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SOLD ‘BY ferguson & Charbonneau, Official Watch Insnectol‘s N.-Y, N. H. & H. R. feb10d Every Day in the year, ai mid-day or at mid-night, dawn or dusk, any- time and all the time, The Roud Instantancous Automatic Gas Water Heater furnisites hot water in unlim- ited quaniity in ali parts of the house. Turn the Faucet, The Ruud Does the Rest. Call and see one in operation. Gas & Electrical Dep't., 821 Main Street, dec24d Alice Buiiding. < USE.Co end have your property insured at once. You cannot tell what moment fire may destroy your valuable belong- ings. Our list of Companies are the| wery bhest, and our rates as low as the | lowest. ISAAC S. JONES, [nsurance Agt. Richards Building, 91 Main Street. feblldaw We Have a Great Variety of Caoned Fish Just the thing to have in the house for emergency—and incidentally they are very satisfying at other times. — ORDER NOW — FEI)FI.E’ S MA RKET, 6 Frankiin St. JUSTIN HOLDEN, feblld Prop. Enamels INTERIOR DECORATIONS Will dry hard over night and produce a bright, glossy epamel finish oa furniture, picture frames, vases, or any- article of interior use to which they may be applied. Seventeen beautiful shades. GHAS. 035000 & 2., 45 and 41 Commerce Strest, flofiyl_flll, i (;ONN. A Fine Assoriment of .. -MILLINERY at ifttle prices: MRS. G. P. STANTON, S NOTICE Louise Frankl!in Miner is now octld Dr. located In her new ofice, Breed Hall. ! Room 1 ° ¥ Olyhoun.l 4 p. m. Tfl"w !FALLING HAIR| ?Many People Have a Simplg «Way of Stopping It. It was Dr. Sangerbond, of Paris, who first discovered that dandruff and falling hair were caused by a mic- robe. And remer y is = now that Parisian Sue— kills the dandruff germ. ery town in America, the of this country have the fact that dandruff is that falling - hair and 2 1p can be quickly stopped, 5 let people who use Parisian Sage viil never grow bald. To every reader of The Bulletin who wishes to eradicate disgusting dan- druff, stop falling hair, and have an immaculately clean séalp, free from -, itchness, we make this offe We will return your mone: out red tape, if Parisian S not banish dandruff, stop falling hair and itching scalp in two weeks. Parisian Sage is sold by druggisis everywhere for 50 cents a large bot- th It is an ideal, daintily perfumed hair dressing, free from grease and stickiness, and will. cause hair to grow lustrous and luxuriant. Sold and guaranteed by The Lee & Osgood Co: Mail orders filled, charges pr: paid, by Giroux Mfg. Buffa Co., W« For the second of the unifed Len;en services in the middle of week, Trinity Epigcopal church E: gregation on Wednesday evening that filled the body of the church, attract- ed to hear Rev. Henry 8. Nash, D.D., who is professor of the New -Tetsa- ment in the. Episcopal theobtk:al school -at Cambridge, Mass, deason J. Kldred Brown of Tflnltv church, Rev. Neilsoh Pde Carey of Christ church, and Rev. F. Johns Bo- hanan of St. Ardrew’s church con- ducted evening prayer, which was fol- lowed by the edifying and auhol&rly , sermon by Dr. Nash. For a text the preach$r quoted the verse, “Jesus began to preach and to Repent, for the Kingdom of heav- s at hand.” and_went on to re- N. Y. Mrs. Francis Kobgl, 41 W. mine St., St. Paul, Minn., on Now. 1909, wrote: “I have used sev | hair tonics, but there is none that c: compare with Parisian Sage. It curcd my falling hair and dandruff, and it @oes not only cure those troubles, but the best hair grower in the worl Jess & is NEW SUITS BROUGHT IN SUPERIOR COURT. Business Returned for March Session. Additional Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Wilcox of L bon sue Albert Lebarre of Plainfield $390 lent him before July Angelo Covello of Nor 'h, adm. of the estate of Pasquale Paldino of Nor- wich, sues the Connecticut compan fors $5,000 damages for the death Paldino, who on Nov. 10, 1808, w killed by a car of the company near St. Regis avenue, in Boswell avenue. It is «claimed that the company failed to keep a proper lookout on the car for the plaintiff's intestate walking in said highway and crossing the track and negligently failed. to sound the whistle or gong on the car. | _The New York, New Haven and | Hartford Rallroad eompany on Wed- nesday brought three suits against Charles H. Richmond, Elmer E. Rich- mond, Mary A. Richmond and Nellie T. Rose, all residing in Pawcatuck, in the town of Stonington. The suits are brought for the recovery of land now in the possession of the defendants, but which the plaintiff alleges is owned by it. The plaintiff claims $1,500 dam- ages in each suit and possession of the land. In the first suit, in which Charles H. Richmond, Elmer. E. Richmond and Mary A. Richmond are the defend- ants, the New Haven road seeks to recover a lot of land en the northerly side of West Broad street from which it alleges that It*has been dispos- ;xessed, depriving it of rents and prof- ts. The same persons are made the de- | fendants in the second suit, in which the plaintiff seeks possession of a lot of land adjoining the piece in question in the first suit. NellHe T. Richmond is the defendant in the third suit, in which the New Haven road claims possession of a piece of land adjoining the other two pieces. All three pieces of land were ! formerly owned by the New Haven road, from which it alleges that it has been dispossessed by the defendants, who have erected dwelling houses on the property. MILCH GOAT KEEPERS. Second Annual Meeting Held at West | i Hartford. The second annual meeting of the Connecticut Milch Goat' Keepers’ asso- | clation was held Tuesday evening at ‘West Hartford. The following officers were elected: President, George W. Smith, Melrose; vice president, Milo N. Wooding, Hamden; secretary, Al- fred Dixon; treasurer, James A. Smith, Hartford. The annual dues were in- creased from 50 cents to $1. Rural Life, a monthly paper, was chosen as| the official organ, and will be sent free to all the members, out of their mem- ‘bership fee. ough local in name, the society has embers in seventeen states and in/Canada, and it soon ex—| { pects to incorporate under Connecticut { law. The necrology of the year show- ed the loss of but one member, Hon. John Gower, judge of the county ‘court at Winthrop, Me. The organization is seeking to popularize the milch goat; and has physiclans, mintsters, farmers, ladies’ mechanics and others on its membership. roll. Committee Named. In the Sodality rooms on Wednes- day evening the dance committee held a meeting, at which arrangements for their post-Lenten dance at Miller's were completed. Those comprising the committee are M. J. Coscoran, Thomas Slattery, Joseph Sullivan, John Sulli- van and Daniel J. Mullen. PILES Quickly Cured Instant Relief, Permanent Cure — Trial Package Mailed Free to All | In Plain Wrapper. We want every man and woman sut- | fering from the excruciating torture! of piles to just send their name and address to us and get by return mail a free trigl package of the most effec- | tive and positive cure ever known for| this disease, Pyramid Pile Cure. i The way to prove what this great! remedy will do in your own case, Is to just fill out free coupon and send to us and you will get by return mail a free. trial sample of Pyramid Pile Cure. { Then after you have proven to your-' self what it can do, you will go to the . druggist and get a 50 cent box. Don’t undergo an operation. Opera- tions are rarely a success and often ' lead to terrible consequences. Pyra- mid Pile Cure reduces all inflamma-' tion, makes congestion, irritation, itch- | ing sores and ulcers disappear — and the piles simply quit. No knife and; | its torture. No doctor and his bdills. For sale at all drug stores at 50/ cents a box. FREE PACKAGE COUPON Fill out the blank lines below with your name and address, cut ount coupon and mail to the PYRA- MID DRUG COMPANY, 240 Pyra- mid Bldg.. Marshall, Mich. A trial package of the great Pyramid Pile Cure will then b= sent you at once by mail, FREE, In plain wrapper. Name for $400 damages to recover the sum of of g { beauty. | mannoff’s The Floods of Spring; | His case _ dress goods and valued at about $6. RIIV. HENRY S, NASI‘L D. D. mark that the Bible might have said that this was the sole text upon which Jesus preached throughout his minis- try. Dr. Nash drew the distinction be- tween thinking about great things and thinking with them. As an instance, people went on thinking about the sun and the earth for years, but when they came™ to think with thém, to. get be- vond the evidence of the surface sens- es, then there was a reyvolution in our conception of the relations of .the sun and earth, In the same way, we are not‘to sup- pose because we do so-much think- ing about Jesus, that we are thinking with him, It does not follow. But for this evening, the preacher invit- ed his congregation to think with Jesus on the subject of repentance. It is the object that stirs one to repent- ance that Jesus is concerned in- and he never thinks about repentance ex- cept in connection with the kingdom of God. When Jesus came.he found many thinking about the kingdom of God. One class was the Jewish monks who had their whole object then as now to subject themselves to a su- perb discipline of body, mind and soul | | .simple that the people could 80 that once in a while the vision of a divine reality might touch the soul. But this was at the cost of for- =zetting the nation, and Jesus would ' have nothing to do with their way of talking about the kingdom of God. There was a second favorite way of talking about the kingdom of God as illystrated by the Pharisees who left in writing the Apocalypse, whose chief purpose was to turn loose upon the sinners and heathen theological dam- nation. Jesus would have nothing to do with that way. There was a third way, which was that of the Galilean weasants, - who were ready to stake their life upon a fight with the Roman government, upon their belief. But Jesus brought the kingdom of God. down out of the heavens to the people. He was too great a" teacher to give any distant, unapproachable ideals, but his chief work was to real- jze the kingdom of God in terms so not think with him without realizing the king- dom of God, There were two chiéf texts he used the first being the Old Testament quotation, and the only one from the Old Testament that he used twice, “1 desire mercy, not sacrifice.” To desire mercy meant not merely ‘compassion, but that most difficult of all human prerogatives. thg ability to evercome our own prejudices and to find on the other side of the wall which they erect people as worthy in God's sight as ourselves, Jesus calls upon us to be ashamed of the overvaluation of the little things that get between us and | our fellows. And the second great text of Jesus was the parable of the Good Samari- tan. This® thought was amnvlified by the preacher in an interesting way with a comparison of the two differ- ent. individuals he finds in himself as revealed by thelesson of the automo- bile. ¥For the greater part of the year, he said, he was‘a footman, and the amount of dust he swallowed from his neighbors’ automobiles was inconceiv- able. At that time he was urgent and an zealot for the enforcement of | speed regulations and the adherence to law. But on the few occasions in | the year when his friends would in- ' vite him to a ride in the automobile, | he finds he is a different creature from when he is a footman. In the atmo- sphere of that superb machine he couldn’t go too fast, he likes to break the law and he can appreciate the feel- ing the the skllled mechanic who likes to see how close he can come to the hub of a baby carriage without hitting it. The true test of character, cul- | ture and religion is what we do with | power. It is easy to be virtuous when we are poor and have no power, but Jesus calls us to a use of power that shall not forget the rights of oth- ers. He calls us to be ashamed of something vastly more hurtful than a fretful disposition or a peevish tem- per, and demands of us that when en- trusted with power we are hot to use it to trample upon the rights of others, And he calls us to a realization of the kingdom of God because the great power of God is at reach and within the hand of every individual. SONG RECITAL BY MISS MARGARET GLENN Norwich Club Filled and Audience Was Delighted—Masterly Accompa- niments by Mrs. Grosvenor Ely. The Norwich club was filled to the limit of its capacity with ‘a brilliant | audience on Wednesday, evening—the occasion being a - charming song re- cital given by Miss Margaret Glenn of New York, assisted by Mrs. Grosvenor Ely. This recital was given under the auspices of Willis Briscoe, Charles W. Gale and Eugene Wallner Mr. and Mrs. Oliver L. Johnson, Mr. ‘and Mrs. Grosvenor Ely, the Misses Young, and Mr. and Mrs. William B. Birge, all of whom had been given much pleasure the past summer by Miss Glenn's sing- ing and wished their Norwich friends to share the same pleasure with them, This the audience surely did. Miss Glenn made a decidedly favora- ble impression by her gracious per- sonality, her musical mezzo-soprano voice and the power, ease and grace of her singing. Mrs. Ely also came in for a great deal of enthusiasm from the audience for her beautiful and bril- liant rendering of the piane accompa- niments and especially .in her wonder- fully masterful playing of the one by Rachmaninoff, in which the applause was persistent - until. she was finally compelled to rise in acknowledgment. The programme was . carefully se- lected and comprised many songs, not so frequently heard .here. The first | group were in Italian—Gluck’s O del * mio dolce ardor, from his opera Paris | and Helen; -Lancavallo’s - Mattinata, and Meyerbeer’s aria, Figlio Mio; from Il Profeta, each given in good style and expression. Light by Sinding was especxal!y ar- tistic in rendering-and received with much favor, as wers also the three | Browning songs given 'in this second group—Serenade, by Branscombe; Ah, | Love, but-a Day, and The Years at the Spring, by Beach—the latter song having toybe repeated. Miss Glenn and Mrs, Ely were pre- sented handsome bouquets of pink and white roses. The mext group was five pretty ‘rench songs, given with grace and They were Chant Hinhou by Bemberg; Chansop du Coir. by S. B. Colburn, and Si mes vers avalent des ailes, d'une Pwison, L’Heure exquise, by Reynaldo Hahn. The Chanson du Soir was written by Mr, Colburn es- pecially for Miss Glenn and is still in manuscript. The last group includ- ed Chadwick’s He Loves Me; Rach- five of Edward Lear’s Nonsene Rhyme by | Margaret Lang, and Benjamin Whelp- ley’s The Nightingale Has a Lyre of Gold. ‘The first of these was repeated by request, the second received with prolonged applause, the nonsense rhymes amusing and skilfully done and the last one followed by the encore number—Lelimann’s adaptation of the old English song, When-Love-Is Kind. The ushers were Robert C. Johnson and Edward D. Arnold. William Birge, Russell Welles and Robert L. Johnson had charge of tickets and programmes. —_— CHARGED WITH THEFT. Anfieny Brokofski Am ted by Ser- geant Connell and Policemag Bray. On Wednesday Sergeant Connell and Policemen Bray arrested Antony Bro- kofski as he was leaving the grounds of the United States.Finishing.com- | pand. They found_ a_bundle of cloth which he had wound about himself. will come before the -city court this’ morning. He had been working overtime at the plant, and was coming out between 7 o'clock. It was found ~that he had wrapped the cloth about-his body un- der all his clothing. There- about 25 yards of the cloth, Dbeing. hed A Sleighing Party. The Sixth and Seventh grade ils of the Broadway school weu-gil:“p a sleigh ride Tuesday afternoon between the hours of 4.30 and 7.15, and had a jolly t!mad\mder the care of Miss Stra— 2ddea to the of the party. and 8, 3cork as far as possible, but he will | 1 | ]LITTLE IDEA HERE OF THE PARIS FLOOD. Miss Anna Senectaire Was Obliged to Live on Bread for Several Days Be- cause of It. Miss Anna Senectaire. of Clarmont- arrived here from her native land, and intends to make her home jin this country, and possibly Norwich. She was unfor- tunately in Paris during the recent flood.and was a witness tn all the con- ditions there, and says that people here have but a vague idea of the suffering it caused and the abject terror in which the people were held. She left her home, which is some dis- | tance from Paris, and reached the French capital before she knew of the flood. She told of being assisted off the train by the police, and later being housed in by the rising water. The situation was frightful, and kerosene lamps had to be used, as the gas and electricity were out of commission. There was no heat and there was great trouble in getting eatables. Merchants rowed about in boats delivering bread, which they handed in at the windows. There was/great suffering in all guar- ters, the water reaching into the upper stories of buildings. There were sev- eral instances where men attempted to l | | make a fortune by getting large sup- ! prices. i 1 | being looked up. | i | WANT MISS MATHER plies of food and asking exorbitant In such cases complaint was | made, and the authorities took away such stores and distributed them among the people. The subsiding of the wa- ' | ter was a great relief. | Miss Senectaire is an interesting talker about the flood and her country. Her brother leaves soon as a mission- jary in China. For four years she was an attendant in the general hospital in Paris. Although she has been in this country before, she declares she will never travel alone again, as the re- . quirements at the port of New York are too much for a woman, in her estima- tion. She was detained for three hours while her recommendations wers On her previous trip she had companions. RETAINED AS TEACHER. Yantic Pirents Have Signed Petition ' for Her Retention—School Still in Session. As the result of a petition circulat- W. E. Manning, postmaster at Yantic, the parents of the children at- tending school at Yantic-have all ask- ed for the retention of Miss E. J. Math- er, who has resigned, to take effect at the close of the winter term. There has been no trouble in the school,states Miss Mather, to her knowledge, and the dissatisfaction she claims lies with the acting school visitor alone, al- though he gives no clear reason for it Miss Mather has secured her certifi- cate from C. D. Hine, state secretary of the board of education. She has taught there two years previous to this. She considers that the only reason for the alleged dissatisfaction | is that it is desired to make room for | another person as teacher. Not only | her pay, but that of the other teacher there has been held up for 21 weeks, and she intends to get it if she has to | sue for it. i e { ALMSHOUSE CENSUS { HAS BEEN COMPLETED. Number There is Constantly Changing, But Was 86 the First of January. Having been named as special agent to secure the census of the almshouse, John J. Corkery has completed his keep track of the changes there on slips furnished bv the government un- til they notify him to cease. ‘On the 1st of January there were 86 inmates—59 men and 27 women. The: number is constantly changing, and as | spring approaches the number will de- 4 crease. t the present time there are but 82 ere, four having died .].n.eg .h.mu.riy 1st, six have been d, while four have been admitted. . The securing of the nmames was ac- complished with no trouble, an- m to all the questions were riot ob- without um- little trouble en "Nobie Grands’ association. Ynmfl-fl--fidw“ the very first application. Danderine is quickly and thoroughly absorbed by the scalp and the hair soon shows the effects of its wonderfully ex- - Hhrnagndlil'r-dua-l qualities. It is pleasant and once a day until the hair begins to grow. then two or three times a week till desired results are obtained. A lady from California writes in substance as follows: wm now| vondertul suicor nair ures over 48 inches in lxtgl braid is over § inches aroand. Another from New Jersey: After using sixch Dottle I am bappy 2o ey that 1 have ae niee a head of hair as anyone in New Jersey. This Great Hair-Grows ing Remedy can now be bad at all druggists in three sizes, 25¢c, 50c and $1.00 per bottle. will send a I-lre by retarn mai w-umwn sends this free goupen tothe Kaowlton Danderine Ce., Chicago, with their nsme snd address and 10c in sfiver or stamps 0 pay posteg That ‘uneasy feeling— that dull depression, that ""fi’d out, 088, ?lrlueu ke Schenck’s how different yowll feel con: —it's ears as a specific lor;‘-ll st vst ills, billpusness, constipation, .lek lenet. ce, solutely. h‘rmld-—puin or_su eadache, iddiness, edrtburn, flatu- Jaun y vegetal -O—Gb- —26c. Sold sverywhere. m for our free look. and learn to t:r yourself. D! DR. J. H. SCHENCK & SON, Philadelphia, Pa. makes the bread for the whole- some meal. the part of Mr, Corkery, as it is neces- | sary to get the name, age, date of ad- mission, place of birth and business engaged in before entering almshouse. These returns, which have been ar- ranged in form, will be forwarded the government, together with the add tions since the time of taking the cen- sus, BOWLING ALLEYS FOR THE NICKEL THEATER Three Will Be Placed There and It Is Hoped Will Be Ready by the First of the Month. On Wednesday Raymond Jodoin of Baltic stated that he had decided to make extensive changes in the Roder- ick theater and make It into a bowling alley. The contract has been let to Blackledge & Co. to raise the floor to a level, and three Brunswick. Balke & Callendar alleys will be installed. They will be regulation length and the latest i equipment and will occupy the entire width of the building. The front will be remodeled some- what and repainted and there will be a large electric sign with electric lights in the alleys, - John Wright of Woon- socket will have charge of the alleya It is hoped to have the alleys installed and ready for use soon after the first of the month. The alleys will be in- stalled so that the noise will be dead- ened and will not bother the adjoining tenants, Work has already been start- ed, the seats having been taken out of the theater. HAS A SISTER IN THIS CITY. John Carroll, Who Died Suddenly in New Haven, Left Policy to Mrs. William Clark. On Wednesday afternoon Henry D. | Johnson received a telephone message from his brother, who has charge of the Yale dining hall, stating that John Carroll, who was a janitor at Woolsey hall, had died suddenly there, and among his efféects was an insurance policy made out to his sister,’ Mrs. Nora Clark, of this city. He was de- sirous of locating his relatives and later in the day Mr. Johnson learned that his sister is Mrs. William Clark of Chestnut street and she. was in- formed of her brother’s death. The body is held at New Haven awaiting the action of the relatives. YOUNG PEOPLE’S SOCIAL Held in Sunday School Room of the Broadway Church With a Good At- tendance. There was a soclal for the members ‘of the Young People’s society of the Broadway Congregational church on Wednesday evening in the Sunday school rooms of the church, at which there were twenty-four present. Games were played and an excellent mono- jogue was given by Miss Bessie Cor- coran, it being the same as given in the recent play by Christ church so- cieties in the Y. M. C, A. hall. The entire affair was very pleasing and ‘was in charge of Misses Abbie Cal- . kins_and Henrietta Gardner, assisted by other members of the \'lfltlng com - mittee. Refreshments consisting of chocolate and cake were served. Going to New. London. Past Grands Mary Gren, Hattie Par- sons, Margaret Hart and Harriet Jen- , all of Hope lodge, No, 21, L. O. 0. F., are to attend the meeting In New London this afternoon of Thames Past TRAGEDY iN A THEATER. Fwo Men Shot at the Stage Entrance —8how Not Interrupted. Indianapolis, . Feb, 16. — Fatally wounded by two . bullets fired ¥ Adolph Cdssau, a violinist, Louls Ostendorf, manager of the Empire the- ater orchestra, tomight overpowered his (assailant, wrested . the’ revolver from him, and fired three bullets through Cassau’'s head, killing his in- stantly at «the stage entrance of the Empire theater, Ostendorf died in a hospital later. The shooting occurred just before the -curtain rose for the night performance and the audience was kept in ignorance of the tragedy until the show ‘was dver, Cassau's attack upon Ostendorf is said to be the tesult of & quarrel last night ‘'with the mahager, The Empire theater is a bu leoque house. 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