lacy thing she was sewing on the front porch. “T'ip,” said l suddenly, “let’s play grpev.’ You cah be Bedriddin Hassan aleh Amina and T1l he Esmeralda Baba Abdalla. And we'll steal Fan's clothes and put them on and sneak down to meet poor Mr. John, because he's probably coming to dinner.” Of course Tip was crazy as I said, so we wentup to Tip lad to do | I'nlddl' of 1t all, ‘an’s room. doughnut.—Chicage News. Plctures First Tima Out of New York Changed Mon,, Wed. and Fri. Marvelous Acrobats Vaudeville, Motion Pictures and Latest of llustrated Songs Afternoons 1 Pricfls i Evenings 10-2 wealth instead of mastering it. The necessity for hard and constant labor- ing being in many cases removed, men and women not infrequently grow soft and selfish and sensual. Nothing but eternal vigilance can counteract and vanquish these foes. We must be as her | alert and determined in caring for our srgotten pnl any of Fan's powder on Tip's "Be&lddi.n Hassan Seieh Amina” I called him, “come and get your beautifier. But the pet had gone down statry. So I ran after him, and—oh, wel, I can't just recomaeaber how . it hap- od. but that skirt of Fan's got be- tween my knees, and my heels turned out, and I forgot, in (he excitement, to keep my thumbs kinked, and so—— T must have rolled about ten miles, for I woke up in bed with court. tor on my head where the hatpins had punctured me. And Fan’s diamond rings gone! I forgot to keep my thumbs kinked while I was dashing down the stairs for my life. And et eyes lock liie toma'ues from weep- ing. And poor Mr. John just bites his lips and looks the other way when he's looking at me. 1 stand at the table when I'm eat- ing, for father's got an awfully strong got some, too! hand. _ Ask Tip been searching, ev Tomoreow poor Mr. John's Foing (o shingle off the grass, and if that doesn't do any good they're going to burn it off. Such & row! But down in our hearts and I are glad, for we're in the like the hole in the for whose young he serves as venison; but the wasp seems to be only master of the dullards in the grass, and he is particular ‘to always select his vie- tims from the same variety. There are spiders the wasp could not conquer in a fair fight. These flower spiders do not run or jump, but have a rather formal and graceful way of describing half circles to retire from' view, al- though in outline they appear awk- ward enough. I do not know where this spider of the flower {s when not on the flower more than I know where the man-in-the-moon is when he is not there. He interests me because God made him, which is evidence that he was not made in vain. Some weather forecaster said this wat .oln; to be a phenome: summer an has Been, and the fnan or woman e haw weitnck upon & summer rest without taking winter clothing along has. suffered from chilly nights and mornings. Every month has had them—the whole summer appears to have suffered an attack of malaria. We cannot learn the cause of it, and ‘we cannot escape the affect. We think that we never saw anything like it, but it is more than probable that we have. The weather is not nearly ‘as frregular as we think it is. You know there have been a good many changes in the weather since you were a boy— neithe~ the winters nor the summers are what they used to be. Quite likely this is so. Man does not live long enough to find out about the clmatic causes in this whirling world of ours. The world's career is in cycles of 40,000 years, and the average age of man is about 40 years. Comparatively he is equal to 1-32 of an inch on the yard stick of time. We recognize the an- tics of nature and must let them go as unaccountable, since we can do no better. SUNDAY MORNING TALK THE TRAIN OF MODERN PESTS. An experienced and successful farm- er was bemoaning in my hearing re- cently the number of harmful bugs and insects with which agriculti horticuiturists have to conts “Why, just think of them,” he went on to say, “the potato bug, the gypsy moth, the brown tall, the destructive beetlés and @il the other enemies of vines and shrubs and trees. Latest of all in some quarter of the country we hear of an insect that is making Baevoc of great splendid elms, stflpvln’ of their leaves so that they stand today ha::d and gaunt, fit only for kindling My heart out, | confess, to those who live on the soil and by the soil and who have to fight this train of pests with which their grandfathers were never troubled. Whence they came and why they are here is not easy to answer. There is a religious philoso- power in the universe continually ma ifesting itself in new forms for the har- assment of men. This philosophy holds that the world grows’better in certain particulars, it grows worse In others and evil becomes more insidious and more determined to balk the onward progress of mankind. Be that as it may, the pests are certainly here and the practical question is how may farmers, market gardeners and nurs- erymen be rid of them. Certainly, to look at the situation as cheerfully as possible, we may find some compensation for these pests in the stimulus they create to the inven- tion of devices wherewith to counter- act and destroy these creatures of the night. Swamps and bogs are being @rained. Parasites and other insects are being brought from other climes to destroy the destroyers, on the old prin- ciple of fighting fire with fire. And in proportion as the foes of sound and healthy vegetable products increase men become more vigllant and reso- lute. They do not forget that they were told originally by the Creator that their business upon the earth is to re- plenish and subdue it. A parallel may be drawn between these foes of veegtable life and the modern obstacles to spirftual growth. Ease and luxury so prevalent today have brought with them an attendant train of enervating avd harmful influ- ence. Men are being mestered by thelr DON'T MISS OF ALL MAKES—OU L £ — MEN'S SHOES - $2.4? 10 well known makes — MEN'S SHOES — . at $l.9'8 § well known mikes — MEN’'S SHOES — at F $1.59 r pair 500 pairs Box Calf Bluchen — LITTLE GENTS' SHOES — at 98¢ per pair THIS SALE! Your Opportunity to Save Money. OUR WINDOWS ARE FULL OF - High Grade Sample Shoes PRICES BELOW COST. — WOMEN'S SHOES — at $2.49 per pair Manufacturers’ Samples. — WOMEN’S SHOES — at $1.98 Manufacturers’ Samples. — WOMEN’'S OXFORDS — at $1.69 per pais Manufacturers’ Bamp! = Misses’ and Children’s Shoes — n Manufacturers’ Samples. ASK FOR ANY MAKE mm(fnu SAMPLE SHOE STORE, i spiritual gardens, as farmers in gar- ing for their garde and their or- chards. In the same conversation from which I have quoted, this farmer went on to say, “Nevertheless there never was a time since Adam and Eve wefe created uld got & Dbetter living it not also be d £6 Reser Was . battar time In lhn hlltflry of the world for & man to vanquish ‘the moral foes and live a clean, rich, noble life than today? THE PARSON. At present the monastery at St Bernard costs about $9,000 a year to keep un. This money is partly collect- ed in Switzerland and partly derived from revenue In the monastic order. SORE HANDS Itching, Burning, Bleed- ing, Cured by Cuticura. Soak hands, the d‘on .in‘l%ot anoint 'uh Cuticura om’- Tiguty in ol cobtsn or wear old gloves. ‘This treatment s for soften- EgEed MARY P. CLAFPP Embroidered Waists FALL SAMPLES OF SHIRT WAIST MATERIALS. Good Home Cooking in the WOMAN'S EXCHANGE, 237 Main Street, Fay Building. Tel. 356-2. augl2TThs Very Particular Tea Drinkers say that our best Teas are bet- ter than that they have paid 60c per Ib. for. Our price 25¢ Ib. ALL VARIETIES. No Premiums to be paid for. United T_ea]mpnflem bo. Franklin Square, up one flight, over Somers Bros. Jun3TuThs heat days have system in a weal IF sapped left your condition, has IF Your nervous system THEN we would recommend Leg’s Besf, Iron and Wine 50 CENTS A BOTTLE IT contains the iron t: red blood corpuscle: IT contains the beef for your mus. cular system, IT contains the wine to tone your om, IN SHORT it contains all those constituents ‘which prep. you for the work ahead. Bo sure t is Lee & Osgood’s We guarantee the result. E§ flSGflml 131- |33 lam Strest your attered, New London County WILL BE HELD ON THE FAI BONNIE WILKES NXS@[ TRUEMAN GRAPH]I HAPPY MADISO\Y B MARY B. LEILA MORN . LECCO MAID . THE Sath ANNUAL FAIR ——OF THE—— . AND THE GRAND VISITING FESTIVAL OF THE NORWICH CENTRAL LABOR UNION September 6th, the grealest list of Special Atiractioas ever ssen Sample of the Races 2.20 Pace, stake purse $500. 2.25 Trot, stake purse $500. . A. H. Standish, Attleboro, Mass. . — BAND CONCERT EACH DAY — E. JUDSON MINER, Pres’'t. THEO. W. YERRINGTON, Sec’y- Agricultural Society R GROUNDS AT NORWiCH Tth and 8th, Falr, Frank E. 8mith, Norwich n, Norwich . Blackstone, Mass, . A. Sherlock, Boston, Mass. . Hall, South Willington, Conn. L Handy, Springfield, Mass. . W. Delany, Hartford, Conn. . L B. Fleming, New York T. J. Broderick, Ipswich, \lul H. Hall, South Willington, . H, C. Holmes, New London, Conn. Electricity for Power CHANGE IN PRICE The price to be charged to persone and corporations for alternating cur- rent electricity for power has been changed by the undersigned to take | effect on September 1st, 1909, that is to 7, 411 bills rendered as of ‘September 9, for alternating current el lclty Iol' Rowor as shown by meter readings taken August 2024, 1905 to have been used since the last previous reading shall be according to the fol- lowing sched 1 to 500 Kllowzn Hours, 5c per kilo- watt Hour. Over 500 Kilowatt Hours, ¢ for first §00 and %¢ for each additional kilowatt hour. +.1000 Norwich, July 26, 1908. JUHN McWILLIAMS, GILBERT 8. RAYMOND, EDWIN A. TRACY, Board of Gas and Electrical Commis- sloners. Jys0d - Paris Fashions For Fall Season 1909-10 Received v You are invited to call and see the Fall Parisian and New York Fashions, and also prepare yourself with a suit for the Fall. Reasonable prices for early callers, S. LEON, Ladies Taitr 278 Main St, Room 1 May Building. augsd PAINTING BY CONTRACT ! Seethat you get what you pay for. We do work by contract and by the day and guarantee money value. The Fanning Studios, 31 Willow St. auglsd [ MISS M. C. ADLES, Hair, Scalp and Face Specialis! THE VACATION SEASON has been the time for Miss Adle | prepare the Latest Parisian Styl her patrons. Study with the Fashion | Leaders has equipped her for the early Fall season. In three states Miss Adles numbers, the best and most fas- tidious customers. Come to her if you would look your best. In Norwich week of Au t 30th. A'LiI-ZGAN HOUSE, Norwich Bnl(Bn. New York Telephone aug23d | Do It Now Have that old-fashioned, unsanitary plumbing replaced by new and mod- ern open plumbing. It will repay you in the increase of health and saving of doctor's bills. Overhauling and re- fitting thoroughly done. Let me give you a figure for replacing all the old plumbing with the modern kind that will keep out the sewer gas. The work will be first-class and the price reasonable. 704 auglsa Street. Watch Repairing done at Friswell's wpeaks for (ltself. WM. FRISWELL, 25-27 Fraaklin sans2demw Lincoln Park Norwich and Westerly Trolley, RUSTIC THEATRE Matinee and Evening Performanses FREE CONCERT 8unday Afternoon at 3.20 FIVE EXCELLENT ACTS OF Vaudeville Firsworks Thursday Evening, DISPLAY COMMENCING AT 8 0'CLOCK - CASINO Dancing every afternoon and evening. Ice Cream, Soda and Light Lunches, Purchase your car tickets, admit- ting to Park, at Madden's Cigar Store, BREED’S THEATRE Charles McNuity, Lesses Devoted to Firsi-class Moving Pictares and Ilinstrated Songs. Feature Picture, DRIVEN FROM HOME, Thrilling Wild West Pleture, AND— Bix Other Features. Master Harry Noona Boy Sopranvo, in High Cl trated Songs. e L BREED HALL. Washington Square. JAMFS F. DREW Fiano Tuning and Repairing Best V'ork Only, Phune 433-3, 18 Porkine Ave EXPERT TUNING uraduate N1l Tuning, Drop a postal and Il call ) decisa ‘Phone §18-6 F. C. GEER ) TUNER 122 Prospect St, % Tel, Norwioh, -6 o A WARNING To LEWANDO'S Customers Ering your Dyeing and Clean. ing NOW. Don't wait _untli September. We will be VERY BUSY then. NOW IS THE TIME, Respectfully, MARSHALL'S Purohasing Agenoy, 164 Main Street, with Norwich Cir. Library. Surprises Awaits Everybody Who Trades Here. Dress Goods in all the latest pat- terns at the most tempting prices, One profit between the manufacturer and you—it's ours, and a very small one, too. Others have learned where to buy cheapest — why not you? BRADY & SAXTON, Tel. 306-2. Norwich Town. auglsd JOSEPH BRADFORD, Book Binder. Blank Books Niade and Ruled to Orden, 108 BROADWAY. ' Tulephan 263 rz’lt s ne sdvertising tern %flu cu! * ww ;