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deorwich ‘ilfil_i.: ‘and Goufied, 114 YEARS OLD., price. 1Ze & week; 50c & year. s months e Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Conn., as second-class matter. e Telephone Cafls: ° Bulletin Businéss 480, Bulletin Editorial 35-3 Bulletin Job Office, 35-6. Willimantlc Office, Reom 3. Murray Butlding. Telephone. 210. Jan. 14, 1910. Norwich, Frida The Circulation of . The Bulletin. The Bulletin has the largest cir- culation of any paper im Hastern Commecticut, and from three to four times larger than that of any in Norwich. It is delivered to over 3,000 of the 4,053 houses ia Nor- wich, and read by ninety-three per cent. the people. In Windham it is delivered to over 500 houses, in Putnam and Danielson fo over 1,00, and fn all of these places it is considered the local daily. Fastern Conmecticut has forty- nine towss, one hundred and sixty- five postoffice districts, and forty- ome rural free delivery routes. The Bulletin is sold In every town amd em all of the R. F. D. routes in Eastern Commecticut. CIRCULATION 1901, AVETREE ....cocaseccnc.. HAI2 -5.920 1905, average THE CITY BEAUTIFUL. The City Beautiful is being con- stantly preached now, and it has back of it something more than maudlin sentiment, a sentiment which smacks of righteous advancement as well as beautiful scenic effects. If any one has covered the purpose of this move- ment any better than the Rev. Will- m H. Butler of Northampton, Mass., we do not know who the man is. He says: “But clean streets, pretty homes and recreation centers are not all that is neceasary to make the City Beautiful Brick and mortar, fountains and flow- ers. do rot of themseives make a Holy city. Unless its foundations are deeply imbedded in truth, unless it foursquare to righteousness, un- it be lighted with the glory of God, its beauty will be no finer than the golden glitter of a Monte Carlo. So, more important than the material slde of city life, §s the moral side. And there is nothing which would so raise the standard of municipal morality as the feeling on the part of each citizen that he himself is partly responsible for the things that are going on with- n the city limits. “Josiah Strong has said that ‘n the sverage American city there law-abiding men than crimiffls, more people interested in pure sovernment than in corrupt, more good men than bad: but we have bad govermment be- of the bad citizenship of good e, more causc men.’ “Who ere the men who stand in the way of reform? They are the ones who vote mechanically for mem- bers of the city government without stopping to consider whom the can- didate represents, whether he stands a special interest or whether he esents the average tax payer. are the men who haven't suffi- t interest to vote one way or the her; the stay-at-homes, the blanks, the spineless creatures who can’t walk to the polis and register their convic- tons. “The modern city challenges the church. If we are to meet this chal- lenge we must get into touch with actual conditions, We must study our town as well as our Bible, so that we may know what is going on. Every- thing that fosters public spirit, that creates a healthy public sentiment, that wipes out lines of division, wheth- er they be raclal, political, social, ev- ervthing that brings all the people closer together and unites them in the T to further the common good should receive the loyal support of cltiz 5 Thers is nothing the matter with this conception of a beautiful city. is nothing to make a citizen pause. It calls for the action of all good men. A NEW DATE FOR INAUGURATION When this movement Is started right t ought not to be difficult to bring sbout the desired change. A prop- osition to amend the constitution so that the president can be inaugurated on April 30 instead of on March 4th is_likely to be made this session, if Washington has its spectacles on right. Washington is interested in having the change made if it has not a word to say about it. Those who g0 to see the inauguration, all who have ever been, and all who will ever go. will form only a small minority of the voters on the proposition. The Test of us, save as we are interested generally, have no par- hoice. The fourth of March traditional day: the fourth of ch wil suit most of us just as well as the 30th of April. Still, if 1t will make Washington happy to receive its guests in spring costume instead of e ing itself to the harsh winds and weather of March, there is little to object to in the proposed change of the programme. We agree with a contemporary that says: “Washing- ton does not have much to be thank- ful for, and if this privilege will add to its stock of thankfulness, we see no really good reason why it should not be generally agreed with.” g e ke S ill blame Mayor Fitzgerald ughs at Hibbard for the next Hibbard doesn't appear to been much more than a political valsion the support . of a single Boston does not warrant the ignoring of the press. fluke! It was a politi- new mayor of Boston's decla- fhat “he is unbampered by aises” gives rise to the inquiry, 1 was e ever hampered by -even promise?’ Dr. Cook is no longer a member of a single Arctic club, hence he has no _further use for the fur clothes he used to wear. A dime museum might ap- ~veciate thasa J ‘While the terfere with private business there is no doubt of its right to protect its citjzens from degrading conditions, and this makes proper the request of Federated Labor that the government ook into the conditions this great cor- poration forces upon American work- ‘men. The charge persistently made against the Pittsburg steel producing district is that it contains the most repulsive and unhealthful slums up- on the American continent. The steel industry made thbse slums. The cor- poration, when it obtained control of the larger part of the production, did nothing to improve conditions among its immense forces of wage-earners. It has proceeded to bend every energy to squeeze dividends out of the ore and out of the flesh which toiled amid the flame and steam. Anyone from Pittsburg will teil you that a "hunkey” is hardly considered a human credture in the mills, The millionaires in this great indus- try ought to be ashamed of the report made by the inquirers into this bus- iness at the expense of the Russell Sage funfi, which, among other things, said: “An altogether incredible amount of overwork by everyone, reaching the extreme in the twelve-hour shift for seven days in the week. “Low wages for the great majority of the laborers . . . so low as to be inadequate to the maintenance of a normal American standard of living. “An absentee capitalism, with bad effects, strikingly analogous to those of absentee landlordism.” This is a focal point worthy of the Federation of Labor- and of the gov- ernment, and had it held down to this alone it would have been quite as like- ly to have effected reforms, PINCHOT AT THE WEST. Mr. Pinchot must feel proud of the way in which his record is viewed and the hearty support he wins by it among the steadfast Taft .republicans. The Toledo Blade, which is a relia- ble interpreter of the feeling of the western people, says: “The country will understand. It will sense the president’s point of view. But that it will concur in that view- point The Blade does not believe. Pinchot and his works are dear to the American heart. He has been a good and faithful servant. His methods, impatient of official restraint, daring, dashing, have savored of the Roose- veltian habit of thought and action. He has defled lawbreakers and loot- ers, big and little. He has made an obscure government department a center of interest and a national pride. And it will be difficult, indeed, for the whole people to believe that an nfraction of orders, however glar- ing, can justify his discharge or that the gain to_official discipline can off- set the loss to the public service which his removal entails. “The hope will be that the coming inquiry will dring Taft and Pinchot together again. They belong together. Both men of high ideals and unques- tioned integrity, both earnest and honest servants of the people, their paths should be parallel in the re- maining years of the administration. They think differently, but to the same end. It must be the ardent wish of the friends of both that their battles for right and justice may yet be fought side by side.” EDITORIAL NOTES. Boston may congratulate itself that Fitzgerald will not last till 1915, when she contemplates making her finest exhibit. Happy thought for today: The man who beats his fellow man will see a day and hour when he will see him- self as he is. Should a democratic house be re- turned next November, Speaker Can- non will then realize just what he has cost his party. The prediction that meat is going still higher makes the farmer feel well, the non-meat eaters do not mind and the rest can sweat. ‘The man who can keep a digry every day in the year is surprised to see i the end how little real meat 365 days” Jottings can bring forth. Some of the Copenhagen scientists would like to see Commander Peary's data and observations. Do they know what an impertinence this is? A western exchange says that the market reports are good enough to be played on the piano for the men who have pigs ready for the market. It is predicted that artificial wings will be commoner than bicycles were by and by, and that whole families will 1ly to the resorts for Sunday dinners. A western minister having found that “the devil is a myth” a con- temporary takes occasion to say that “this is good news to the Sugar trust.” The nurses in a New York hospital struck because the management de- clined to put Miss before their names. This is worth a good deal to a nurse. An exchange has discovered the fact that the goose that laid the golden egg made its reputation when hen’s eggs were selling for 12 cents a dozen. Senator Stephenson has confessed that it cost him half a million to get his political honors. Honors that cost so much border upon the dishonora- ble. The almanacs all read “below the average temperature,” until next June, but eastern Connecticut truck grow- ers are apt to~get their peas in in March. Four years of Fitzgerald ought to be all that Boston can bear. Let's hope that it will not take eight years | to make straigh crooked. . what he leaves A_Rose Colored Statement. Miss Jane Adams, the brillant head | ull House, says: ‘We women have still much to fight for. ~Our battle will be long and difi- cult. Well, let us frankiy admit it. There is nothing to be gained by such roes colored phrases as William White employed, “Willimm White's brother had killed @ man in cold blood. ““Weil, William, how about vour brother?” a visitor to the town asked him one day aftor the trial. “Well’ said William, ‘they've put him_in jail for a month.’ “ ‘That's rather a light sentence for a <old blooded murder,” said the zentle- man. “Yes, sir! William admitted, ‘but at the month’s end - theyre going to Tess. ‘hang him.’ ”—Detroit Free P “Who 1s that fellow who has been advertising for a chauffeur?’ “The author of ‘Paddle Your Own Canoe. —Cleveland Leads» They had everything arranged with the exception of the date of their wed- ding, and another matter that was now under discussion. He owned four acres of land that fronted upon the road, one extremity of which was a gentle rise and other a decided hill The question was, where was the new house to be erected? “I can’'t see why you deliberately choose the less desirable site,” said Ed- ward, sulkily, as they warmed to the twentieth consideration of the disput- ed point. “The high land is the nat- ural building spot.” - “But a ladder is almost necessary for ome to get there,” she retorted. “All that's needed is a willing mind, and the place is sightly and airy.” exclaimed. there without “Decidedly airy!” M “Winter gales strike mercy, and then it is frightfully bleak.” “Warmth within will overcome that. It 1s an ideal site, and if we bulld there all mankind must necessarily look up to us.” “Yes, and If the wind is turned on, perhaps see us sailing through the air from the window: ‘Better that than to be washed away from the lower land by the water from the hill.” They smiled as they talked and each tried_to_show forbearance, but they failed. Every foot of the land was fit for building, but, starting from a dif- ference of opinion, they had gone on until neither would see the opposite of the question. This night their remarks gradually grew more intemperate, and they ended with an open rupture. Words were spoken they mutually re- gretted afterwards, and when Edward hurried away to catch the train for the city, where he was employed, they parted without even a good might. Next. pride had its inning and played the mischief with their better judg- ment. Both were angry and stubborn he did not come again to the village, and she did not send for him, so they remained apart. Three_ weeks later Miriam had a shock. Men were seen at labor on the hill, and soon the whole village knew was among the first to make the dis- covery, but she summoned artificial courage and met all comments with evasion so skilful that nobody suspect- ed her grief. In time the cellar was covered, and, watching the building grow, she loathed the sight. Twice, according to report, Edward came to inspect proceedings, but he did not call upon her. Her mind was full of questions that were food for bitter thought. Was Edward building with the idea that, later he could compel her to submit? Or had he chosen some other woman for mis‘ress of his home? One day as she was waiking along the road a young and pretty lady left the grounds and they met in spite of Miriam’s wishes. The stranger looked at her amiably and mildly and asked some questions about the village, then, - g with the remark: “!ou-ao.l-nguuvemvhcnfln went, but there was somethi to seen besides boards and On the farther side a bright light shone ‘nd‘h lt.;omur' mfln not to be mistaken; the use was fire, though as yet only in the first stage. Dismay came upon her and she impuisively ran to a door. left unlocked it offered no barrier and she ran inside. The light in the en- dangered room showed her an old broom, and—bewilderment fell upon her. Edward was there. “The fire is out,” he ;u “y;l.l:n.;l suppose it was due to the carel of some workmen, but you—why, Mir- jam, you deserve a Carnegie medal for your heroism™” His voice rang with admiration, but she thought of something else and the tribute did not pléase her. 3 “I @id it for your bride-elecf!” she exclaimed, sharply. “My-—for whom?” . “Your wife that is to be. I met her a fortnight ago, and, really, she is very nice. She ought not to lose this house on the hill. Edward caught his breath audibly. “Miriam, he said, h “let me make confession. house nor that part of the land, for I sold it a few days after I last saw you. Another man built the house, and tho lady you mentiof is to marry him. T've known that penplegou‘ht I was building, but I was an; and I kept quiet. But, Mirlam, anger does not pay and I want to be done with it. ‘What I do want is to confess and build on the part of the lot I still own. You were right about its being the best site—" “I am not sure of tlha&"mfllflbl inter- rupted, her voice barely audible, th:.-how. I am content, and, frank- 1y, I was coming to see you when I no- ticed signs of the fire. So you fought the flames thinking it was for the other girl. Well, it was, but she is nothing to me. You are everything, but if you can forgive my stubborn folly—" “] was as much to blame as you.” “That I will not admit, but as for the future—Miriam, shall we build on what is left of thie lot? Shall we live there together?” He opened his arms, and Miriam took refuge there.—Boston Post. THE OUT CASTES OF INDIA. Fifty Million to Whom the Hindus Refuse to Grant Any Rights. The out castes of Hindu society form all over India a distinct section of the population, numbering about 50, 000,000. They are descendants of va- rious races who inhabifed India before the Aryan invasion, and who were. through varifous causes, reduced to a state of slavery or serfdom. Some of them were the slaves of ruling races before the Aryans entered India. Certainly in South India slavery was a regular institution long before the appearance of the Aryans. But some of the servile classes of the present day have in historic times fallen from a high estate and were originally ruling classes in the countries where now they are slaves. Sir W. W. Hunter says that the Bhars were formerly the monarchs of the center and east of the province of Oudh, in North India; that they were the traditional fortbuilders to whom all ruins are popularly as- signed, and that they were reduced to slavery by a Mohanmmedan ruler of Jaunpur. So again, he says: “The Gaulls are ancient and ruling races of the central provinces, the Ahams of Assam, and the Gouds, Chandelas and Bundelas of Bundelkund are other in- stances of crushed races. In centers of the Aryan civilization the aborigi- nal peoples have been pounded down in the mortar of Hinduism into the low castes and out castes on which the labor system of India rests.” The same 1is true of the Parelyars of South India. There is a great deal of evidence to show that originally they were the ruling race in the Tamil country. They had their own priests, the Valluvas, who were priests to the Pallava kings In what are now the ‘Tanjore and Trichinopoly districts, be- fore the advent of the Brahmans. The greatest poets among the Tamil peo- ple, the weaver poet Tiruvalluvar and the poetess Avvalyar, who wrote about the ninth century A. D. before the Brahmans have secured a dominant-in- fluence in the extreme south of India, both belong to the Parelyar race, and even to this day there is a familiar saying all over the Tamil country which literally names “Parelyar the elder brother of the Brahman.” Marsh- man in his “History of India,” (Vol L, e 21), says: “A Tamil literature ex- isted before the introduction of Brah- manism, and some of the best authors in that janguage were of the tribe now stigmatized as Parelyars, which incon- testably proves that the Parelyars were * * * a highly cultivated people, who were reduced to subjec- tion and degraded by the triumphant Brahmans.” ‘These out caste races are called by different names in different parts of Indla and have various occupations. Large numbers are agricultural labor- ers, many are leather workers, some are weavers, others again are scaven- gers and sweepers. But _whatever their occupation, they are invariably treated by the Brahmans and the up- per castés as degraded and polluted. As a rule, the Hindus feel no sympathy for them and are unwilling to concede them any rights whatever.—Nineteenth Century. The Remarkable Story of a Russlan Spy. For mary years the revolutionary situation in Russia has been in some particulars a puzzle. But “The Story of Eugene Azeff,” as told in McClure's Magazine for January by David Sos- kice, makes some things clearer. Eu- gene Azeff was in the employ of Rus- sia’s secret political police system un- der the administrations of two chiefs. He was known as an “agent provo- cateur.” While protected by the police it was his business to become a mem- ber of the revolutionary party and to be useful in provoking other members to deeds of violence and then to betray them. He did this successfully until unmasked by an editor of a revolutione ary journal. He so gained the confi- dence of other members that with @if- ficulty they distrusted him. He plan- ned a n ber of the assassinations, notably, Von Plehve and Grand Duke Sergius. He is charged with killing Father Gapon, who led the people on “Bloody Sunday” to present a petition to the “Little Father.” The risk of as- sassination was taken in order to ap- prehend as many as possible of the revolutionists and secure their execu- tion. Some were convicted simply on the word of Azeff to the secret police head. There seemed to be no crime to which he would refuse te stoop. When finally the central committee of the revolutionary party gained the evidence against Azeff he escapad. As a spy he was shrewd, tactful, bold and treacherous PA CLORE’S CORN PRIZES. He Wins So Many That the Family Can Keep House With Them. Near White'and, in Johnson county, Indiana, lives a farmer. His farm con- of 130 acres, and he gets up at clock every morning, and has holes in_his overalls. His name is Leonard B. Clore, and he js nothing less than the corn King of the world, A dozen years ago Mr. Clore besan to specialize in corn. To- day he sets the world’s pace in this cereal. The Cldre family very nearly keeps house h father's corn prizes. In the list is everything from a manure spreader to a piano, including watch, clock, stove, mandolin, lawn swing, an automobile, a quarter section of land in Texas and a $1,000 cash prize. One of the incidentals is a silver loving cup. valued at $1,000. Mr. Clore decided a few years ago that instead of spending so much time to improving their land, the corn- growers should give more thought to improving their breed of corn. All his - efforts have been in that direc- tion. In a specially built barn he ger- minates the corn in boxes of earth kept at the right temperature in early spring by gasoline stoves. Thus he knows before planting what percentage of the grains will germi- nate. Two ears of corn may look alike but the vitality of one may be much higher than that of the other. Mr. Clore is alsc a judge of what it takes to make a perfect car. Selecting the best ears each fall and planting the bardlest grains in the spring, he has in a great way eliminated chance in corn growing.—Hampton’s Magazine. Senator McCumber’s Banquet. .. Senator McCumber or North Dakota had a dinner at the house of one of his rural constituents last fall which was costly. It consisted of boiled potatoes, bread and Arbuckle’s best coffee. The sena- tor and his secretary indulged in it, and were glad to get it. But before they got through it had separated the senator from $21. Mr. McCumber and his secretary were touring the state in an auto, fix- ing up such political fences as ap- peared to be in need of repair. On this occasion the machine got stuck out on the prairie. The senator and his secretary -went to the nearest farmhpuse, and while the machine was being pried loose dimner time came. They were invited to have dinner, and accépted. Dinner consisted of the menu as given. It is not the custom for North Da- kota country folk to take money for a meal, and so the senator handed a dollar bill to the small boy of the family. The small boy had no scruples about accepting it, and did so. Then the visitors went outside the house and were contemplating the con- tinuation of thelr journey when the farmer pointed out near at hand a small church which- had, he sald, just been built. The debt incurred rested heavily on the shoulders of the meager congregation. He suggested that if the senator felt inclined, any small contribution would be thankfully re- ceived. “Of course, T'll be glad to,” said Sen- ator McCumber, reaching for his rol The senator ‘expected to give small amount, as a five, but whi scanned his supply of he currency he found he had nothing but twenties. He could do nothing else under the cir- cumstances than peel off one of the yellow backs. The farmer accepted it with thanks, and the senator climbed into his auto, lost in contemplation of The report may be cost by applying to the director of the geological survey at Washington. by New Secientific ratus. A new reglon of wonders, quite un Koo omoned. Up by @ Commmation of een ope: up a coml n the ultrami and the cinemato- graph. The former is an ordinary mier @« powerful ray of and, while it does not accurately reveal sizes and shapes, organisms and ether solid les far too small to be even detected by ordi- to appear Wonders Disclosed pa as pright and their position and movements are clearly shown. ‘With great care and patience, Dr. Comandon, a French in , has photographed upon moving films both microscopic _and ultramicroscopic scenes, adapting for each the illumina- tion of an intense pencil of light from an eleotric arc. In the cinematograph the films throw upon a screen moving pictures, and the objects thus repro- duced may be magnified as much as 10,000 diameters—an enlargement that would make a flea as big as a si: story house, if o immense a creature could be shown entire. ‘The movements, in the blood, of cor- puscles and disease germs are among the instructive views that can be out. One set of moving pic- tures shows the blood of a mouse in- fected with & trypanmosome, similar to that of sleeping sickness, and the or- ganisms—actually 1-12.50 to 1-2.50 of an inch long—appear as swift-moving giant caterpillars & foot or more in length. In another series of pictures a tad- pole’s tail is a mass of cells traversed by a_river of biood, which whirls the oval blood corpuscles along like pebbles in a mountain torrent. Sympathy for Mark Twain. A profound sympathy from all quar- ters of the civilized earth will be di- rected to Samuel L. Clemens (Mark Twain) in connection with the crush- ing affliction that befell him on the eve of Christmas. it a pathos there is in the simple declaration of Mr. Clemens following the tragic death of his daughter Jean: “She is gone, poor child. She was all I had left, ex- cept Clara, who married Mr. Gfl.bfle'A witsch lately and has just arrived in Europe.” There is no writer of Bng- lish more universally beloved than Mark Twain. His individuality is no longer hidden behind a pen name. The people of two hemispheres know him and all will grieve with him. The pathos of the bereavement is heightened from the fact that the fa- ther had but just returned from Ber- muda in order to spend Christmas with his daughter. On the evening before the sad mishap they had talked over and arranged plans which would have kept them together during the remain- der of the winter. The daughter had asked that he defer his return from Bermuda until March, when she had promised to accompany him. This had beep mutually agreed upon, and then, w hours later came the tragedy. It is, of course but the repetition of the universal human story: “The moving finger writes, and having writ, moves on; nor all your piety nor wit shall lure it back to cancel half a lin And yet the flood of sympathy that will be poured upon the lonely father will not be altogether in vain.—- Baltimore American. TS 100 T MATINEES Ge—3 SHOWS DAILY—2.30, 7, S.45 3 SHOWS DALY 2.30, 7 and 8.45 AUDITORIOM ™ & PM% Vaudeville FASHIONPLATE INSTRUMENTALI&TS IMPERIAL MUSICAL. TRIO Introducing MISS MAY DELAIR! Thur., Fri, Jan. 13,14, 15 Admission 10 cents. The Senatorial Silence. fmpression seems to be univer- l&'lr:l:lt lt".fdv. Vardaman is elected to the senate, the stock of senatorial sl lence will be thereby greatly diminish- ed~Houston Post. Bob H: La Tollette persists in acting as it he didm't think it wae necessary to investigate Ballinger.—®ittsburg Dis- patch. Bach railroad tie treated by the oil process takes up about throe gallons of oil. WM. F. BAILEY (Successor to A. T. Gerdner) Hack, Livery na Boarding Stable 12-14 Bath Street. HORSE CLIPPING A SPECIALTY. ‘Telephone $83. aprzsa MISS M. C. ADLES, Hair, Scalp and Face Speciatist l HEAVY HATS HURTFUL. Heating the head by heavy winter millinery means dry scalp and hair. To keep bota heaithful, frequent and scientific attention is necessary. Have Miss Adles tone up your scaip. She will be in Norwich entire week of January 10th. WAUREGAN HOUSE, Norwich New York. Boston. Telephone 704. jan10d PIANOS PIANOS PIANO Special prices this week Yerrington's dec3od Decided. Get Acquainted Molasses Puffs, Old Fashioned the banquet he had just attended at $10 per plate—Philadelphia Times. No Combination to Beat It. The fogs of London, the ice of Etah and the sleets of Sleetville, Sleet county, all combined cannot rob Rich- mond of its international climatic su- premacy—Atlanta Constitution. Important Part of His Anatomy. Considerable relief is feit in the statement that when Mr. Carnegie fell the other day it was only his knee, and not his pen hand, that was injured. —Pittsburg Gazette-Times. Pen of a Ready Writer. Mayor Gaynor's pen is the pen of a ready writer. His _epl puzzles make it fair to refer to him as the incomplete letter writer of his S ANTnE Constitution. William R. Hearst appears to be the most eminent “man of letters” in the country. And he wrote none of them. 29c Special FOUNTAIN Allready for inspection Saturday morning A Few Hints FOR THE SUNDAY SWEET TOOTH Old Fashioned Creams, Peanut Brittle, Peanut Butterscotch Flakes, Old Fashioned Molasses Candy Velvet Molasses Kisses, Cocoanut Molasses Vaffy, Iexican Kisses,, Walnut Kisses, Walnut Butterscotch Kisses, Peterson & Tyler PETERSON & TYLER, 145 Main Slregl. with the New Vanilla Puffs, Maple Creams,. Chocolates. World’s Representative C “His Reformation.” THRILLING WESTERN HOLDOW. MISS FLORENCE WOLCOT! IN SELECTEW SONG PROGRAMM Matinee, Ladies ahd Children, L) Jan3a CAROLINE H. THOMPSON Teacher of Music 46 Washington Street. b . Teacher of Pimme “Shames BE ven at my residence or a8 thl@:lons the pupil. Bame o Gned 4t Behawenka &'-w.fl'c"‘,'g’! Hn. oott & F. C. GEER - E TUNER 122 Prospect 8¢, % Tel. 611, Nll“.“ N A. W. JARVIS is the Leading Tuner i Eastern Connecticut. 'Phone 518-5. 45 Cilalrmount Muw. sept22d JAMES F. DREW Piano Tuning and Reparizy Best Vork "Phrone 423-8 sept23a S L JOSEPH BRADFORD, Book Binder. Blank Books Made and Ruled te Owder, 108 BROADWAY. Telephone 363 CARDINAL FLO a Cardwell’s. It will please you. Try it. Jan7d FRESH STOCK THIS WEEK Cod, Pollock, Haddock, HaMbvu, Weakflsh, Smelts, Salmon, Madserel, Shell Fish of all kinds. Ladd’s Fish Market, 32 Water Street. Zero Weather Calls for Fur Robes and 1 Blankets. We have & fine stock of Wentana Robes, also Horse Blankets for street and stable, and Sleigh Bell, K Right quality at right prices. The Shetucket Harness Co 283 Main Street. WM. C. BODE. Janda Telephone 866-4. 'No Building in Norwich | will ever be too large for us to bufid. All we ask is an opportunity te bid | for the job. Competition iy keen ama | compets el figuring, but years of | experience has taught us the way te | figure close and do first-class wofik. C. M. WILLIAMS, General Contractor and Bulles, 218 MAIN STREET. ! "Phone 370. mayIve | Delivered to Any Part of Norwich the Ale that is aclnowiedged to be the | best on the market HANLEY'S | PEERLESS. A telephone order will | receive prompt attengion D. J. McCORMICK, 20 Franklin St mey29d ;fiose Bowling Alleys, | LUCAS HALL, 49 Shetucket Street. - 3. J. C. GTONE. Prop RE 15 no adverUsing medi In E Connectc - fapien Conneciiont sanal o Tha Bal