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gty conmmm P! ClNfi PRO0F Ly OF THE VIRTUE OF derwizi Bullefin EX-FORESTER PINCHOT. Some of the reputable papers of the : country are swatting Mr. ot on and Gonfied, the knuckles in a way which un-| g der suspicion their purpose to queer 114 YEARS OLD. a man before he has been fully heard, | N\ —— —— — ———___land Mr. Ballinger has made_his full 5 Soociiption price, 12¢ & weeks 50c | answer. It is apparent that Mr. Pin- | Mrs. Braithwaite opened the kitchen | keeps up his singing, Mrs. Braithwait Lydia E. Pinkham Vegetable Compound menth: $6.00 & Fer: ohot is familiar enough with commit- | door in answer to a timid knock, and | #nd vou play his accompaniments? _ oy e o Soiors o ius rosioince ax Norwion | t® methods in Washington to see thefa small girl handed her a note, she | pocame conscious el na. What is the use of procrastinating in the face of such Coma. a5 second-class matter. e M L T N R R Ara, | Sh€, Temoved it attempted to smooln| evidence as the following letters represent? If you area count . D s micyed AL A 3 < g+ e than by plecemeal es the skiiful ex-|Wendt Cannot come to wash monday | embarrassed flush % Ser checrs| sick woman or know one who is, what sensible reason have you for not giving Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- Buljetin Business Ofdce. 480, for I am feeling veary bade and I willl “My hat P LR BGHE AR R T aminers would gt It beforo the Fubllc | Come to wasi nexi_monday vour | Hois yoluniecrad with & Superior smile: 0 s Thuly MRS, WENDT.” | “FHow do you keep your hands in con- | pound a trial? For 30 tzws we have been publishing such why Mr. Pinchot strove to make his | last pi f cake in he kS M ld ask ‘wife do the tesfimo i Ie i 8%z d th q - g 3 lece of cake ier hou: Ts. ‘his to H Norwich, Wednesd>—~_ Maroh 2, 1910. | 10¥ 20, TI0CTE 1n aavance, for It 1o | Beaithwaite conidencd the Situation. — | Tio was siwais w0 considerats cas=® | genuine and honest, t0o, every one of them. she murmured. “I'll just celebrate my | waite broke in lnd.l‘nlh . “The - % him open to the severest criticism, but | 20 WE ™00 qing “anniversary by |an failed to come. e e : bl?lcm' s, At ‘ompoun: committee appears to be very anxious | Braithwaite began to put her plan in- | She consulted her watch, adding as to save the dignity of the president, | to -execution. With her dress skirt|she rose, “Positively, it is nearly lun- Mon., Tues., Wed., BROADWAY THEATRE "7 255 SHEEDY & JACKSON Frosest IRV CLOUSE, That German Comedian, and Bl Compans. In Vacation Days Lo, b PRETTY GIRLS hie Dol MORTON & KEENAN, Langhs) FAIRCHILD SISTERS, Danein NEW MOTION PIOTURES 1A% CHILDREN AT MATINEES So—8 SHOWS DAILY 830, 7. 545 . MUSICAL GOMEDY AT rIICEH AYWAYS The Circulation of The Bulletin. Willtmantis _Office, Roew % Muwrray | submarine boat scandal investigation ‘When the small messenger had been | dition to play the piano when u Bullding ‘Telephone. 210. is brought to mind, it is plain enough | sent on her way with a nickel and the | wash? I pneyver d.r»“mad that ;:Il the only protection he has. It may| -1 have nover washed before, but| My husband hasn't the faintest Mrs. . Barber says: e Pre romulan, 1 ey leany | what wormen Tus, done woman can 4o | 1des That T wasting Mrs. Braith: | rs.S. J. Barber says: 3V it gives him a protection he is not| .iing it my first wash-day: “Of * Miss Du Bois sure of getting in any other way. The | "t was nedriy 11 & clode whon Mrs. | coa it politery inoretuloes. A the best med. cine in the wor] FEATURE. The Balletin has the largest eir- culation of any paper in Eastern Commecticut, and from three to fouwr times larger than that of any im Norwich. It is delivered to over 3,000 of the 4,053 houses im Nore wich, and read by mimety-three per cemt. of the people. Im Windham it ta delivered to over 900 houses, fa Putsam and Danielson to ever 1,100, and in all of these places it is commidered the local daily. Eastern Conmecticut has forty- sine towns, ome humdred and sixty- Sve postoffice districts, and forty- ome rural free delivery routes. The Bulletin is sold in every tewn and om all of the R. F. D. routes in Eastera Commecticut. CIRCULATION average ......e 1965, average ...... RUSSIA BECOMING ALARMED. re appears to be no doubt that t ny s about to be t to a close o far as invasion f the Mongolian nations is concerned. t comes to light that Russia is much cd today over the prospects of a ~ar with China. A despatch from St Petersburg on Monday said: “Ruesian officlals say that China is rming against Russia, and profess o believe that war is possible within decade. Alarm against the Chinese has replaced the expectation of a re- ewal of the war between Russia and Japan which a few months ago ereated a veritable panic among the military horities. The Novos Vremya and ther nowspapers which at that time ed war In the spring are now ¢ mgainst China. They call a series of economic meas- ertaken by the Chinese gov- result of which will be Russians out of Manchuria.” matter is not taken serl- Washington, evervthing ne military development of & the same lines which have ziven Japan recognition as one of the nations of the age. Rus- sia’s days of conquest and tyranny are ol ught to & close by a course and to keep him from getting drawn imagine his predecessor, Mr. Roose- velt, doing anything under the cir- cumstances except inviting the fullest inquiry regardless of who is involved, and showing his own readiness to have everything submitted to the commit- tee and himself appearing as a Wit~ ness if pecessary. The Bridgeport Standard states the case fairly when it says: “This ma! charges and counter charges must be made good or disproved, and Pinchot must be shown a defamer or Ballinger a man unfit for the place he holds. One or the other is true, and the sooner the demonstration i{s made the better for all concerned as weil as for the country at large. No big corpora- tions are to be allowed by one kind of hocus-pocus or another to seize the rich and immensely valuable public lands of Alaska, er anywhere else in the country. That sort of business has gone far efough and must be stopped and whoever directly or indirectly plays into the hands of the spoilers, be he high in office or of no official ac- count, will be spotted and condemned as an enemy of the public. TEN MILLIONS FOR SCREENS. Tt is stated as a fact that the Amer- ican peopls spend ten millions @& year for screens to keep the flies out of kitchens, dining rooms, restaurants and sleeping rooms, and that to make this sum would be required, which show that the fly is an expensive “lit- tie kuss” as Artemus Ward would have said, aside from the seeds of dis- ease and death he is charged with treading into the food we eat. And the flies do mot appear to decrease as fast as the war upon them would lead us to expect them to. The real men- ace appears to be the manure heaps of the city stables in which the flies establish their metropolises. Dr. How- ard of Washington is sure that if the ing manure in stables were rigidly enforced ninety-nine out of every hun- dred files in the citles would go out of busintss because they would find it impossible to make a living. This a straight tip to health boards ev- erywhere to do their duty and thus reduce these fleet-winged germ car- riers from establishing such populous centers in filth that has no good de- fence for existence. The screen side of the battle Is important but not into the controversy, but we cannot ter has come to a pass where the| the protection complete four times health department regulations regard- | pinned up, her sleeves rolled above the elbows, the loose ends of her hair wound around her kid curlers and hid- den under a sweeping cap, she plunged her hands into the foaming suds, laughing to think of what her husband would say if he could sec her. Presently she stopped to rest a mo- ment and_ruefully contemplate her reddened hands robbed of cuticle in more than one vlace. Then the water boiled over in the :r on'the gas stove. he lid, flling the tiny kitchen with steam, and .at that moment there came a tap on the door. Lid in hand, Mrs. Braithwaite answered the summons and was con- fronted by a sraceful figure in a gray suit. “I couldnt ring the front door bell because of the mewly-painted steps.” explained the caller. “Is Mrs, Braith- waite at home?” “I am' Mrs. Braithwaite.” hil's wife! How perfectly delight- ful to meet you! I am Evelyn Du Bois. You will excuse my caliing at this unseasonable hour, but I am pass- ing through the city and took the op- portunity betwsen trains to make the acquaintance of Phil's wife. Please, may T come in?" B “I beg your pardon” Mrs. Braith- waite said. painfully conscious of her abbreviated skirt and the boiler lid im her hand. She led the way into the sitting room through the piles of as- sorted clothes on the kitchen floor, This, then, was the girl Phil had been engaged to. Mrs. Braithwaite looked around her in dismay. Never before had the lttlo sitting room shown such disorder. She gathered up an armful of things from a chair and begged her caller to be seated. “Phil and I have known each other for vears” Miss Du Bois observed. “He's much older than I, you kmow. I imagine you are nearer his age. He always said he never would marry a brunette, but there’s no depending up- on a man's word, as I suppose vou've learned already. What a dear home! And so very, very tiny! Somehow, I can’t imasine Phil crowding his six feet of stature in here. Of Course he cheon time. Mrs. Braithwaite rose also, a nerv- ous something tugging at her throat. | Pnil would_never forgive her for let- ! ting Miss Du Bois go without somo refreshment. But the pantry was empty! Saturday they ~had" dined downtown; Sunday they had dined with their friends. “You must let me give vou a bite fand su Mrs. Braithwaite urged. “While you lay aside your coat in the hall, T will prepare it quickly.” Seated at the table, brave with pret- ty new mapery, cut glass and_ silver, | Miss Du Bois helped herself daintily to bread, butter and jelly, begging to be excused for omitting eggs, which | she never ate. At the conelusion of | the frugal meal the guest made her apologies for hastening away and took her departure through the back door. Left alone, Mrs, Braithwaite indulg- ed in the luxury of a good cry, then went to the telephone and told her | husband that she would dine with him downtown. “Did you have a caller today?” ask- ed Braithwaite of his wife when they met. “Yes; Miss Du Bois,” she answered. “I met Evelyn on the street and she tried to get me to go to lunch with thought maybe you wouldn't be pre pared for callers and all that scrt of thing, but I emphasized the fact that you are always prepared and have given me leave to bring anybody home at anytime for a meal Evelyn. you know, can’t turn her hand to anything in a house—been waited on all her life. It was all right to send her up, wasi it?” Mrs. Braithwaite say “Yes” rather faintly. Then she added_ as thoush the thought had just flashed on her. “Perhaps it would pe best, though, to call up and see if I'm at home and ready for visitors before you send out anybody eles “Tll do that” he agreed. “But certain you were prepared toda: > declared, with the blissful ignorance of an inexperienced husband.—Chicago News. 't ple can afford to waste time in its con- sideration. The season is on now when every ball nine is a penmant winner. It will all be over with the most of them be- fore August. THOSE BANK DIRECTORS And Their $12-$144000 Automobile Bookkeeper. Twelve dollars a week was a small whatever may be the reason that in- duced the organization to request the Waterbury press to bar the names of doctors from medical and surgical cases the newspapers will be likely to continue to exercise their own judg- what it is in the 167 other towns of will really object to having his name ful treatment of a case of public in- her,” explained Braithwaite. “I told | her I wanted her to meet vou. She| ‘ Gomtime {0 extrcise their own foae- |, ert Toke e Netmens | Shea & Burke print and what isn’t. The Waterbury | persist in trying to get Gov. Haskell Fesolution e wholly entertaining, but into Jail despite his ropested declars- p not wholly convincing. Unless human | tions that he is innocent of any wrong- F l D Pature is different in Waterbury from | doing.—St. Paul Ploneer Press. uneral Directors Connecticut, no Waterbury physician | | industry in Calabra. It is good form printed In connectlon with the success- | in Naples to bite all silver coins before feel it my duty let ofthers L .. : me. [ (TSROt e e . said would have to be removed by an on or I | table Compound, and the pain could not live more a year, | disappea: 1 contin its or two, at most. I wrote Mrs. Pink- | and am now in verfuct health. ham, at Lynn, Mass., for adyice, and | Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- took 14 bottles of Lydia E. Pink- | pound has been a God-send to me ham’s Vegetable Compound, and to- | as I believe I should have been in day the tumor is gone and I am a | my ve if it had not been for Mrs. Trectly well woman. I hope my | Pinkham’s advice and Lydia E stimonial will be of benefit to oth- { Pinkham’s Vegetable cam&oumi." ers.” — Mrs. S. J. BARBER, Scott, | —Mrs. GEORGE MAY, 86 4 N. Y. Paterson, N.J. — S Mrs. E. F. Hayes says Mrs. W. K. Housh says: g was under the : doctor’s treat- 'ment for a fibroid tumor. Isuffered mend it to all suf fering women. Mrs. W. K. , 7T East- [view Ave., Cin. X Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable | Beca s Simems 2 E. am’s Ve e use your case icul C:mpo)l-md_ To-day I lm‘: well | one, doetor’-“hlvh:g done_you no woman, the tumor was expelled and | good, do not continue to suffer with- my whole system strengthened. out giving Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg- adyvise all women who are afflicted | etable Compound a trial. It surely with tumors or female troubles to | has cured many cases of female ills, tcry Lydhd‘E. PlnkhuJE:’s]Ye table !I]mhllinfiln'al::ot:zn.tunluflflioldlb ompound.” — Mrs. E. F. HAYEs, acement Lmors, rrefi: 1890 Washington St., Boston, Mass. flflfiu,pe‘fiadicpllnl.b‘cmhe,e For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable 7 | Compound has been the standard remedy for EEITENE whe Wikt ot try Chls famons Mmedicine, Y wi n s famous m n: Mend.e exclusively from roots and herbs, and | has thousands of cures to its credit. Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health free of charge. Address Mrs, Pinkham, Lynn, Mass. Won't Take His Word. Counterteiting 1s still a considerable AND Embalmers accepting it in payment or in change. —ZARRA TRIO Novelty Artistic Jugnlers and Hoep Mahipuiats s Prima Donna ADMISS10N—10c. Stationery Supplie; TABLETS, Ave, | pox PAPER, | MUCILAGE, FANCY PENCIL BOXES, SCRAP BASKETE, SCISSORS, ETC. J Up Business has been forced upon us by t sure of public approval know how to buy and to sell goods satisfactorily that they absolutely fly off our premises. way of keeping WINES and LIQUORS Stirring harder than ever soon, becauss of the good value Come in before the cream’s off the top Geo. Greenberger, KIT SEYMOUR | Buditerius KARSON | & NESTER | Do Novelty Character and Sho Act IVENINGS, Meserved Semta% B TRHEATR: CHARLES MeNUL FEATURE PIOTURS: N TCE SERPENT'S POWER STRONG STORY OF SUNNY ITALY MRS, EDWIN £AY, Franklin Suars | MISS FLORENCE WOLCOTT IN SELABOTED & ~a PGWA M ME and Children, - " PAGODA LAND INlnstrated bty Moviag Plctures CENTRAL BAPTIST CHURCH Friday, March 4th, 1910 MUSsIC. NELLIE S. HOWIE, CAROLINE H. THOMPSON Teacher of Musie a8 hingten Street of events which is of much interest to| hait as important as ,well-enforced e e anti-fly regulations. salary for an employe who had It in his power to steal $144,000 before his detection. It depositors knew what b THE COST OF NEGLIGENCE. |a pENNY'S Salary was they would have become WORTH OF ENERGY. |3 1%, US%¢ him when he rolled by in | The forse of habit in human beings fevia terest—Hartford Times. ——— | _Lassons given st my restdencs or st the home of the pupll. Sams In order to enable us to more promptly attend to our increasing busi- Ch;ldu;onr 7cvr, Strange Force of Habit. 1 1 r Maxwell s righ - o T g ot » Uned at Bohawenka Consery . S Bt m:m‘;“":::_ There are a few things still cheaper | an automoblle with a chauffeur at his | is well known, but it is hardly prob- FOR FLETCHER'S i ol n he Hendriok Block, Mer DON T WORRY' ose - e mesligente o tne | than dirt and from recent representa- [side. But the public, or the greater [able that there has ever becn @ rarer| €= A ST O FR | A |thants Ave. Tasivilh Bisek. . $1a 2 - o tions electrical energy is one of them. |Part of it, supposing he received a | exhibition of that trait than in a re- | ants” A ville, and will keep mact 1 consequent resuits. The | 4 man who knows his electricity from | Munificent Tecompense for his servi cent remarkable occurrence in Pitts- constantly on hand & good stock o It Makes Wrinkles, r. . GEER Funeral Supplles and an efficlent at- tendant to answer calls day oF BIERt, | worry over fll-Beaith does gew | car needs sharp attention every 49Y, | watt to work Iy ald not wonder at i o c b A Pittsbucg physician, whil 1 as this at his style of ure. ittsbucg physician, while ana vers that ten minutes use of | us Weckly of awhat may o morr s | . The public, therefore, may well be | hurrying along e strest In that city, re- : TUNER the wrench a week will prevent man: o excused for its implicit confidence. | turning to his office from e profession- 4, an: 1 122 Prosns = electricity will “make four cups of | what salary their bookkeeper received, | from above, “Look out below!” Before SHEA & BURKE' than you are. mobile are: coffee, or cook a steak, or boil two |hence ordinary prudence ought to have | e could realize what was happening Seca that your motor is kept clean.| guarts of water, or make a Welsh |aroused suspicion on their part. But |the body of a man falling from above 37-41 Main St., Norwich, Cona., nre sick, don't w , but | wilst o yeursel! woll, "To 3 results will be obtained from hine and better work from n who is obliged to work om §t. A dirty motor is a sure sign of neglect My experience has taught at neglect of the above is re- e for nine-teuths of the re- cessary on automebiles. hat you have plenty of oil in your abricator, that it is feeding properly, and that the oil is the best. A little ofl in the right place at the right time will forestall a big repair bill. “That all your bearings are properly adjusted. One loose bearing has a ten- dency to loosen others, causing knocks, oss of power, and crystallization of metal. Mors harm can be done to a motor by running it on loose bearings or & fow days than would result from use. Do not neglect at your cylinders, pistons, and -alves are not coated with carbon. erosene oil wil not remove it, once i s baked on, without the assistance & scraper. Make one and use it. That your steering connections are cleaned and oiled. This will prevent he axcessive wear and play so com- Tareblt, or operate a seven-inch fry- ing pan for 12 minutes, or an electric sriddle for elght minutes, or an elec- tric broiler for six minutes, or run = sewing machjne for thyee hours, or an clectric flatiron for 15 minutes, or a luminous radiator for eight minutes, or a foot warmer for 15 minutes, or a massage machine for four hours, or a curling-iron once a day for two weeks, or a dentists's arfll for an hour and an half, or an electric piano player for an hour, or vulcanize a patch on an automoblle tire, or keep a big glue pot hot for an hour, or brand electrically 150 hams, or raise a passenger cleva- tor five stories a minute, or raise 250 gallons of water 150 feet high, or raise ten tons twelve feet high in less than one minute.” It is pleasant to think that one pen- of the equipment necessary to do such wonders with a cent Is not stated, we cannot fgure out how much benefit this is to the men who work for $10 a weel, EDITORIAL NOTES. Even Speaker Cannon admits that ny will do all this. but since the cost | even if their attention was not drawn to the chasm between the young man’s mode of life and his small wages, the decline in the volume of the bank’s business should have frightened them into an investigation of its finances. A person who should not take thought for his health when the scales told him he had lost 50 per cent. in welght would be deemed mad or im- becile. As for the directors who, it seems, did not direct, we trust they will be able to make an explanation that will relieve the public of the ne- cessity of drawing an unpleasant paralielL.—Boston Globe. Gyroscope Claims. After a careful consideration of both the advantages and disadvantages in- chdental to the use on & single-rail line of gyroscopic cars. The Sccientific American comes to the conclusion that, ingenious and scientifically sound as the sygtem is, its success as a substi- tute for that by which freight and paussengers are now moved will prob- ably be at best a limited one. What the new cars, it says, would save as to welght by increased num- ber of wheels they would lose by the enforced carrying of the gyroscope it- self, and as the latter would have to | be éxtremely well made, the cost of the crushed him to the pavement. The bystanders, who expeoted that both the falling man and the physician had been instantly killed, were as- | tounded to see the doctor struggie to his | Xnees in an instant in a dazed sort of way, and, seeing the prostrate man be- | side him, took out his medical case and | endeavored to administer to his un- | conscious neighbor. It was clearly a | subconsclous effort, as the unfortunate | physician speedily collapsed, and it was found that he had been paralyzed by the shock. The man who fell from above was a painter, and when he realized he was | falling he gave the warning cry, “Look | out below!" as he probably would have done had he dropped a brush or thrown some other article to the ground, show- ing that in his case also babit was strong, even In a_moment of terrible agony, when he realized that he him- | selt was falling to a certain death be- | low.—New Orleans Picayune. Paris has 30,000 liquor selling estab— lishments. Tuberculosis Merchants’ Ave., Taftville, Conn, fob1sd PORTLAND CEMENT | when mixed as concrete, makes | stronger - than-wood, lasting - as- | granite Gate Posts, Fence Posts Hitching Posts, Clothes-Line Posis Posts of Every Kind When the wood-posts the other man buys at a high price are rotten and have to be renewed, the concrete posts you put in, at the same or less cost, will still be Iron your own Clothes We have found that the average woman prefers to do her own ironing. The back breaking, scrub- bing part she sends to us. When we re- turn it to her care- fully and and scien- tifically washed it is ready for the line. YOU had better try it S. & J. GREGSON about It to make yeurse this we repeat Ihly words of thousands of other former sufferers from woman. ty iiie, similar to yours, when wo say, | e Viburn-0. 1t 18 & wonderful femal you will admit if you ry Direotions for s tse are printed in #tx languages with every bottle. $1.25 at druggists FRANCO-GERMAN CHEMICAL 106 West 120th Street. New York Fiano Tuning and Reparria Building It s0 you should consult wit get prices for same. at reasonable pric C. M. WILLIAMS, General Contractor and Builder, A. W. JARVI is the Leading Tuner (2 Eastern Connecticul. 18 Ciairmou . JAMFS F. DREW Best Viork Only Prone 4328 18 Perking Ave sept2la . flndividualitv Is What Counts In Photography. mon In steerin 3 cars would not be d sed. Ther od for hundreds ears. et move ont wheels are prop. | FC0OVelt is the most popular Ameri- | Wwould be a saving by the cimination 8o b 3 °‘_Y 193 Frankiin Street, 218 MAIN STREET. | sematne i SRTien. T Sl S ed o] can. of ihe Tine ot 'ralis "but the ‘one re- Plenty of fresh air, sleeping The quality of Edison Portland Norwich, Conn. ‘Phone 270, san11a fthe nne vointe in charact .- g maining would probably be as expen- h 2 243 > il i tralts that make nes The incoming of March furnished no | Sive s two are now. and % would ne. | f§ out-doors and a plain, nour- i§ | Cement never varies and it is Telenjrons: &5 oned down by the na “That your rear axle and drive pin- | evidence that wind is air getting in a | Cessitate expen ishing diet are all good and helpful, but the most import: ant of all is . Scott’s Emulsion It is fli’eedstandarx;‘l ireatme:ltl over the world ?or this dread disease. It is the ideal food- medicine to heal the lungs and build up the wasting body. ive changes in roadded and bridges by the concentration of train weight that is now divided. So allowed to become & Flattery was once a vice; but now 1-'Arh=_-s E’Ll;&“fe“;‘g‘:p".." g:ncasr‘;xf“dg. The motor owner who gives atten- | it has become an approvable fash! = . oh i tion o these crails doss ot nnd bis | it net a vireue, 7 B e ool pi ey sutomobile expense greater than that — but that present speeds could be dou- of keeping a span of horses, or his ‘What New York lacks is politeness; | bled with fe and economy, The mishaps incressing from month to|but so long as it does not lack money | Scientific American much doubts. The nonth. it can worry along. only immediate utility of the monorail, A Eyroscope, rallroad Soen e this "an” According to Fugens Christian a| The national treasury department | [NOTILY is for ploneer lines through un- tries. Mr. Christian is eo enthusias- | (NeY Yote in November? and_sharp cur es were necessar: tic o s that we should not be N. Y. Times. 3 rprised if he died suddenly someday, | It is Tot strange that the wife who 77| discovers that her husband is a para- The European governments have | 5ite itches to be rid of him. Are the doctors of Waterbury vie- eighty-eight airships held In reserve tims of over-modesty and difidence? for war. In the next great human| The only trouble with Edison’s con-| Anyhow, the Waterbury Medical as- massacre death is to rain from the | Crete house is that you cannot get the | SOCiAtion has adopted a Tesolution re- by builders to put it up for the price. | Juesting newspapers, in publishing ac- counts o({ sic;r::snl sccldents and oper- ations, to o he at- Down south they say it costs twice| The Nestor of the Vermont bar is | iendink bhssleians or surgeons. . We as much to get drunk now as it did | Augustus P. Hunton, who at 94 keeps | do not understand that the organiza- twenty years ago. It takes less of the | up his reading and activity as a cit- | ton objects to the publication of the Sl 1o a0 the ik, oo izen. name of the victim of the accndent or Olilhe Sfll;]t;cl. (:;“The operation. Whiss Coleman fs coryoting His-1ad- | , Bifics Phdsinliie Tas mads sl | 1n o o co oE Of 3 Dewspaser gors with two policemen beside him, | & reputation for sleepiness it is hard | reference to what to leave out. But Te will feel cheap not to be able to|NOW to Drove that she hasn't a night- s th cent cigar. mare. r and p It you want & photo of your at your friends see jon bearing are always well oiled, and | hurry. that your universal joints are never Rose Bowling Alleys, LUCAS HALL, Usiformly 109 Finest Ground in the World ——— : That's why it goes farthest, is i kit B 1 I e e ) | LAIGHTON . e e I]U“ll S [:l]lluh syrlll] g EEpamr o The Photographer, An excelient remedy FRES“ l.‘lsn. m-::-‘;’:a Norwich Savings ® for Coughs, Coids, All kinds in their season. ¢ Clean, Prices Right Stop in and ask us to tell you about it. CRUTHERS & LILLIBRIDGE Norwich, Conn. Watorbury Doctors and Publici ALL DRUGGISTS Sond tfo.. mame of paper wnd this 1. fox oxx oy Sarmeet BanE ot b 2 B R P amtatha Good Luck Peuny. SCOTT & BOWNE, 409 Pearl St., N. Y. Hoarseness, E. T. LADD, Agent | Sore Throat, Efc. el 523 w2 waer 5| If You Want a Good AUTOMOBILE STATION. NEWMARKET HOTEL, - utamo! 715 Boswsll Ave. Soltie’ St aert General Ma® 1éb21d 25c a bottle at First-class wines, 'and clge:a, | chine work Jobbing. ‘Phons. servec DUNN'S PHARMAGY |BUSINESS DIRECTORY Meais and Weich — call at 50 Main Strezt. T erder. Jobn Tuckie Pron. Tel 42- BoTTLER Market and Wates o Tinis 'of the Leat Al santsa NORWICH FIRMS There is Only One e Buitaty el - Yerringtun' S physician from accounts of accidents and surgical operations would be an into bri every possibla protext, they are o hish priced that they are| Those who are mot obliged (0 lead | Amg (o much phosiclane ine resotdtion zot Interesting 4o regular consumers, ! the simple life wonder how other geo- | may be intended as a rebuke. But The Pittsburg mother who bas had | FAPPY thought for today: This may | SSAS3 asninst” enterprising journal- eo girls slope with most desirable |be & =ad day with You, but the day of | majority of cases. the name of the ate REAL ESTATE AND INS ling to lea e ne and laughter is not f: g i P P illing to leave the fourth | Sunshi ot far | tending physician is an unimportant £ »”» Geo. ;- g airs ahead. matter. But in the case of a promi- S romao arsIne 49 Main = = L nent fnaividual who is The victim of 3 cons:Ts 9 Street s Bomt & Custitinnt Biaths ot | X0 1he semihecn paoh crop survives | opt eIl opeseion: the public 19 That is — y - - - - ecure. The | jnterested to know, as indeed it has Sobine enother vietim. What does he take|southern peach never EEW & Worma | e i te K the me ee (e e WILLIMANTIC FIRMS - - P 49 - T e — Model A67 axative Dromo Quin roar goiTursons samims. | Delivered to Auy Part of Norwich mateur = t savs that ten| The American women laid down|ed the adoption of the no-name reso- —_— USED THE WORLD OVER OURE A COLD iN ONE o u service guarantesd, | ., ¢ - hes of suow is equivalent to a foot | $165,000,000 for silk goods in 1909. The | lutlon of the Waterbury Medical asso- is a new one. - —r - -~ e hing” e ‘Rewsy veamiog & apes | 10 Ale that ix mckrowisdges 1o e in ot rain, Not at Fairview reservoir. | American woman is just draped in clation we do not know. Perhaps sone cap ¥ | 3% W gl oy oy > —— million: Sactots have hil sh itch for publicity Always remember the full name. Look | PEERLESS. A taiephone . Strawberries are in the market, but R0 havo sought o et thelr “"“‘“l o this ighebire on o e 456 you want (o put your busi- | Peeive prempt attention she DubIle there'is no me-| D. J. McCORMICK, 30 Framklin % thay throlgh the adyeriis of The Bullewr may 189