Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, December 30, 1909, Page 4

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Forwich Bulletin and Toufie. 113 YEARS OLD. -—= fou price, 13¢ @ week 30c & a year. Srbme month; Bntered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Conn., as second-class matter, Bulletin Pusiness Oflice, 4 Builetin Editorial Rooms, 35-3. Bulletin Job Offics, 35-6. Willtmantie Office, Rcom 2. Murtay . 210, et The Circulation of The Bulletin. The Bulletin has the largest cir- culation of any paper in Eastern Connecticut, and from three to four § : times larger than that of any in} i Norwich. It is delivered to over} §3.000 of the 4,058 houses m Nor- % wich, and road b: ninety-three per cent. of ihe people. In Windham 31t s doitversd to over 900 houses. {in Putnem and Danlelson to over 31,100, ard In al' of these places it 1s considered the locel daily. Rastern Connecticut has forty- nine tewns, one hundred and sixty- five post office districts and forty- % ene rural free delivery routes. The Builetin Is sold in every town and on all of the R F. D. 3 routes in Bastern Connectlcut. CIRCULATION 1991, averag 1605, average 1906, avera, THE SOUTH POLE. It would be greatly to the credit of America if it should capture the honor of discovering the South pole. Although Mrs. Peary has declared that her husband had finished his Arctic exploring and would in future rest upon his laurels and get acquaint- ed with his family, Commander Peary while at Philadelphia, intimated that he might lead an American expedition fo the South pole. This Is very likely to stimulate the spirit of exploration in that direction which exists in sev- eral countries. It is recorded as a fact that an Englishman approached within 110 miles of the South pole, and is anxious that some one finance him for another expedition. The Bel- glans, also, wish to reap the glory of planting their flag on the southern- most tip of the earth. A French ex- pedition is in the field, A movement in America to fit out an expedition with a leader of the endur- ance and fame of Peary would arouse the patriotic pride of these nations, and thers would be such a hustling toward the South pole as was never known before. By a stiff pretenuc Peary can materially ald in promo 4ng this work which will leave no more poles to be discovered. HELPED TO EXPERIMENT. The anarchists of Buenos Ayres re- cently assassinated the chief of po- fice, and the crime was traced to their door. The government immediatel: arrested the 400 persons who did not balieve in the form of government un- der which they were living and de- ported them to an unsettled portion of Patagonia, to set themselves up in business and to form any kind of & government they thought they «om'd respect and thrive under. The only agreement they were compelled to sign was that they would never again re- furn to Buenos Ayres, and it will be ihteresting to see what sort of a suc ©ess this colony will make of life where they will have their' own way It is not probadle that the world will ever Jearn that an Eden was the re- | gult of this movement, for man has tried about every imaginable form cf government as a matter of protection and thrift in the past; and lak of government has never been found to produce commendable results. However, the goverument, has 3 compulsory the conditions the 400 yearned for, and it is likely to prove 1o Be @ severe penalty. THE DOOM OF CANNONISM. A popular magazine has taken pains to get an opinion of its readers with | reference to Cannonism, and because in 13,000 replies only 500 favored Speaker Cannon's methods, it regards thg end of Cannoniem certain. In thus exploiting itself, it is enjoying a lot of free advertising and managing a special boom for ftself. With regard to this matter, a des- patch from Washington says “The few members of the ho who are in Washington at the pres- ent time are amusing themsclves studying the unique figures gotten up by Success, In relation to Cannon and the chaices various mem.- bers of the house would have for re- elsction, should they eome up before tlie peopls within a month. The mag- ®zina in question has sent a tabu statement gotten up by the editors %o every member of the house, and the aim of it is of course to show the great unpopularity of Speaker Can- non throughout the country. = Success undertook something similar last s sen of congress, when it sent out petitions to be filled in by voters and | forwarded to thelr members, asking them to vote against Speaker Can- non, course, and it was severely criticised %y many members, The same is true of the present method. of trying to in- fluence the house members. “As a matter of fact, according to etatements of the members them- rélves, the figures obtained are abso- lutely worthless, Take for instance, the Connecticut members, and the only one who would be elected, If running at the present time. would be Mr. Hill, and yet he voted with the dele- gation for Speaker Cannon. Of course the number of people who express their sentiments is so small as to he insignificant, and besides they are life 's to Success, and presuma- agree with everything this mag- ST says. 128 votes are cast Connecticut, and o Speaker | ted | The scheme did not work, of | | | | the statistics of 1908. | health by clearing it off. | kimos ried over the fact that these few votes show ofmwsition to their re-election.” ‘This magazine is not disturbing the voters of the country to any great ex- tent. Speaker Cannon has really reached the age-limit as viewed In this state, and as there can be no more honor in it for him, that is why he should be retired if he will not graciously retire himself. GAIN IN IV IN IMPORTS AND DUTIES. The annual report of Collector Loeb of New York shows that the year 1909 has been remarkably prosperous. The total foreign commerce, inward and outward, of the port of New York for 1900, exclusive of so-called foreign merchandise passing through this country, aggregates $1,498,901,422, com- pared with one year ago, when the corresponding commerce reached a value of $1,295,031,080. The total gain thus is more than $200,000,000. That New York {8 an increasing rev- nue carner for Uncle Sam’s treasury js evinced in that part of Collector Loeb's report dealing with the duties collected, It appears that with only three more business days, including today, Mr. Loeb has collected in dn- ties, In 1909, $217,520,879, as compared with $175.720.394 in the same period of 1908. The total gain in duties col- lected for 1909 over 1308 is $41,800,502. The volume of foreign exports p: ing through New York in 1909 had a value of $12.230,671, while in the same | period of 1908 the exports of such | goods were valued at $11973,904. The withdrawals from warehouse during 1909 were considerably in excess of Mr. Loeb re- ports that this calendar vear's with- drawals had in value of $106,023,961, compared with $96,118,736 one year ago. When it is consldered that this has been a tariff-revising year, with six months of jgitation, these figures do swell t8 phoportions which indicaté that the year 1910 may e a record- breaker in the way of foreign trade. A QUESTION OF TAXATION. | Chief Forester Pinchot is opposed to present system of taxing growing tim- ber and declares because other grow- | ing crops are not subject to taxation timber should not be. That the land only should be taxed. This appears to be a just conclus- fon and it will ind favor with owners of forests in all parts of the country: ‘When the states desirous of encourag- ing forestry are exempting the land from taxes for-a number of years to encourage the timber growers and to promote the culture by enhaneing the profits, it is certainly queer to find that some states tax standing timber which is a sure way of making timber less profitable to the grower and more expensive to the consumer. It is intimated that this promises to be a national political issue in ths near future, and it is not difficult to say on which side of the question thz grangers will stand. Chief Forester Pinchot's statement that taxing the value of uncut timber is penalizing the man who grows tress will be widely endorsed by the people. EDITORIAL NOTES. President Zelaya got “a place of | safety” for Christmas, and that is nal! so bad, after all The locker-clubs have been declared | legal in Alabama, and one prohibition town has 150 of them. In the future, clerks in the govern- ment employ at Washington must go when they are Uncle Sam is still ery tolerant. The rural free mail delivery man in New gland has to take a snow shovel with him to aid in the passage of snow drift that graft is a great mongst us than the We had sus- Now they say deal commoner vacation pay envelope. pected as much, It is pointed out that if apples will not cure alcoholism, apple-dumpling will settle an appetite so that it can- not recognize itself. If New York has built 38 churches and 98 theaters in four years, what Is her destiny? This inquiry cannot be answered in a minute. Norwich has & few business men who rather look at the ice on the walk than to improve their muscle and their The fact is, a woman's footsteps in the snow never look tiny and fasci- nating. Prudence requires that they should not exactly described. When the men elected to the may- oralty of cities In Massachusetts are below a certain grade they are re- ferred to by a class lurk mayors. The sofl of Missouri grew $37,000,000 worth more of produce than It did in 1908 this year; and the state still has plenty of undeveloped land. The toughest northeaster New Eng- | land’s coast has experienced in twen- | ty years was not so bad here when we come to read of results elsewhere. It Peary did not dare bring home the records of Dr. Cook, he might have ventured to Induce the two Es- to have come and told their Alf: Kin ves out t 0 g on a hunting expedition, he is off when he has to undergo an | improving his sneaked operation physical to a hospital in hopes of condition. It is more than likely that some of the census enumerators will try to use ieteries in swel An excited Chelsea man, who threw wite out of a second-story win- was surprised to find her sit- ting in a snowdrift waiting for him when he came out a Three distinguished astronomers decided that Peary did not come within a mile of the North pole; and he has not asked them yet if. they would know the pole should they sce it Happy thought for today: The Chief Ice-maker Is laying out a great | deal of free ice for hié children; but the only free thing likely to come to most of them from it is a fall or a broken leg. Would Enjoy the Job. arrie Chapman Catt's delight Mr: that women may become census takers is readily explainable. Of course, a woman would rejoice in backing an- other woman against the wall and her to admit her age.—Louis-| - CONCERNING WOMEN. The American College for Girls at Constantinople has recently been giv- en $150,000 by Miss Helen Gould. ‘The majority of women in France e wage earners in one capacity or another. The -average sum paid to dressmakes is 3 francs, or about 60 cents, a day. Mrs. Elizabéth Cochran Seaman, bet- ter known as “Nelly Bly,” the globe- girdler, is now the manager of the Irenclad works of Brooklyn, a con- cern which employs many hands. Mrs. Rosa Herman is president of the H. Herman Lumber and Furniture company, an American concern, which has branch_offices in London, Ham- burg and Natal. Mrs, Herrman lives in Stuyvesant square, New -York. Mrs. William Salter has been elected a member of the London county coun- cil. She is the who was defeated a few-days ago for parliament. Mrs. to house canvass and she credits her election to the support of women, She wag opposed by two men and she top- ped their combined vote, The chief planks in her platform were rents and lower taxes, two things which appealed especially to the v men in the district she now will rep- resent in the council NEEDLEWORK SUGGESTIONS Paris Thansfer Pattern No. 8143. Back and front design for & maga- zine cover. On ack the spray of roses and the word are omitted, This design is to be transferred to white or ored n, scrim, silk, damask, or denim, and embroidered in the Wal- jan _and long and short stitches, Price of pattern 10 cents. Order through The Bulletin compa- ny Pattern department, Norwich, Ct. Paris Transfer Pattern No. 8138, for a 16-inch center- piece to be stamped on white or col- ored linen and embroidered w ton floss. The pattern may be used on damask or art material and work- ed solid in colors. Price of pattern 10 cent 3ulletin co Norwich, C Order through The ny Pattern departme pa- Egg Sauce for Cod. Cook a tablespoonful each of butter and flour together until they which & pinch of soda and cook until you white sauce. Chop fine and stir it into add a raw this in very as been stirred ve a smooth hard bolled egg the sauce, then en light, beating Season with salt nd peppe hey are liked, add a few capers. Serve at once, or keep | hot In the inner vessel of a double boiler. Do not let' the sauce boil after adding the raw egi Risen Waffles. Beat stwo eggs light and stir into them a tablespoonful of sugar. Sift three cups of flour with one-half tea- spoonful of salt. Dissolve one-half yeast cake in a lit arm water, Add to the ¢ d sugar 4 pint of milk, three tablespoonfuls of melted butter, prepared flour and the melted steake. Beat very hard and set in warm until morning. Bake in heated and sreased waflle irons, Mother’s Steamed Corn Bread. One cup of corn meal, one cup of flour, one cup of sour milk, one-half cup of molasses. Mix flour and meal, add the milk and molasses, a teaspoon- ful of soda dissolved in a little hot water and stir in a vich of salt. Put into a greased tin and steam one and one-half hours. Eat while hot. Squash Fritters. Select a squash having a thin rind, cut into portions about two inches square, after removing the seeds and wife of a physician | ter made a house | Tower | bubble, | | then pour upon them a cup of milk in | ma | rather in the picture with rind, Lay them in a steamer and cook until nearly tender. Take them up carefully and put a bit of butter, and a dusting of salt, &wu- and grated cheese on each, t away to cool. ‘When cold sprinkle them with fine breadcrumbs, turn them over with a ‘bread knife and cover the other side with crumbs. Cook one tablespoon of fine chopped onion in two tablespoons of butter slowly until you have quite a strong odor of the onion, then draw it one side, and carefully brown the squares of squash in the hot butter. Old Fashioned Mirrors. Those who can indulge in it find the collecting of mirrors a fascinating fad. The real treasures, of course, are the antiques; naturally they are closely held. The shops show fascinating re- productions of mirrors manifestly new, but made on somewhat the same beau- tiful lines as those of a past century. Some of the smaller mirrors_have old French prints at the top. In these prints, too, one must distinguish the genuine from the reproduction, thouga to the uninitiated either is charming. For a wedding or other gift oné cannot go far astray if a mirror of this kind is selected, the size and shape being largely dependent upon the amount one wishes to pay for the gift. When fat has become again. Stir into the fat half a tea- spoonful of baking soda and a quart of water. Let it boil for a time, take off the scum that rises to the surface and set the pot aside to cool. Remove the cake of grease, scrape off what im- purities you can, and put the cake in a vessel on the stove, where it will melt very slowly. Let it remain until all the water has evaporated. What impurities there are will sink to the bottom. Then pour off the clear grease. Be very careful to avoid burns in treating fat. The Breakfast Omelet. A pleasing change in the morning omelet is to add chopped parsley to the egg mixture gefore it is cooked. Do not let the omelet brown before turn- ing. Washing Real Lace. To wash real lace, the best plan is to baste it to a strip of clean white muslin, catching each point carefully to the foundation. After soaking in suds made from white soap and warm water it should be thoroughly rinsed in clear water and then cold water. Bluing should not be used for laces, not even the imitation, In order to restore the ofl to the thread and also to soften the color, | the lace should be finally rinsed in skimmed milk, To iron, lay a clean rag over the strip of basted lace and press with a moderately warm iron. Remove the cloth, snip each basting thread with the scissors and the lace will look like new. A Child’s Coat. A smart little coat for a child from 4 to ¢ years of age seen recently was of smooth face cloth in a delightful shade of gray-blue on a smoke tone. The material hung full and loose from the shoulders and the coat displayed long. broad revers braided with sou- tache matching the color of the cloth. These revers ended in a sharp point below the waist line and closed with one handsome button. At this point, three rows of shir- | ring ran around the coat, not meeting in front, but left plain to suggest a panel. The shirring created a full short skirt similar to the French dress. Full sleeves ended in braided cuffs. THE MOTOR HOOD. The motor hood is the modern name for the old opera hood. It is an excel- lent invention and should be far more widely adopted than it is. The innovation of taxis brings mo- toring to and from entertainments within the average purse and the bare- headed woman is not so much afraid of cold as she is of disarranging her coiffure. She wants her head covered to keep the wind from blowing her locks helter skelter. This is as true when in the trolley and on the street as_in the motor. This hood which she wears is usu- ally of fur or seal plush or of heavy ancient brocade woven with gold and silver thri The latter is starting in on a wave of popularity it is e mod- ern_clothes. The hood is loose and wired away from the head over a rather square frame. This keeps out the wind and also protects the coiffure from disast- rous crushing. The new way of dressing the hair is so flat that one does mot have the same trouble as last winter, when the hoods first came in fashion, for then the masses of hair, human or otherwise, would mot have tolerated any covering but a most _capacious one. Today hair 1s not built up and out, but round about, So one can wear a somewhat snug hood. And it is a comfort to know that when one ar- rives at the opera, at a dinner, at the theater, that one’s hair is still neat and in its proper place. Even_ when one rides in a limou- sine, which does not permit a breath of a to stray across the locks, there is still the passage between the motor and the front doors. These two jour- neys taken on a wild and wintry night are quite enough to make one’s coif- fure look as though one had been playing tennis for a cup. Smart Velvet Slippers. Very smart are the severely plain velvet slippers, the sole trimming be- ing a flat bow of the velvet. Batter Trip Beat an egg hard wjth four table- spoonfuls of water, a tablespoonful discolored it | be clarified for use again and | merse in the batter. Fry in gld‘nn until both sides are well Beat the yolks of four eggs and add eight tablespoonfuls of pow- dered sugar. Stew ‘half d of stoned dates till tender, add a little lemon extract, and add this to the égg ang sugar mixture. Cut and fold in the whites of the four eggs well beat- en, with & sprinkling of orange peel. Bake in a slow oven and serve with a vanilla sauce. Kibba Balls. Run a pound and a half of the lower half of the round through the food chopper, and mix it well with a half cupful of chopped peanuts, a lit- the parsley, salt and pepper and a éash of paprika. Form into balls, roling each in eggs, and then in cracker and bread erumbs. Put the balls into a buttered baking dish, and pour over them a cupful of tomato, to which has been added a little but- ter. Bake in a moderate oven for three-quarters of an hour, Cuffs and Revers of Fur. One of the latest cries of fashion is revers and cuffs of fur. The cuffs are deep and the revers low rolling. The fur need not be the same as the muff and neckplece, but of a contrasting skin. The fur coats also have deep cuffs and low rolling revers, these us- ually being of long halr fur, different | from the body of the coat. Glazing Puff Paste. A writer in the January Delineator tells how to glaze puff paste. She says: “When a brown polished finish is desired the pastry should be brush- ed with egg glaze before baking. For this glaze allow one tablespoonful of water to each egg. The egg must not be beaten to the frothy stage, but merely enough to make it mix with the water. Where gloss, but no color, is desired, the white of the egg alone may be used. The yolk gives the vellowish brewn tinge so much ad- mired on real French pastry. Use a quill for this work and dust over with sugar. stiff Cruets for Oil and Vinegar. Two bottles blown = together, the necks at right angles, are designed for oil and vinegar. They are curious- looking articles, but those who have used them find them quite satisfac- tory. They cannot but recall the de- canters of our grandfathers' day which were blown in four sections. Bonnets for Ocean Travel. Travelers over seas in winter re- joice in the bonnets such as are worn by motorists. The head dress is very practical, and the shapes from which to make a selection are in such va- riety that one may easily find a bon- net that is becoming. Housekeeping Helps. Tay in a supply of flannel scrub cloths for floors, and cheesecloth bags slip on brooms and brushes to wipe down walls and woodwork. Richly Embroidered Tunics. Very handsome tunics are being shown as the season advances. Cut jet and cut jet in combination with steel or gil among the most strik- ing materfals used in embroidering these artistic garments. Serving Grape Fruit. A new hint in serving grape fruit is to flavor with maple syrup. The pulp loosened from the skin as usual with a sharp knife, after which the center filled up with the syrup, whicH must be the pure sugar melted down. This adds a new and very de- licious flavor. Currant jelly, too, has been discovered excellent. Hot Egg and Milk. Egg and milk flavored with va- nilla extract, well shaken, sprinkled over the top with pulverized nutmeg and piping hot is for sale at all the big shops and drug stores. Small salt vafers and squares of $100—REWARD—$100 The readerd of this paper will be plessed to learn that ther is at lesst one dreaded disease that sci- ence has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is catarrh. Hall's Cstarrh Cure is the only postitive cure now known to the medieal fratemnity. Catarrh being s constitational disease, requires & eonstl- tutional trestment. Hall's Catarth Cure s taken internally, _aeting _dire tipon the Blood and mucous surfaces of the sstem, therety destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the pa- tlent strength by bullding up the consiitution and assisting natuse in doing its work. The proprieors ® much faith In fta eurative powers that they 4 Dollars for any caso that it falls lst of testimonials Address ¥. 3. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Scld by all Drugsists, Tc. Tuke Hall's Family Pills for eonstipation. ofter One Hun. to eure. Send fe Looking One's Best. It's a woman's delight to look her best, but pimples, skin eruptions, sores and boils rob life of joy. Listen! Buck- len’s Arnica Salve cures-them; makes the skin soft and velvety. It glorifies the face. Cures pimples, sore eyes, cold SOr cracked lips, chapped hands. Try Infallible for piles. , at The Lee Osgood Co.'s. Mrs. Joyce, Claremont, N. H., writes: “About a year ago 1 bought two bottles of Foley's cured me of a Kidney Remedy. It vere case of kidney trouble of several years' standing. It certainly is a grand good medicine, and I heartily recommend it.” The Lee & Osgood Co. CHILDREN WHO ARE SIZKLY Mothers who value their own comfort and the wel- fare of their chlldren should peves be without a box of Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children. for use throughout the season. They Break up Colds, Constipation. Teething Disorders. Cure Forerisness. Di: Headache SE . Olmsted, HOME GARMENT MAKING. Sabvion The Bulletin’s Pattern ¥ BOY'S RUSSIAN SUIT. Parls Pattern No, 2673 — All Seams Allowed. Tan corduroy has been used for this jaunty model, which closes at the left side of the front with small brass but- t Two narrow backward-turning tucks at either side of the front and back, stitched from shoulder to hem, give' the required fullness below the walst line and have the effect of ‘mak- ing the front and back look like a panel. The belt, which is slipped through straps 'at the under-arm seams, is of tan Jeather, or it may be made ‘of the matérial. The collar and wristbands are of tan colored cloth, o the sleeves may be plaited into cuff depth at the wrist, and stitched with brown silk. The knickerbockers are the regulation shape, gathered to the knees by elastic run'through the hem casing. The pattern is in five sizes—2 to 6 years. For a boy of 4 years the suit requires 4% yards of material 27 inch- wide, yards 36 inches wide or 2% ‘vards 54 inches wide. Price of pattern; 10 cents. Order through The Bulletin Company, Pattern Dept., Norwich, Conn. Fancy Native Chickens Fancy Native Fowls Fancy Native Ducks Just the thing for Sunday dinner. Apples, Basket Grapes, Malaga Grapes, Oranges, Grape Fruit, Ete PEOPLE’S MARKET, 6 Franklin St. novidd JUSTIN HOLDEN, Prop SION 10c Evenings Reserved Seats 20c | Pictores neavy weiaHT—ELVER | EN—JvooLer ALIKIN BROS. —*75/% ncers one strina—MUSICAL IRVANG—vioLmsT — THE MORRELLE SISTERS IN HIGH CLASS SONGS— changodonday, Wedoosday and Friday WM. F. BAILEY (Successor to A. T. Gerdner) Hack, Livery and Boarding Stable 12-14 Bath Street. HORSE CLIPPING A SPECIALTY. Telephone 883. apr25a THE RUBBER STORE RECOMMEND THEIR Goodyear Quality Bools Rubber [Felis Arelics on Gloves and Mittens, 24c to $3.00. Working Coats, $1.38. Hot Water Bottles, 750 up. Alling Rubber Co., 74 Main St, Norwich, 158 Main St, New London. Wholesale (si5.) Retail MME. TAFT, Clairvoyant and Palmist, has been call- ed out of town. The public will be notified upon her return. novi7d What and Where 1869 ~ CHRISTMAS - 1909 We extend to the great Amerlcan public an invitation to call and inspect our choice line of Hollday Footwear— useful and sensible gifts for old and young. Courteous treatment and satis- faction guaranteed P. CUMMINGS. PREMIUMS. 52 Central Ave. dec10d — e H. COOPER, Upholsterer 259 West Main Street. MATTRESS MAKING a Specialty. Mail orders promptly attended ‘to. dec29d 1o Buy In Norwich Joseph F. Smith, FLORIST 200 Main Street, Norwich. Ivia PURE OLIVE OIL [, There are many brands, but only one best brand. LAPURA leads them all. it direct from Italy. We We import 1l it at & low price. Let us supply you. 0. FERRY, Tel. 703. 336 Franklin St Free delivery to all parts of the city. dec24d Custom Grinding TUESDAYS and FRIDAYS at YANTIC ELEVATOR. A. R. MANNING, Yantle, Conn. phone. dec14d OUR WORK meets the approval of the people, Rogers’ Domestic Laundry. Tel. 958. Rear 37 Franklin Street. ®ept27d critical ‘DR, JONES, Dentist, | 35 SHETUCKET ST. Room 10 ’Phone 32-3 maylid Red Cross Stamps and Xma: | Cards at Thamesville Store and | | all the rest of the good things for your dinner. C 8. Falrclough, Prop. Special The Osgood, Suite Telephone 824. THE Studio Specialty Shop Silk and Cloth Gowns values $25.00 to $40.00 Al $15.00 Selling 6, 32 Church St., Norwich, Conn. !/ Boyle’s over v | Weakiiah, RE THEATRE CHARLES FEATURE PICTURE: B A Trap for Santa Claus GREAT BIOGRAPH SUCCRSE Master Harry Noonan, IN SELECTED SONG PROGRAMME. Matinee, Ladies and Cl novisd ren, Academy of Skating in Frochlichkelt Hall, Taiman St., Opens Today al 2.30, and skating will continue until 1480 P. m. NO INTERMISSION. Best Skates and Best Music. Rinfs in Bridgeport, New Haven, Hartfewd, Springfleld and Worcester. deciod — e Music. NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teacher of Plane, -~ Central Bullding, Room 48, CAROLINE H. THOMPSON Teacher of Music 46 Washington Street. L. H. BALCOM, . Teacher of Plane. il 29 Thames St Lessons given at my_resldence oy &g the home of the ‘\IPII. Same met! an {sed at Schiawenka Conservator: e oo A. W. JARVIS is the Leading Tuner ig Easiern Connecticut, 'Phone 518-5, 15 Clairmount Awe, sept22d JAMES F. DREW Piano Tuning and Repairiay Best Vork Only, "Phone 432-8. 18 Porkine Aves sept2la FALL STYLES including the latest patterma, ready for inspection. Quality, minus the high pries sting, telis the story of our suse @ Whether you wish to order or not, we want to show you the new line and fashions for FALL. THE JOHNSON CO., Merchant Tailors, Chapman Bldg. 65 Broadway. HOLIDAY Wines and Liquors For the Hollddy Trade we bave & complete assortment of Pure Wines and Liquors. FREE! FREE! A bottle of fine California Wine wi!l to each purchaser of 766 and Jan. %4, 1810, Calendars to our patrong, JACOB STEIN, Telephone 26 93 West Main St deodsd FRESH STOCK THIS WEEK Cod, Polleck, Huddock, Halfbug Smelts, Salmon, Muckerel, Shell Fish of all kinds. ladd’s Fish Markel, 23, 32 Water Strest. Handsom

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